Sports
Dickwella, Chandimal help Sri Lanka draw opening Test
Dinesh Chandimal and Niroshan Dickwella dug deep with the Chattogram surface staying true to its nature of being a batting paradise as the first Test between Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, ended in a draw. Things, however, could have been different if not for the pair’s dogged 99-run stand for the seventh wicket on the fifth and final day.
Having started the morning on a brisk note, Sri Lanka lost two wickets each on either side of the lunch interval to stumble to 161 for 6, with a narrow lead of 93. But both Chandimal and Dickwella showed grit and determination keeping the Bangladesh bowlers at bay for 203 deliveries to eke out a draw. Dickwella, more adventurous with his shot-making, brought up his 20th Test half-century and finished with an unbeaten 61 off 96 balls. Chandimal, on the other hand, was more measured during his 135-ball 39 not out. The two teams shook hands an hour before the scheduled close of play, with Sri Lanka on 260 for 6 in 90.1 overs.
The Bangladesh bowlers, particularly Taijul Islam and Shakib Al Hasan, stuck to their lines, but were unable to break the seventh-wicket stand. Taijul was the pick of the bowlers returning 4 for 82. Angelo Mathews was named Player of the Match for his 199 in the first innings.
It took Sri Lanka all of 24 balls to wipe off the 29-run deficit in the first session with Kusal Mendis taking the attack to Bangladesh. He was the aggressor while Karunaratne, more circumspect in his approach, rotated the strike well as runs came at a premium in the first hour of the morning.
Kusal started off the day by clattering Taijul for two fours in the first over before slamming Khaled Ahmed for a hattrick of four either side of the wicket as Sri Lanka scored 59 runs in the first nine overs of the first session. It did not help that Bangladesh were a bowler short with Shoriful Islam ruled out of the series, after fracturing his right hand courtesy a Kasun Rajitha bouncer late on day three.
Shakib and Taijul then restored some parity with the latter striking twice. He first removed Kusal Mendis with a peach of a delivery that pitched on middle stump to turn and trim the off bail for a 43-ball 48 before accounting for Mathews with a stunning return catch for a duck. Mathews, who was visibly frustrated having not scored for 14 balls launched a straight drive back at Taijul, who somehow got both hands to it and completed the catch above his head.
Sri Lanka, ahead by 60 runs at lunch, started off after the break on a positive note collecting seven runs from each of the first two overs. Karunaratne reached his 28th half-century with a thick outside edge off Shakib. However, his joy was short-lived as he fell soon after to Taijul. Going the aggressive route, Karunaratne skipped down the track but his mistimed flick could only travel as far as Mominul Haque at midwicket, who completed a good catch diving to his right.
Dhananjaya de Silva continued taking the attacking option and he did succeed to an extent before falling to a rank long-hop for 33. Shakib, to his credit, floated the short of a length delivery, enticing the batter, who took the bait and pulled straight to Mushfiqur Rahim. Shakib could have had another wicket the very next ball but Dickwella’s sweep just evaded a leaping Taijul at backward square.
Sri Lanka were staring down the barrel at that stage but Chandimal and Dickwella dug in to rescue the visitors.
Brief scores:
Sri Lanka 397
(Angelo Mathews 199, Dinesh Chandimal 66, Kusal Mendis 54; Nayeem Hasan 6/105) & 260/6 (Niroshan Dickwella 61*, Dimuth Karunaratne 52, Kusal Mendis 48; Taijul Islam 4/82) drew with Bangladesh 465 (Tamim Iqbal 133, Mushfiqur Rahim 105, Liton Das 88; Kasun Rajitha 4/60, Asitha Fernando 3/72).
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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]
Sports
Sri Lanka’s RPS blueprint
Sri Lanka’s home ODI record since the wreckage of the 2023 World Cup has been a study in quiet efficiency. Ninth place in India and an early Champions Trophy exit could have sent the wheels spinning, but instead the hosts have responded by turning their backyard into a fortress. Since then, Sri Lanka have played seven ODI series at home and won all of them. These are not against minnows, but against the heavyweights, including World Cup finalists Australia and India. Beat England again on Saturday and within the space of 18 months, the so-called Big Three would have been ticked off one by one.
