Sports
CPL 2026 to feature new Jamaica-based franchise
A Jamaican franchise will return to the Caribbean Premier League (CPL) this year under the new ownership of Kingsmen Sports Enterprise, an American group which recently invested in one of the new Pakistan Super League (PSL) teams.
Jamaican Tallawahs were three-time CPL champions but have not featured in the last two editions. The franchise’s most recent owner, Kris Persaud, sold it back to the league in late 2023 – citing a lack of support from the Jamaican government – and bought the rights to a new team in Antigua, which became the Antigua and Barbados Falcons.
The GMR Group, an Indian infrastructure conglomerate which co-owns Delhi Capitals and has a portfolio of other teams around the world, were in advanced talks to revive the Jamaica franchise last year and sent a delegation to the CPL final. But the deal fell through, and the league announced on Wednesday that Kingsmen has purchased the rights to the franchise.
Kingsmen is run by Fawad Sarwar, a Pakistani entrepreneur based in the United States, who said in a press release that the return of a CPL franchise would act as an “economic engine” and was designed to promote Jamaica as “a global hub for cricket, culture and sportainment”.
Sarwar was involved in the recent purchase of one of the two new franchises in the PSL, which will be named Hyderabad Houston Kingsmen, and also runs Chicago Kingsmen in Minor League Cricket in the United States. A new name for the Jamaican franchise is yet to be confirmed publicly.
The CPL announced earlier this week that Sabina Park will host four matches this year, marking the league’s return to Jamaica for the first time since 2019. The 2026 edition is due to run from early August until September 21.
“The return of a Jamaican franchise and matches at Sabina Park is something fans have been calling for, and we’re delighted to be working closely with the Government of Jamaica to make this happen,” Pete Russell, the CPL’s chief executive, said.
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Nissanka ton knocks Australia out as Sri Lanka script Pallekele heist
Cricket, as they say, is a funny old game. Barely a fortnight after being booed off this very stadium following a humbling 3-0 drubbing by England, Sri Lanka were hoisted on shoulders and hailed as heroes on Monday night as they sent Australia packing from the World Cup with a performance that had nerve, nous and no shortage of swagger.
Kandy, which had turned hostile earlier this month, was suddenly awash with jubilation. Fans burned the midnight oil, firecrackers lit up the hill capital and chants echoed long after the winning run was scored. There is no sweeter music in Sri Lankan cricket than the sound of Australia being knocked out of a tournament.
Australia had come out all guns blazing. At 100 for no loss in eight overs, with the Power Play carnage extending into the middle phase, the former champions looked set to bat Sri Lanka out of the contest. It was leather on willow and Sri Lanka were staring down the barrel.
Then the tide turned.
The spinners applied the handbrake on a surface that offered just enough grip, bowling with discipline and clever changes of pace to drag things back from the brink. The squeeze was relentless. Boundaries dried up, risks multiplied and panic crept in.
At the death, Dushmantha Chameera was ice-cool under pressure. Nailing his yorkers and varying his pace cleverly, he denied Australia the late surge that so often proves decisive. What followed was a collapse of dramatic proportions, six wickets for 21 runs, as Australia were bundled out for 180, a total that looked well below par given their flying start.
“We knew this was a 200 wicket,” Pathum Nissanka told reporters. “When Australia were bowled out for 180, we believed we could chase it down. But we had to be watchful and plan well.”
What followed was a run chase for the ages.
Knockout games against Australia are rarely strolls in the park. More often than not, they are arm-wrestles that go down to the wire. But Sri Lanka got home with two overs to spare, a statement win carved out with composure rather than brute force.
For years, Sri Lanka have bemoaned the absence of a power-hitter in the mould of David Miller, Hardik Pandya or Tim David, men who can clear the ropes at will. Nissanka, however, proved that timing can trump muscle.
His hundred was worth its weight in gold.
