Sports
CH & FC enjoys having rugby’s last ‘regal’ player

By A Special Sports Correspondent
One of the positives about the Sri Lanka Rugby (SLR) conducted inter-club Division 1 league rugby tournament is that there are eight teams in the fray and the side finishing last faces no risk of being relegated to a lower division. For the record, there was a B Division tournament conducted many years ago, but right now there is no talk of conducting that tournament this year.
But all that relegation talk goes into oblivion when one sees the progress Colombo Hockey & Football Club (CH & FC) has made this season despite the awful performance last season where they finished at the bottom of the points table (eighth place) at the conclusion of the league tournament for 2022/23. CH & FC is not a side that can be written off that easily. The club has attracted some of the best youth rugby players and signed up veteran coach Sanath Martis to put the players through their paces this season.
Rugby in Sri Lanka has remained an elite sport. Unlike cricket, where the best players are now coming from the outstations and making it to the national team, rugby is still heavily depended on the talent that Western and Central Province schools produce for its sustenance. There is another factor that makes rugby attract media attention and that is the participation of members of an elite family; like the Rajapaksas. The present CH & FC side has Rohitha Rajapaksa who plays as fly half. A few seasons ago there was Yoshitha and before that Member of Parliament and the eldest in the family Namal; all of them being involved in the game at club level at the time their dad-Mahinda- was the First Citizen of the Country. Just imagine the attention the sport of rugby union receive when Mahinda was president and the three sons were dabbling in the game. There were other notorious issues connected to rugby which made the sport get highlighted for all the wrong reasons during this time. Let’s not go to that part of history in this sports column.
Looking on the bright side rugby was the sport where the Royal family was involved in when all three Rajapaksa brothers were involved with some club contesting the domestic league rugby tournament. This factor just makes it so difficult for other sports to be in the limelight. All that glamour that the sport attracts for the reasons given above will be over the day Rohitha hangs up his boots. However, as for CH & FC, history has taught this institute lessons on maintaining prestige and glamour in the fields of entertainment and sport.
Just reverse the clock to 1863 we saw the emergence of a club for recreation and sport when this nation was known as Ceylon. It was established under the English and one had to be British to represent the club at sport. Starting its operations at Race Course the club then moved to Maitland Crescent in 1962; in which year they opened the doors for locals to obtain membership and represent the club in domestic sport; especially rugby. Bryan Baptist had the honour of becoming the first local to captain CH & FC at rugby. But still the influence of British nationals or expatriates continued to boost the image of the club. Individuals like this writer, who was born in the early 1970s and watched rugby in the 1980s, can remember The Gymkhana Club authorities flying down British national Simon Hunter for the Clifford Cup knockout tournament; a move that made members of the other experience goose bumps. When Hunter (who played as wing three quarter) kicked an up and under during a game one could go to the restaurant area of the club, have a quick tea and comeback to his or her seat and miss nothing because the ball would almost touch the clouds before it came down again; the description of his kicking prowess given here using a figurative expression common to spectators back then who witnessed the best of CH rugby. These foreigners who played in our domestic tournaments knew the makings of the rugby ball and possessed intricate knowledge of the seam of the oval shaped object which made it behave when a player kicked it. This was sheer magic to us!
Then the club had a phase of employing Fijians and was a force in rugby in the early 1990s. The Gymkhana Club then had the fortune of obtaining the services of Hisham Abdeen, who was already a legend at Havelock Sports Club having established himself as the best player Sri Lanka produced in rugby. There was a time when the best players leaving school preferred to join CH & FC because of the prestige the club had in the sport of rugby and the standards this institute forced players to maintain both on and off the field.
Now times have changed a bit and a player in the likes of Rohitha is capable of attracting players from any club to don CH & FC’s red and white jersey. The Rajapaksa brothers still have much clout in the societies they frequently step into and showing some of that influence in rugby is easy as taking a walk in the park.
This is an era where clubs are struggling to exist because of the many economic hurdles they have to encounter. There was a time just about during the pandemic when clubs were struggling to pay its members for playing competitive rugby. Now there are influential members in rugby playing clubs who can get players to think of doing the unthinkable or saying yes to something which is not so close to their hearts. There have been occasions when players who wanted to quit the sports here in Sri Lanka and immigrate changed their minds and stayed back because an individual with clout offered a ‘lifeline’. Havelock’s Sanjeewa Jayasinghe was all ready and packed up to go settle down in Dubai when someone from Kandy SC made an offer he couldn’t refuse. Thanks to what happened Jayasinghe had a ‘new lease of life’ at rugby and was able to bring honours to both club and country.
Rohitha is perhaps the last ‘regal’ face in local rugby. He may have a few more seasons in rugby the least and then hang up his boots. He has had a few coaching stints with schools and may take up a more serious role in coaching or even take to rugby management in the club scene. CH & FC enjoys having him in the team’s line-up and the ideas he brings to the discussion table. The Maitland Crescent Club showed him how to handle matters related to elitism, difficult times and protect an institution’s identity at rugby. Rohitha is sure to cherish all his rugby memories at the Gymkhana Club.
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Sai Sudharsan and Prasidh lead Gujarat Titans to top of IPL table

