Sports
England Under-19 win last over thriller
Rex Clementine
in Worcester
Sri Lanka Under-19 suffered their first defeat on their tour of England when they lost the first one-dayer in the last over at New Road, Worcester on Monday. In a game affected by rain, Sri Lanka’s innings was cut short in the 48th over when they had reached 248 for nine and England were set a revised target of 172 in 24 overs. The hosts lost seven wickets to get there with Jamal Richards who looks like Jofra Archer sealing the win with a boundary in the last over.
Batting on a synthetic pitch, the Sri Lankans struggled to post a decent total. Despite the openers Hasitha Amarasinghe and Abisheak Liyanaarachchi adding 45 runs for the first wicket, the introduction of Fateh Singh saw Sri Lanka slumping to 74 for three as the left-arm spinner dismissed the openers and the team’s best batter Ranuda Somaratna.
Shevon Daniel did well to score a half-century but a Thomas Aspinwall thunderbolt cleaned him up. The Lancastrian has been the standout perfumer on this tour and you sense that it’s only a matter of time before he starts replacing another Lancastrian in the England senior side called Jimmy Anderson. Those are big boots to fill but with his pace and swing, Aspinwall has impressed even the Sri Lankan management.
The lower order saved the day for Sri Lanka. The tourist at one point looked as if they might not get to 200 but Anjala Bandara (44) and Malsha Tharupathi (37) gave the team a decent total.
England openers George Thomas and Ben McKinney added 56 runs for the first wicket in 49 balls as Sri Lanka opened bowling with Traveen Mathews’ spin. Sahan Mihira provided the breakthrough before captain Raveen de Silva delivered some deadly blows.
De Silva dismissed Ross Whitefield for five and then had the presence of mind to run out Matthew Hurst off his own bowling. It wasn’t Mankading but Alex Horton had smashed a straight drive right onto the boot of Hurst and the batsman was hurrying for a single. De Silva picked up the ball after it had deflected off the boot and threw it to the keeper with the non-striker hopping around not able to reach the crease.
Wicketkeeper Horton was in a hurry to finish things off as he reached 49 off 37 balls with four fours and two sixes. De Silva challenged him to take on the longer leg side boundary and Horton took the bait but failed to clear the ropes and was caught at deep mid-wicket.
England needed 48 runs at that stage and it looked Sri Lanka had the game in the bag but Daniel Ibrahim smashed 32 off 21 balls to take England within touching distance. When he was dismissed, they needed two runs in the last over. Sri Lanka opted for their quickest bowler Sahan Mihira instead of testing the tail-enders with spin. It was a gamble and in sports you have to trust your instincts and take them. It didn’t go to plan as Mihira served up a full toss first ball and Jamal smashed it for four to give England a 1-0 lead.
Sports
After stormy build up, Sri Lanka look for calm waters
Not many are giving Sri Lanka a fighting chance in this World Cup after being handed a 3-0 whitewash by England on the eve of the tournament. Yet, with a core that has been together for five years and the comfort of home conditions under their spikes, they will quietly fancy sneaking into the second round at the very least. The campaign gets underway on Sunday when they lock horns with Ireland at the RPS.
After the opener, the former champions shift base to Kandy where Oman await on February 12, followed by the heavyweight bout against Australia. They then return to Colombo to face Zimbabwe in the final group fixture. Apart from the Aussies, the other three sides sit below Sri Lanka in the rankings, reason enough for the hosts to believe they can punch above their recent weight.
Ideally, the team would have liked to go in with a settled deck. The chopping and changing of selectors and captain has hardly gone down well with the public, although Charith Asalanka’s excesses left the authorities with something of a Hobson’s choice. Whether they should have held their nerve until the World Cup was done and dusted instead of twisting the knife remains a question that refuses to go away.
Dasun Shanaka, the man recalled to replace Asalanka, has been around this block before and rarely set the field alight as leader. What he brings to the table is well known, as are his frailties with the bat, particularly against wrist spin. Should he fail to strike form, the selectors may be forced into a 2014-style déjà vu, leaving the captain cooling his heels outside the playing XI. The trouble is, there is no obvious skipper in waiting to take the reins if that storm breaks.
The panel has also copped flak for plucking Dhananjaya de Silva out of thin air. It is widely believed his recall came at the behest of a fast-bowling guru who has now begun offering batting sermons as well. That is precisely why a selection committee needs a spine of its own, rather than dancing to every passing tune.
Sri Lanka had been making steady, if unspectacular, strides in white ball cricket without exactly setting the stage ablaze. Their blueprint was clear, big runs from Pathum Nissanka at the top, Matheesha Pathirana creating mayhem with his slingy darts and a spin attack marshalled by Wanindu Hasaranga. With that backbone, a few rubs of the green might have made them serious dark horses. Instead, they pressed the panic button with the World Cup on the doorstep and now appear a touch disjointed and disoriented.
What tilts the scales in their favour is a gentle runway – fixtures against Ireland and Oman before they enter the sharp end against Australia. For now, the fans seem to have voted with their feet, but one statement win over the Aussies could have them flocking back in droves. After all, it’s a funny old game.
by Rex Clementine
Latest News
England enter the unknown in maiden encounter with Nepal
Ten years on from their improbable run to the World T20 final in Kolkata, England return to India with quiet expectation. While controversy swirls around their captain, Harry Brook, and what he did and did not get up to outside a nightclub on Halloween, the team that he oversees has found some stillness in the eye of the storm. With 10 wins in their last 11 completed T20Is, they are as ready as they can be for the challenge that lies ahead.