Elegant rather than explosive, he peppered the boundary with five sixes of the highest quality, each one greeted by a roar that rolled down from the Pallekele stands. The pick of the lot was a reverse-swept six off the left-arm spinner that had audacity written all over it.
“I loved that reverse-swept six,” Nissanka said. “I knew that area was vacant but you had to execute well. I’m glad it paid off.”
It was the first hundred of this World Cup and a landmark knock for the 27-year-old, who became the first Sri Lankan to score two T20I centuries.
“Scoring a hundred in a World Cup has always been my dream,” he added. “I’m glad I achieved that today.”
If Nissanka was the architect, Kusal Mendis was the steady hand on the tiller. His mature approach at the top ensured Sri Lanka did not lose wickets in clusters, and his game awareness, particularly regarding the dew, proved crucial.
“Kusal batted so well and told me the dew would come in,” Nissanka said. “We had to make sure we didn’t take undue risks. We planned well and are happy to be through to the second round.”
That clarity of thought, so conspicuously absent during the England series, was evident throughout the chase. Sri Lanka rotated strike smartly, picked their moments to attack and refused to be drawn into a slugfest.
The victory ensured Sri Lanka became the first team from Group ‘B’ to seal passage into the second round, where sterner tests await in the form of England, Pakistan and New Zealand.
Rex Clementine at Pallekele
Sports
Ganuka, Yuhansa reach quarter finals
Ganuka Fernando and Yuhansa Peiris reached the quarter finals of the J30 ITF Week 4 tournament as they won their second round matches in Colombo on Tuesday.
In the boys’ second round encounter Ganuka Fernando beat Chris Jovan Gubza of Austria 6-0, 6-4 to seal his quarter-final place.
For her place Yuhansa beat Ai Shin Huang of Taipei 7-6, 6-2 in the second round.
They are set to compete in the quarter finals today.
Sports
Sri Lanka lose Pathirana ahead of business end of World Cup
Sri Lanka’s charge towards the sharp end of the T20 World Cup has hit a speed bump after slingy quick Matheesha Pathirana was virtually ruled out of the tournament with a left calf strain.
The fast bowler limped off after sending down just four deliveries in his side’s commanding eight-wicket win over Australia at Pallekele, a victory that sealed qualification for the second round and sent the islanders marching into the business end with a game to spare.
Pathirana travelled to Colombo on Monday night for scans and although official results were pending, the team physiotherapist’s early assessment suggested the “Baby Malinga” would be sidelined for around four weeks, effectively curtains on his campaign.
It is a massive blow as Sri Lanka had banked heavily on Pathirana as their designated death-over enforcer.
Sri Lanka beat Australia with two overs to spare despite losing their pace spearhead early.
Pathirana becomes the third casualty of the campaign. Fast bowler Eshan Malinga had already been ruled out with a shoulder injury, while champion leg-spinner Wanindu Hasaranga suffered a hamstring tear in the opening game and was sent home.
Selectors now face a Hobson’s choice as they weigh up replacements. Left-arm quick Dilshan Madushanka is understood to be the front-runner, offering angle and variety with the new ball. Seamer Binura Fernando, who has enjoyed success in Asian conditions, is also in the mix. Nuwan Thushara, another slinger in the Pathirana mould, could provide like-for-like cover, while Milan Rathnayake’s all-round credentials and lower-order muscle present a tempting package.
Sri Lanka remain unbeaten and have ticked most boxes ahead of the Super Eight stage, where heavyweights Pakistan, England and New Zealand loom. England and New Zealand have already punched their tickets, while Pakistan must still get past Namibia to secure their passage.
Sri Lanka’s final group game against Zimbabwe is effectively a dead rubber, but momentum in tournament cricket is a delicate thing.
Encouragingly for the islanders, the batting unit is firing. Kusal Mendis has reeled off three successive half-centuries while Pathum Nissanka has registered the tournament’s first hundred, anchoring innings with the poise of a seasoned campaigner. In the middle order, Pavan Rathnayake has shown he can milk spin and shift gears when required.
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