Sports
Chamika Karunaratne handed suspended one-year ban from all cricket

Chamika Karunaratne, the Sri Lanka, all-rounded, has been handed a one-year ban, suspended for a year, by Sri Lanka Cricket following a “disciplinary inquiry”.
The SLC found Karunaratne to have breached multiple clauses by a three-member inquiry panel. The all-rounders pleaded guilty to all charges levelled against him.
Karunaratne was handed a suspended ban of one-year from all forms of cricket and was also fined US $5000 for his breaches.
“Considering the seriousness of the violations committed by Karunaratne, the Inquiry Panel by its report has recommended to the Executive Committee of the SLC to strongly warn the player to refrain from further violations and to impose a punishment that will not have an impact on his cricketing career,” SLC stated.
“Subsequent to the said findings and recommendations of the inquiry panel the Executive Committee of SLC has handed a one-year ban from taking part in all forms of Cricket, and the said ban will be suspended for a period of one year.”
Karunaratne featured in seven matches in the recently concluded T20 World Cup in Australia, picking up three wickets with minimal batting opportunities to make an impact.
(ICC)
Sports
Mahinda take top spot in Group ‘B’

Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ Cricket
Mahinda College, Galle took the top spot in group ‘B’ with four wickets victory over Royal College as they reached a target of 202 runs with 11 overs to spare in the final group match of the Under 19 Division I tier ‘A’ tournament on Monday.
Chasing a target of 202 runs to win, Thevindu Rashmika and Dulsith Darshana scored half centuries and put on a stand of 88 runs for the first wicket to give them a strong start.
Later Sehas Ashinsa and Manitha Rajapaksha contributed with useful runs to seal the victory with many overs to spare.
Manitha Rajapaksha and Vishmitha Sathsara (4/37) shared bowling honours for Mahinda.
Mahinda will meet the runners up of group ‘C’ in the quarter-finals.
Scores:
Royal
201 for 9 in 50 overs (Hirun Liyanarachchi 38, Ramiru Perera 31, Himaru Deshan 40, Dushen Udawela 39; Manitha Rajapaksha 3/36, Vishmitha Sathsara 4/37)
Mahinda 203 for 6 in 38.3 overs (Thevindu Rashmika 55, Dulsith Darshana 51, Sehas Ashinsa 29, Manitha Rajapaksha 33n.o.; Sandul Abeywardena 2/25)
The quarter-finals begin today
The quarter-finals of the Tier ‘A’ tournament will commence today with the clash between defending champions St. Joseph’s and Richmond.
The quarter-final line up was amost complete after Mahinda beat Royal on Monday.
But Mahinda will wait for a Sri Lanka Schools Cricket Association decision to know who their quarter final opponents are.
In the other two quarter-finals, St. Sebastians’ Moratuwa will meet Royal while Prince of Wales encounter Mahanama. Both matches will be played on Wednesday.
Division I Tier ‘B’ quarter-final line up
Sri Sumangala, Panadura V St. Anne’s, Kurunegala
Dharmaraja, Kandy V Devapathiraja, Ratgama
Ananda Colombo V St. Benedict’s Kotahena
De Mazenod, Kandana V St. Thomas’ Matara
by Reemus Fernando
Latest News
WWC 2025: Spin-heavy Bangladesh look to challenge England in rare meeting

England take on Bangladesh in an ODI World Cup match!
The sentence itself is an event. Despite qualifying for back-to-back ODI World Cups – in 2022 and now in 2025 – Bangladesh have faced England only once in the format, and that too in the previous edition.
“This is the stage where we show our capabilities so that teams like England and Australia show interest in playing against us,” Bangladesh captain Nigar Sultana said on match eve.
As per the new future tours programme which will run from 2025-29, Bangladesh are scheduled to tour England for three ODIs and as many T20Is in September 2027. That is perhaps when the fixture will stop being an event.
On the field, both teams are coming on the back of comfortable wins. England’s multi-pronged attack could pose a tough challenge for Bangladesh, whose batters often struggle to force the pace. Conversely, if the track assists spin, Bangladesh’s spin-heavy attack led by Nahida Akter could be more than just a handful for England. Their batters were hardly challenged in the opening game.
She is just 21 ODIs old, but Emma Lamb is already adapting to a second role in England’s batting unit. A natural opener, she scored her only century at the top of the order and was the leading run-scorer in the ECB Women’s One-Day Cup while opening for champions Lancashire. At the start of this English summer, though, Amy Jones was promoted to open, and Lamb was moved to No. 3 when Heather Knight was recovering from a hamstring injury. Now, with Knight back for the World Cup, Lamb is set to take on an altogether different role – batting in the lower-middle order and chipping in with a few overs of offspin. She wasn’t needed with either bat or ball in England’s tournament opener, but could get her first go in this new role against Bangladesh if her team bats first.
Marufa Akter just loves to bowl. After setting the tone in Bangladesh’s win over Pakistan, she lit up their first practice session in India. With rain forcing the team indoors, Marufa was full of energy, bowling at full tilt two days out from the contest. She constantly troubled captain Sultana in the nets, eventually bowling her once. With her ability to move the new ball and generate sharp pace, Marufa could be a real handful for England’s openers – Tammy Beaumont tends to struggle against the incoming angle early on, while Jones prefers a cautious start.
Given England’s line-up was hardly tested against South Africa, expect them to go in with an unchanged XI.
England (probable XI): Tammy Beaumont, Amy Jones (wk), Heather Knight, Nat Sciver-Brunt (capt), Sophia Dunkley, Emma Lamb, Alice Capsey, Charlie Dean, Sophie Ecclestone, Linsey Smith, Lauren Bell
Against England’s right-hand heavy line-up, Bangladesh could look to play left-arm spinner Sanjida Akter Meghla for an offspinner in Nishita Akter Nishi.
Bangladesh (probable XI): Fargana Hoque, Rubya Haider, Sharmin Akhter, Nigar Sultana (capt & wk), Sobhana Mostary, Shorna Akter, Fahima Khatun, Nahida Akter, Rabeya Khan, Marufa Akter, Nishita Akter Nishi/Sanjida Akter Meghla
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
WWC 2025: Mlaba, Brits, Luus seal comfortable win for South Africa

