Sports
Galle to host both Tests in Warne-Murali Trophy showdown
by Rex Clementine
The legendary Galle International Cricket Stadium is set to be the battleground for the two-match Test series between Australia and Sri Lanka this coming January. With both games counting toward the World Test Championship (WTC), the stakes couldn’t be higher – this series might well be the stepping stone to the grand final at Lord’s, slated for June next year.
Currently, Australia sit in second place on the WTC leaderboard, with Sri Lanka nipping at their heels in third. Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) announced yesterday that the series opener would kick off on the 29th of January, with the second Test following on the 6th of February.
Australia are scheduled to arrive in Sri Lanka on the 20th of January, giving them ample time to get their feet wet in the local conditions. The last time these two teams locked horns in 2022, they split the series 1-1, Australia drew first blood, but Sri Lanka bounced back to level the series. Both of those games, too, unfolded on the sun-baked turf of Galle.
Sri Lanka would relish the chance to play both matches in Galle, a venue that’s become something of a fortress for them. Recently, they clean-swept New Zealand 2-0 here, marking their first series win over the Kiwis in 15 years.
All eyes will be on left-arm spinner Prabath Jayasuriya, who has proven to be nothing short of a thorn in the side of visiting teams at Galle. His record speaks for itself—71 wickets in just eight Tests here, with an eye-popping average of 21.78, including eight five-wicket hauls.
In addition to the Tests, Australia will play a one-off ODI on February 13th, though the venue is still up in the air. This match serves as a warm-up for their Champions Trophy campaign, a tournament Sri Lanka will sit out, having failed to qualify.
Sports
Brazil bowler Laura Cardoso takes 9 Lesotho wickets in record-breaking T20 win
Brazil are the unlikely candidates to have claimed two cricket records as one of their bowlers took a record nine wickets – including five in a row – in their 189-run T20 Women’s International victory against Lesotho in Botswana.
Having won the toss on Thursday, at the BCA Kalahari Women’s T20 International Tournament, Brazil posted a daunting 202-8 with wicketkeeper Monnike Machado hitting 69 off 41.
The fun, for the Brazilians, was only just beginning, though, as Laura Cardoso claimed a hat-trick with the last three deliveries of her first over – the second of the Lesotho innings – to set in motion the incredible feat that eventually saw the Africans bowled out for 13.
The 21-year-old then continued her wicket-taking achievement with a Women’s T20 International first of five dismissals in a row as she struck with the first two balls of her second over. This was all part of claiming the first nine Lesotho wickets to fall, but being denied the chance to take all 10 after a change of bowling following her third over. Her final wicket was Ret’sepile Limema, who fell to the fifth ball of the fifth over, with Cardoso replaced for the following over at that end. Her nine wickets, nevertheless, is the best return in either men’s or women’s T20 internationals.
The right-arm seamer did, indeed, come close to another hat-trick, when she claimed wickets with the last two balls of her second over, which itself totalled four victims.
Cardoso, who has has taken 55 wickets in 48 T20 matches for Brazil, replaces Indonesia’s Rohmalia Rohmalia at the top of the Women’s T20 best bowling rankings, as she finished with figures of 3-2-4-9.
Rohmalia had claimed seven wickets in 2024 in a match against Mongolia in Bali. Only three other women have claimed seven in a T20 international.
The men’s record, and the overall in the format, had been held by Bhutan’s Sonam Yeshey after he took eight wickets for seven runs against Myanmar last year.
The previous record for the number of wickets in consecutive deliveries was four, and was jointly held with the most prominent occasion in women’s cricket being when Shakera Selman pulled off the feat for the West Indies against Pakistan in 2018. Afghanistan’s Rashid Khan and Sri Lanka’s Lasith Malinga are among the most notable bowlers from the men’s game to have claimed four consecutively in the format.
Although a huge winning margin, Brazil’s overall win does not compare with Argentina’s record after they beat Chile by 364 runs in 2023. The Argentinians had struck 427-1 to set up their victory.
Lesotho’s part in the record extends to no further than Cardoso’s haul, with the record-lowest total belonging to Mali, who were bowled out for 6 in 2019 by Rwanda.
Brazil, who lead the six-team tournament with five straight wins, play Mozambique on Friday.
[Aljazeera]
Latest News
Zimbabwe Women set for maiden tour of Pakistan
| Date | Match |
|---|---|
| May 3 | 1st ODI |
| May 6 | 2nd ODI |
| May 9 | 3rd ODI |
| May 12 | 1st T20I |
| May 14 | 2nd T20I |
| May 15 | 3rd T20I |
[Cricbuzz]
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