So too, for that matter, are their opening-night opponents. Eighteen months ago in St Vincent, Nepal came within a whisker of a stunning upset against the eventual World Cup finalists, South Africa. They return to the T20 World Cup stage with a battle-hardened unit, forewarned of the pressures but with proof of their worthiness, and with two successful seasons of the Nepal Premier League under their belts to rehearse those big-match moments.
Like England, they arrive on an impressive run of recent form, albeit six wins out of six against the likes of Kuwait, Japan and Qatar in September’s qualifying tournament isn’t exactly apples and pears. Nevertheless, they are here on merit, and very much on the rise, with a young, established captain in Rohit Paudel, and an attacking array of bowlers including the nippy Karan KC. A maiden international against England will be a proud moment in their development, but there’s no reason to believe they should be daunted.
England have endured enough Associate hiccups down the years to take nothing for granted. But their confidence for this campaign won’t simply be derived from their run of recent form. Their range of contributors has arguably been the most heartening aspect, with their spinners finding form and impact throughout the Sri Lanka series, including the back-up offerings of Will Jacks and Jacob Bethell, while their batting has shown depth, power and versatility ever since the summer, when – against South Africa at Old Trafford – they recorded the first 300-plus total in a Full Members’ T20I.
Brook would love to be able to parade England’s T20I form as proof of their progress since he took over as white-ball captain. Unfortunately, those issues of team culture will not go away in what he admits has been a ‘horrendous’ few weeks for him, which means this is perhaps not the ideal moment for his overdue return to India. Unusually for a modern-day superstar, Brook is a relative stranger in these parts. He missed England’s last tour on compassionate grounds, and is currently serving a two-year ban from the IPL for reneging on his deal with Delhi Capitals. His solitary season, for Sunrisers Hyderabad, consisted of 90 runs in ten innings … and a startling 55-ball hundred against KKR, after which he missed his chance to endear himself to the locals by hitting out instead at his critics. He’ll doubtless have similar urges in the coming weeks, if he gets half a chance. It promises to be eventful, one way or another.
Sandeep Lamichhane has endured his own off-field controversies, of a significantly more serious variety. In November 2023 he was convicted of rape and jailed for eight years, but his sentence was overturned on appeal the following May, just in time for his recall for Nepal’s 2024 T20 World Cup campaign (though he was unable to secure a visa for the US and so missed their opening two games). He was already their best-known player, thanks to a cunning repertoire of legbreaks and googlies that have earned him nearly 250 T20 career wickets at little more than a run a ball. For all England’s strengths, spin remains their glaring weakness, and he’s a seasoned campaigner who will know how to exploit it.
True to form, England named their XI on the eve of the match. Phil Salt is fit again after a back spasm in Pallekele, and will open once again alongside Jos Buttler. Tom Banton keeps his place at No.4, ahead of Ben Duckett, while left-arm seamer Luke Wood gets an early outing ahead of Jamie Overton.
England: Phil Salt, Jos Buttler (wk), Jacob Bethell, Tom Banton, Harry Brook (capt), Sam Curran, Will Jacks, Liam Dawson, Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid, Luke Wood.
Nepal warmed up for this contest with two emphatic wins over UAE and Canada, with Aasif Sheikh impressing with a hard-hitting fifty from the top of the order in the latter contest.
Nepal (probable): Aasif Sheikh (wk), Kushal Bhurtel, Rohit Paudel (capt), Dipendra Airee, Aarif Sheikh, Gulsan Jha, Karan KC, Sompal Kami, Sandeep Lamichhane, Lalit Rajbanshi/Nandan Yadav, Sher Malla
Sports
Gateway College, Colombo crowned under-17 basketball champions
Gateway College once again stamped their dominance on the schools basketball arena by emerging Champions at the International Schools Under-17 basketball tournament organised by Colombo International School. In a remarkable achievement, this victory marks the fifth consecutive time that Gateway College lads have clinched this prestigious trophy.
Gateway delivered a flawless campaign, displaying tactical maturity, defensive resilience and attacking flair from the group stages right through to the final.
In the group matches, Gateway set the tone early with emphatic victories: A dominant 65–27win against Gateway College, Kandy and a convincing 62–24 triumph over British School in Colombo (BSC).
Carrying this momentum into the knockout stages, Gateway continued their relentless form. In the quarter-finals, they outplayed Horizon College International with a solid 50–25victory, followed by an impressive 75–40 win against Elizabeth Moir School (EMS) in the semi-finals.
The high-intensity final, played at the Olympus Indoor Stadium, Malabe, saw Gateway College Colombo face hosts Colombo International School (CISC). Gateway won 79-64.
Dulain Theverapperuma, of Gateway was named Best Defensive Player while Navidu Waduwavala, was declared Most Valuable Player.
-
Business1 day agoZone24x7 enters 2026 with strong momentum, reinforcing its role as an enterprise AI and automation partner
-
Business5 days agoSLIM-Kantar People’s Awards 2026 to recognise Sri Lanka’s most trusted brands and personalities
-
Business6 days agoAll set for Global Synergy Awards 2026 at Waters Edge
-
Business1 day agoHNB recognized among Top 10 Best Employers of 2025 at the EFC National Best Employer Awards
-
Business5 days agoAPI-first card issuing and processing platform for Pan Asia Bank
-
Editorial3 days agoAll’s not well that ends well?
-
Business1 day agoGREAT 2025–2030: Sri Lanka’s Green ambition meets a grid reality check
-
Features3 days agoPhew! The heat …
