Sports
Chess veteran warns players must use head and not heart

by a Special Sports Correspondent
The Senior National Chess Championships for the year 2022 conducted recently produced two players who shared equal first after seven rounds of matches. Derrick Perera, rated second, and T.D R Peiris, rated third, finished on top after several rounds of competitive chess worked off in keeping with the Swiss Scoring System at the Chess Federation of Sri Lanka (CFSL) Headquarters in Nugegoda.
The tournament attracted several accomplished veterans and among them were Sudarman Pitigala, Nandika Ruwan and A.H Katugampola.
Derrick Perera who finished on a high airing his views on the tournament said that he maintained the mentality to always play for a win. “In competitive chess, you cannot settle for draws. You have to find ways of keeping yourself motivated and conserving your energy because playing three games during certain days of the tournament can be taxing,” said Perera who was at one time a competitive player and also the president of the CFSL.
Perera said that he always advised players to play for wins unless games would end in technical draws. But according to records at the tournament there had been players who were quite happy offering draws; promoting a sense of camaraderie among players.
Perera said that he had returned to competitive chess after a long break. “I’m not a professional chess player, so I don’t play under unwanted pressure. But I always played to win; and this approach helps to bring the best out in players. I was relaxed and concentrating and as a result I tried new things during matches,” he said.
He said that it’s important to know when to release ones pressure. “You have to keep the opponent guessing all the time regarding when you are going to release your pressure,” said Perera. He said that in round six there had been a power outage and that had affected the players. Perera is a diabetic and under medication and he said that it was also important for someone under medication to maintain health during a competitive tournament. “I made it a point not to release my pressure too early in the tournament,” said Perera who had to win his last three games-scheduled for the final day- to have any hopes of winning on a high. He won all three games. One of his setbacks during the tournament was losing to T.D.R. Peiris, but that game was played before the final day of the tournament.
According to Perera most players are chess coaches as well. As a result they neglect their playing. “In Sri Lanka it is very hard to play chess for a living, but chess coaching is quite a lucrative occupation over here. I’m not a coach and concentrated on my game and playing. Those who took the latter approach to the game were able to come to the tournament and destroy the field,” explained Perera.
Perera said that it’s very important for players to have other interests in life outside chess. “Chess is a game which taxes the mind. Some players who are obsessed with the game don’t know to knock off; hence they run the risk of burnout or even brain damage,” he said. Perera is an academic, practises the Christian faith and is a family man. He said that his attention is spanned over many areas in life. “I play chess with my brain and think of other things important to me using my heart,” he said.
T.D.R Peiris said that he was happy to finish joint first at the tournament. Peiris, who is 64 years old-who commenced the final day of the tournament with 3 ½ points and managed to get 4 ½ points at the conclusion of the tournament. Peiris coaches players and makes chess equipment for a living. He said that he has struggled to maintain a family and continue playing chess because the sport doesn’t offer many avenues to raise revenue. When asked to explain the reason behind his lack of prosperity despite his lifelong commitment to chess, Peiris had this to say, “I think it’s probably because I make crucial decisions from the heart when others would take such decisions using the mind”.
P.K Chandrasiri, Pitigala and Ajantha de Silva finished tied with 4 ½ points each.
Sports
UAE Women retire out all ten batters in 163-run win over Qatar

In a bizarre turn of events in a Women’s T20 World Cup Asia Qualifier game between UAE and Qatar in Bangkok, UAE retired out all ten batters at the score of 192 for 0 in 16 overs. It was the first instance of a team retiring out more than two batters in a men’s or women’s international match. UAE then went on to roll Qatar over for just 29 in an innings that featured seven ducks to seal a massive 163-run win in a match that lasted 27.1 overs.
Since the UAE innings also had eight ducks, the game saw a record 15 ducks, easily the most in a women’s T20I.
Opting to bat, UAE openers Esha Oza , also the captain, and Theetha Satish were cruising along in their century partnership, with Oza on 113 and Satish on 74. But then UAE decided to end the innings. Since a declaration is not allowed in limited-overs cricket, Oza, Satish, and eight other batters (without facing a ball) were retired out. As a result, UAE were all out for 192 in 16 overs.
Oza had brought up a 51-ball century – her fourth in T20Is – and Satish had also raced to her fifty off 31 balls as they took the team past 150 in 14 overs. Oza struck 14 fours and five sixes while Satish collected 11 fours, and it was when Oza had smashed three fours in four balls to end the 16th over – with the team’s run rate reading 12 – that they decided to walk off. UAE’s 192, as a result, became the highest all-out score in a women’s T20I.
Qatar, in reply, lasted just 11.1 overs as only three batters were able to open their accounts, and only one of them went past 5. Opener Riznah Bano Emmanuel top-scored with 20 and saw four wickets fall in front of her in five overs as left-arm spinner Michelle Botha finished with 3 for 11. Once Emmanuel was run-out in the eighth over on 26 for 5, Qatar lasted only 20 more balls and added just three more runs to the total.
Sports
With Sridhar on board, Sri Lanka eye fielding gold