Tazmin Britts is having a year like no other. Her fifth hundred in 2025 – the most-ever by a woman in a calendar year – studded South Africa’s dominance as they got onto the points table with a crushing six-wicket win over New Zealand, who slumped to their second straight loss in Indore.
Four nights after being bundled out for the second-lowest score in World Cups, South Africa showed authority and intent in chasing down 232 in 40.5 overs. This somewhat helped cover up for a massive net run rate dent from their embarrassing loss to England in Guwahati.
That South Africa had only these many to chase was largely thanks to left-arm spinner Nonkululeko Mlaba, whose 4 for 40 triggered an alarming slide after Sophie Devine and Brook Halliday threatened a jailbreak. After the pair had added a quickfire 86 for the fourth-wicket, New Zealand were coasting at 187 for 3 in 38 overs when Mlaba made big dents.
Halliday contributed 45 off 37 in a terrific exhibition of sweeps and reverse-sweeps, before falling to one hit too many when she top-edged a slog-sweep off Mlaba at the start of the 39th. During her stay, she briefly gave South Africa the shivers, like she had in last year’s T20 World Cup final in Dubai.
South Africa hit back quickly after Halliday’s dismissal, with Mlaba next sending back Maddy Green to an ill-advised reverse sweep as she picked out backward point. Amid the collapse, Devine held out hope for New Zealand, like she’d done in hitting a valiant 112 against Australia in their opener.
Devine helped shift gears after Georgia Plimmer struggled to hit the ball off the square in a painstaking 31 off 68 balls. Devine was largely measured, taking 66 deliveries to bring up a half-century, her 17th in ODIs, before shifting gears, as she fed off Halliday’s form and enterprise.
Halliday and Devine raised their half-century stand off just 41 deliveries, and New Zealand looked set for a lift-off. But Devine’s dismissal for 85, attempting to work a full delivery into the leg side, had a deflating effect. Ayabonga Khaka then cleaned up the lower order, as New Zealand lost 7 for 44 to be bowled out for 231, leaving 13 deliveries unused.
All told, it was an innings of contrasting fortunes. New Zealand played themselves into a hole, consuming as many as 72 dots in the first 15 overs to leave the middle order with too much to do, after Suzie Bates fell for a second straight duck off the first ball of the match and Amelie Kerr for 22. Then Devine and Halliday bailed them out, but in having a terrible back 10, New Zealand undid all the good work through the middle overs.
To make a fist of the target, New Zealand needed early wickets, and they had one when Laura Wolvaardt, who plucked a stunner to end New Zealand’s innings, was out lbw playing around her front pad to Jess Kerr. But that was as much joy as they were to derive over the next two hours as Brits put on an exhibition, with Sune Luus for company.
Brits’ was a high-tempo innings full of stunning shots, and it included a thrilling takedown of Amelie Kerr early in the innings to offset any threat South Africa had. Having begun the innings steadily, Brits went into overdrive after the 10-over mark, at one point hitting five boundaries in nine deliveries, en route to a 44-ball half-century, her fastest in ODIs.
Brits equally punished Eden Carson, the offspinner, muscling a six to bring up the 100 partnership off 111 deliveries. Brits’ use of her feet to negate any turn and bludgeon spinners repeatedly down the ground made for thrilling viewing. And while she was flying, Luus was fighting for survival.
Unlike Brits, Luus struggled for timing, but the reward for all that tenacity for a fight was a half-century that she raised off 76 balls. Brits’ counter-attack gave her the rare luxury of finding her feet as the ball spun and jumped, merely underlining how ridiculously easy Brits had made batting look.
Brits fell soon after getting to her century, bowled attempting to pull a skiddy length ball off Lea Tahuhu to leave South Africa briefly wobbly, as they lost two more wickets in an attempt to raze down the runs. But even through that, the result was a foregone conclusion.
Luus raised the winning runs with a lofted hit over extra cover, finishing unbeaten on 81 to ensure South Africa ride a wave of confidence when they meet hosts and table-toppers India come Thursday in Vizag. New Zealand will hope for a change of luck when they travel to Guwahati to play Bangladesh the following day.
Brief scores:
South Africa Women 232 for 4 in 40.5 overs (Taxmin Brits 101, Sune Luus 83*, Amelia Kerr 2-62) beat New Zealand Women 231 in 47.5 overs (Georgia Plimmer 31, Amelia Kerr 23, Sophie Devine 85, Brooke Halliday 45; Nonkululeko Mlaba 4-40) by six wickets
[Cricinfo]
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