B Sai Sudarshan and Prasidh Krishna once again stood up for Gujarat Titans (GT) as they beat Rajasthan Royals (RR) by 58 runs in Ahmedabad. This was GT’s fourth successive win in IPL 2025 and it took them to the top of the points table.
After RR opted to bowl on a red-soil pitch, Sai Sudharsan’s 82 off 53 balls, his third half-century of the season, steered GT to 217 for 6. With no dew in the second innings, it proved way too steep for RR to chase down. Mohammed Siraj and Arshad Khan struck in the powerplay before Prasidh picked up 3 for 24 in the middle overs to keep RR on the back foot. Despite Shimron Hetmyer’s fighting fifty, RR were all out for 159 in 19.2 overs.
Joffra Archer didn’t have a great start to IPL 2025. In his first two games, he conceded 109 from 6.3 wicketless overs. But he boucned back in his next two with a combined 4 for 38 from seven overs. He breathed fire tonight as well. In his first over, he rushed Sai Sudharsan with a 152.3kph bouncer. In his second, he got one to move in at 147.7kph and pegged back Shubman Gill’s off stump. His match-up against Gill in T20 cricket now reads: 15 balls, ten runs, three dismissals.
For his former captain Jos Buttler, Archer had two slips, a short leg and a catching square leg, and welcomed him with a menacing bouncer that Buttler did well to evade. Buttler inside-edged the next ball just wide of short leg, and then pushed Archer through the covers for four.
Sai Sudharsan generally takes time to get going. Here, he attacked right from the start. He ramped, scooped, drove and cut, and took his side to 50 in 5.1 overs. By the end of the powerplay, he had 39 against his name, off 22 balls. Only Wriddhiman Saha (54 vs Lucknow Super Giants in 2023) has scored more runs in an innings for GT in that phase.
Buttler was on 12 off 13 at one point but hit four fours in his next six balls to move to 31 off 19. He and Sai Sudharsan added 80 off 46 balls before Maheesh Theekshana trapped Buttler lbw. After a brief dip in the scoring rate, M Shahrukh Khan opened up and smashed 36 off 20 to re-inject momentum.
Sudharsan was dropped on 81 by Shubham Dubey off Archer in the 18th over, but he only added one more to his tally. Then Rahul Tewatia and Rashid Khan ransacked 30 in the last two overs to take GT past 200.
RR did not have a great start. Yashasvi Jaiswal slashed Arshad to deep third in the second over of the chase and Nitish Rana did the same against Siraj in the next. Sanju Samson and Riyan Parag counterattacked and added 48 off 26 balls for the third wicket. The stand was broken when Impact Sub Kulwant Khejroliya had Parag caught behind in the seventh over. Parag immediately reviewed the decision, confident that his bat had only hit the ground, but the third umpire thought otherwise, with Ultra Edge also bringing up a second spike when the ball passed the bat.
Coming into this game, Rashid had picked up just one wicket in four outings. Tonight, he struck in his first over. It was a shortish ball that didn’t bounce as much as Dhruv Jurel expected, and Sai Sudharsan at deep midwicket gobbled up the mistimed pull.
Rashid enjoys a favourable match-up against Hetmyer, having dismissed him six times in 63 balls for 79 runs before this game. He almost had Hetmyer lbw for a first-ball duck but the ball had pitched fractionally outside leg stump. From there on, Hetmyer dominated Rashid and hit him for 26 runs off 12 balls with the help of two fours and two sixes. However, Rashid was too good for RR’s Impact Sub Shubham Dubey and had him lbw for 1.
In his final over, the 16th over of the innings, Prasidh had Archer caught at mid-off and Hetmyer at deep-backward square leg, both off short balls. With RR 145 for 8 after 16 overs, the result was sealed. They dragged their innings into the final over but that did little to reduce the margin of their defeat.
Brief scores:
Gujarat Titans 217 for 6 in 20 overs (Sai Sudharsan 82, Jos Buttler 36, M Shahrukh Khan 36, Rahul Tewatia 24*, Rashid Khan 12; Joffra Archer 1-30, Tushar Deshpande 2-53, Sandeep Sharma 1-41, Maheesh Theekshana 2-54) beat Rajasthan Royals 159 (Shimron Hetmyer 52, Sanju Samson 41, Riyan Parag 26; Mohammed Siraj 1-30, Arshad Khan 1-19, Prasidh Krishna 3-24, Kulwant Khejroliya 1-29, Sai Kishore 2-20, Rashid Khan 2-37) by 58 runs
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Birthday boy Manasa shines as Joes savour title

Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ Limited Overs Tournament
Speedster Manasa Madubashana celebrated his 19th birthday sharing four wickets each with spinner Yenula Dewthusa as St.Joseph’s sealed a comfortable 71 runs victory over Trinity in the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ Limited Overs tournament final at Surrey Village ground on Wednesday.
Chasing 205 runs to win Trinity’s top order batsmen were rattled by Madubashana who took four wickets in a decisive seven over spell. He took wickets in consecutive balls in his second over to trigger a collapse from which Trinity never recovered.
The four wicket hauls by Madubashana and Dewthusa restricted Trinity to 133 runs. In their chase, Trinity lost wickets at reguler intervals and a laboured 48 runs from Sweath Anurajeewa only managed to delay the outcome till the 48th over. His innings came to an end when Madubashana held on to a regulation catch off the bowling of Aveesha Samash.
Earlier put to bat, St. Joseph’s too lost wickets at reguler intervals, but mini partnerships between Abishek Jayaweera and Senuja Wakunegoda (52 for the second wicket), and Jayaweera and Nimthaka Gunewardena (45 for the 3rd wicket) enabled them to stay aloft.
Gunawardena top scored with 47 runs, while skipper Kenath Liyanage played a vital role anchoring the tail with an unbeaten 29 runs.
The title victory capped a remarkable end to the Joes limited overs tournament campaign after having reached the knockout stage with only two victories under their belt.
by Reemus Fernando
Sports
Action from the Schools Relay Carnival

Schools Relay Carnival commenced at Diyagama on Wednesday. Here are some pictures from day one of the three-day championship.
(Pix by Kamal Wanniarachchi)

Lyceum International Wattala were the winners of the Under 20 distance medley
relay. (From left) Himansi Pradeepani, Shalomi Rashni, Rashini Karunarathne
and Jithma Wijethunga.

.Under 20 boys medley relay winners, St. Benedict’s College, Kotahena. (From
left) Andrew Akash, Kalana Jayamanna, Kavindu Jayamanna and Denuth Nimesh.

Under 12 boys’ 4x100m relay winners, Maris Stella College. Negombo (From left) Tanujitha Weerasekara, Senith Ranasinghe, Milan Fernando and Denuth Thenujan.

Girls’ Under 12 4×50 metres relay winners, St. Bridget’s Convent, Colombo. (From left) Jenuli Perera, Sanah Fernando, Glesha Nanayakkara and Dehara Alwis.
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