When Sanath Jayasuriya walked into his first media briefing as Head Coach, he didn’t waste time playing it safe. He went straight to the point — fielding was going to be a game-changer. And true to his word, what the team has pulled off over the last 12 months is nothing short of a stunning comeback.
Here was a side that had just been bundled out of the ICC Cricket World Cup with a wooden spoon finish — ninth place — and failed to qualify for the Champions Trophy. But under Jayasuriya’s stewardship, Sri Lanka has punched above its weight, defeating the top two ranked teams in the world — Australia and India. And in this remarkable turnaround, fielding has been the unsung hero, the silent game-winner.
Doubling down on the importance of fielding, the team management roped in India’s former fielding guru R. Sridhar for a ten-day high-intensity camp. A coach who comes with a glowing reputation, Sridhar isn’t just focusing on the big boys — he’s spreading the gospel of fielding to the development squads and the under-19s too. It’s a move that signals intent — Sri Lanka wants to be sharp, not just with the bat and ball, but in the field as well.
These efforts to lift fielding standards deserve a standing ovation. One can only wonder how different things might’ve been if this sort of proactive thinking had been in place two years ago. The writing was on the wall even then — dropped catches, fumbled run-outs, and lazy throws were costing games. But instead of addressing the problem head-on, the management handed the reins to an overhyped foreign coach and, in cricketing terms, ended up hitting their own wickets.
Since Jayasuriya took over, he’s turned the tide. He brought in Upul Chandana — Sri Lanka’s very own livewire in the field — from within the SLC coaching system. Chandana, with his unconventional drills and energetic approach, has injected fresh blood and urgency into the unit. The players now seem to have caught the fielding bug.
That’s how it should be. While someone like Chandana remains as a permanent fixture, brief stints from specialists like Sridhar allow new ideas to bounce around the dressing room.
Earlier, even Jonty Rhodes, arguably the Michael Jordan of fielding, spent a few days in Colombo. He quickly identified the blind spots and sharpened Sri Lanka’s fielding toolkit.
That said, no matter how many big-ticket coaches you bring in, no fielding revolution can succeed unless the players themselves buy in. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it dive full-length in the covers.
And for too long, that buy-in was missing. Thankfully, the tide seems to be turning — especially with the next-gen stars who appear hungrier, more agile, and aware that in modern cricket, fielding can win you matches.
Look no further than T.M. Dilshan. Initially groomed as a wicketkeeper, his path was blocked by a certain Kumar Sangakkara — who, let’s face it, wasn’t giving up the gloves anytime soon. So Dilshan pivoted. He transformed himself into a brilliant outfielder, arguably the best in the side. His work ethic was legendary.
After every net session, he’d drag Fielding Coach Trevor Penney to the boundary and aim for ten direct hits a day. In the early days, it took him hours to meet that mark. But with persistence and practice, he was hitting the target in just 15 minutes. That’s the stuff champions are made of — grit, grind, and getting your whites dirty.
What Sri Lanka needs now are more players with that Dilshan mindset — willing to do the hard yards, chase leather like it’s gold, and throw themselves around like they’re defending their mother’s dowry.
With Jayasuriya calling the shots, Chandana in the dugout, and experts like Sridhar chipping in, Sri Lanka’s fielding fortunes are finally turning a corner. It’s early days, but if this momentum continues, the Lions might just roar again — not just with the bat and ball, but in every blade of grass they defend.
by Rex Clementine
Sports
11th edition of Pera 6s Hockey Championship concludes today

The 11th edition of the Pera 6s annual 6-a-side Inter-University and Inter-Club Hockey Championship, organised by the University of Peradeniya Hockey Team, which commenced at the Univeresity of Peradeniya play ground on Saturday, will conclude today [11 May]
First played in 2006, the tournament has been featured ten times, and provides a unique opportunity for university hockey players to display their skills and prowess on a competitive platform. It is also an eye-catching attraction on the university’s sports calendar.
In the last edition the Inter University championship was won by University of Peradeniya (Men’s) and University of Moratuwa/Sabaragamuwa University (Women’s) while Creators Sports Club and Old Aloysian Sports Club were joint champions in the men’s club championship, and Wennapuwa Hockey Club clinched the women’s championship.
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