Sports
Chamod shines with five-wicket haul as Joes dominate
89th Battle of the Saints
Deciding to field first St. Joseph’s reaped immediate success as paceman Gagan Chamod ripped through the top-order batting lineup to contain St. Peter’s to 214 runs on day one of the 89th Battle of the Saints Big Match at the SSC ground on Friday.
Chamod took the first two wickets of St. Peter’s innings in the first over before accounting for their Sri Lanka Under 19 player Vishen Halambage to leave them struggling at 29 for three wickets at one stage.
The Petes fourth wicket pair of Rusanda Gamage and Chamindu Perera then resisted putting on a partnership of 77 runs in 20 overs to partly repair the damage. Both scored half centuries but with others failing to back their efforts the Petes were dismissed for 214 runs before their allotted 60 overs in the first innings expired.
Chamod played the key role for the Joes using the morning conditions to good effect and completed a five wicket haul. Spinner Lahiru Amarasekara took three wickets.In their essay the Joes were 29 for no loss when bad light forced an early end to day’s play.
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U19 World Cup: Japan defeat Tanzania by nine wickets
Tanzania 131 in 38.3 overs (Acrey Pascal 55; Nihar Parmar 4-30, Nikhil Pol 3-23) lost to Japan 136/1 in 28.2 overs (Nihar Parmar 53*, Taylor Waugh 47) by nine wickets
[Cricbuzz]
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U19 World Cup: Ambrish’s four-fer powers India to third straight win
New Zealand 135 in 36.2 overs (RS Ambrish 4-29, Henil Patel 3-23) lost to India 130/3 in 13.3 overs (Vaibhav Suryavanshi 40, Ayush Mhatre 53) by 7 wickets [DLS Method]
[Cricbuzz]
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Josh Hoey breaks world 800m short track record with 1:42.50 in Boston
Josh Hoey had said he was excited to take a shot at the world 800m short track record in Boston and he was right on target as he clocked 1:42.50* to improve the 28-year-old mark at the New Balance Indoor Grand Prix – the first World Athletics Indoor Tour Gold meeting of the season – on Saturday (24).
Seven weeks on from setting a world 600m short track best, also in Boston, the US world indoor champion made more history as he took 0.17 off the world record of 1:42.67 set by Wilson Kipketer at the World Indoor Championships in Paris in 1997.
Hoey went into the race as the second-fastest indoor 800m runner of all time thanks to the North American record of 1:43.24 he ran at the US Indoor Championships in New York last year. But paced by his brother Jaxson, he leapt to the top of that all-time list, winning the race by more than two seconds.
Jaxson led his brother through the first 200m in 24.81 before 400m was reached in 50.21. Jaxson then stepped aside and Josh passed 600m in 1:16.19, holding on to cross the finish line in 1:42.50.
“We did a lot of pacing work,” said Josh, reflecting on his preparations for the race. “Just kind of kept steadily improving, taking it week by week, block by block, and we were able to make
this work.”
A world best had been set earlier in the programme, USA’s 2024 world indoor 1500m bronze medallist Hobbs Kessler clocking 4:48.79 to break the 2000m short track world best of 4:49.99 set by Kenenisa Bekele almost 19 years ago.
World short track 3000m record-holder Grant Fisher also dipped under the old world best, finishing second in 4:49.48.
[World Athletics]
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