Much of this good work has been done at the R. Premadasa Stadium, a venue that has become Sri Lanka’s tactical sweet spot. There are murmurs, as always, about doctored pitches handing the hosts an unfair edge, but that argument doesn’t quite stand. The current England series has been played on honest strips and in any case, this is no longer the Sri Lankan line-up of old, blessed with nimble feet and wrists made for slow bowling. Apart from Kusal Mendis, the current batting group struggles badly against spin, particularly wrist spin, which explains why Pakistan doubled up with leg-spinners recently and why England rolled out Adil Rashid and Rehan Ahmed in the opening ODI.
The RPS blueprint is fairly straightforward: bat first, post something in the region of 275, then squeeze. Patience is the currency here. After the 30th over of the chase, the surface begins to grip, the ball talks a little more and visiting sides often find themselves strangled by scoreboard pressure rather than outright turn.
The opening win against England, however, didn’t quite follow the script. Sri Lanka’s seamers sprayed it around towards the end, struggling for line and control, perhaps guilty of overcooking the wide yorker. That is where solid coaching support becomes priceless, brains in the dugout to complement Sanath Jayasuriya, not attention-seekers chasing social media applause.
The old saying goes that the ends don’t justify the means, but winning has a way of papering over cracks. The public may forget the flaws, but coaches can’t afford to. Margins at this level are wafer-thin and what slips by on one day can bite hard on another.
One major positive was Kusal Mendis finally embracing the anchor’s role. Without him, Sri Lanka might well have been bowled out inside the 50 overs. Too often Mendis has dazzled with a rapid 30 before gifting his wicket with a low-percentage stroke. This time, it was a back-to-the-wall innings – cramps, pressure and all – and he refused to throw in the towel.
The maturity was evident in the final over. Sitting on 92, Mendis resisted the temptation to hog the strike in search of a hundred, instead backing Dunith Wellalage. The youngster repaid the faith in style, clouting three boundaries and a six as 23 runs came off the over – the decisive burst in a 19-run victory.
Mendis also effected two sharp stumpings and many in the press box had him pencilled in as Player of the Match. But the nod went to Wellalage and rightly so. His all-round contribution tilted the contest Sri Lanka’s way and that stunning catch to dismiss Rehan Ahmed was pure athleticism and good presence of mind.
Off the field, the British tourists outnumbered locals in the stands and beer sales reportedly went through the roof on Thursday. Colombo’s leading hotels are full, a timely shot in the arm for the economy. Now the hosts must play their part off the pitch as well – clear signboards, directions to washrooms and basic facilities go a long way.
by Rex Clementine ✍️
Sports
T20 World Cup trophy arrives at Dialog headquarters
The ICC Men’s T20 World Cup Trophy made a landmark stop at the Dialog Axiata PLC headquarters on Friday, marking a celebratory moment in Sri Lanka’s countdown to the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026.
Following its stop at Dialog headquarters, the trophy embarked on an island-wide tour, travelling to Kandy, Dambulla, and Jaffna. The tour offers fans a rare opportunity to see the trophy up close, capture memorable moments and take part in the build-up to the tournament.
Co-hosted by Sri Lanka and India, the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 will be played from 7th February to 8th March across multiple venues in both countries.
The visit carried special significance for Dialog, a long-standing partner of Sri Lankan cricket. Over the years, Dialog has played a key role in transforming how fans experience the game, from live broadcasts and digital platforms to on-ground activations, helping ensure that cricket remains widely accessible to supporters across the island.
Dialog holds the exclusive ICC Men’s T20 World Cup media and broadcasting rights in Sri Lanka under a multi-year agreement. Fans will be able to enjoy live matches, highlights, expert analysis, and comprehensive coverage on Dialog Television and Dialog Play App, bringing the excitement of world-class cricket into Sri Lankan homes. This is complemented by a free-to-air broadcast partnership with Supreme TV, helping extend coverage to audiences nationwide.
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