Sports
Injury woes continue as Binura goes down
Rex Clementine
in Sydney
At the rate Sri Lanka’s players are breaking down during the World Cup here in Australia, there is one thing that’s clear. There’s something that’s seriously faulty in our coaching system. There’s also another point, we don’t appreciate Chaminda Vaas as much as he should be. The left-arm seamer played Test cricket for 16 years and missed just one tour due to injury – England 1998. Apart from the 100 Test matches that he played in, Vaas also played County Cricket for close to a decade repressing four different English counties – Middlesex, Worcestershire, Northampton and Hampshire.

In Perth, playing at the state of the art Optus Stadium, the Sri Lankans had their tails up after setting Australia a target of 158. A score of 158 isn’t that fancy in modern day cricket, but this was Perth, where quicks dominated and the Aussies were under fire having lost their first game to New Zealand by a massive 89 runs.
All the excitement faded away in the first over itself as Binura Fernando limped off the field holding his hamstring. He never returned to the field. The Sri Lankans flew off to Sydney yesterday and a call will be made on Binura today. The Island learns that we are only waiting for confirmation that he too has been ruled out. That will be Sri Lanka’s sixth injury in this World Cup and you can only pity a team that has lost half its side.
Ironically, Binura wasn’t part of the original squad or one of the traveling reserves and was called up to Australia as replacement for Dilshan Madushanka, who tore his quad muscle and was ruled out of the tournament on the eve of the curtain-raiser in Geelong. Binura had little time to get acclimatized to conditions as Pramod Madushan (hamstring) and Dushmantha Chameera (calf) were also injured and featured during the qualifying round. He hardly looked match fit moving about gingerly and your worst fears came to a reality when he went off in Perth. Asitha Fernando or Matheesha Pathirana will be drafted in for him. Despite the heavy loss in Perth, Sri Lanka had their moments defending 158 particularly when Lahiru Kumara bowled a hostile spell. Not often does an Asian fast bowler gets the Aussies rattled unless he’s Wasim Akram, but Kumara after troubling Aaron Finch, hit Glenn Maxwell on the cheek and the batsman was in discomfort. That moment you realized how much the team is missing Dushmantha Chameera.
Group ‘A’ is now wide open after England’s shock defeat to Ireland yesterday. Sri Lanka will play New Zealand and England in Sydney and Afghanistan at the Gabba and if they win two of those three games, they should go through.
Sports
Fans on concourses instead of in seats, claims FIFA
Fifa says numerous empty seats were visible in the near-sell-out Group A match between South Korea and the Czech Republic because of fans remaining on concourses.
Football’s world governing body announced an attendance of 44,985 at the 46,000-seat Estadio Akron in Guadalajara, leading to accusations they exaggerated the number of people in the stadium.
The discrepancy followed pre-tournament criticism of ticket pricing and questions over demand for a number of matches in the expanded 48-team World Cup.
“Official attendance figures reflect the number of tickets scanned and spectators present within the stadium footprint, rather than visual assessments of seating occupancy at any given moment during the match,” Fifa said.
“Fifa works closely with stadium authorities and ticketing teams to ensure all published figures are based on verified operational data.
“Please note that, during last night’s match in Guadalajara, several ticketed fans could be seen standing in concourses rather than staying in their assigned seats throughout the match.”
The organisers also issued a picture showing a mostly full stadium.

Czech Republic are playing in their first World Cup for 20 years [BBC]
Swathes of empty seats appeared after half-time in Friday’s game between Canada and Bosnia-Herzegovina, but steadily began to fill up.
More than 80,000 fans attended the Azteca stadium to watch the opening game between co-hosts Mexico and South Africa, and it was mostly Mexican fans in attendance at Estadio Akron for Thursday’s later fixture.
While there was a sizeable South Korean contingent, there appeared to be only a limited Czech presence for the 2-1 defeat.
The Czechs qualified late in March and face a demanding travel schedule that sees them visit Atlanta before returning to Mexico City for their final group game.
Tickets for the tournament, held in Mexico, Canada and the United States, have been the subject of fluctuating prices and availability, with thousands remaining available for sale across several platforms.
BBC Sport has found tickets for matches involving the smaller nations are now available well below face value – across Fifa’s own resale site and secondary marketplaces.
Travel and hotel prices have also escalated, leading to the suggestion fans are being priced out of the tournament.
[BBC]
Latest News
Co-hosts Canada begin 2026 World Cup campaign with a draw against Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Canada substitute Cyle Larin made an instant impact as his goal rescued a point for the co-hosts as they began their 2026 World Cup campaign with a draw against Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Southampton striker Larin had only been on the pitch for just over two minutes when he superbly spun away from Tarik Muharemovic and fired past Nikola Vasilj, aided by a slight deflection.
It was the first time Canada had avoided defeat in the World Cup finals, after they had been beaten in all three games in 1986 and then again in 2022.
Bosnia, who gained penalty shootout wins in the qualifying play-offs over Wales and then Italy to secure their place in North America, took a 21st-minute lead in Toronto.
Jovo Lukic grabbed his first goal for his country when he headed in after ex-Arsenal defender Sead Kolasinac had flicked on Ivan Basic’s corner.
Canada nearly equalised early in the second half as Richie Laryea’s shot was going in, only for Kolasinac to produce an excellent clearance by diverting the ball on to the crossbar and away.
The hosts pushed for a leveller and had another good opportunity, only for Nikola Katic to clear off the line from Tani Oluwaseyi’s goal-bound header.
But, in a thrilling end-to-end match, Canada got a deserved equaliser in the 78th minute for their first ever World Cup draw.
Canada are one of three host nations for the 2026 World Cup, along with Mexico and the United States, and were looking to record a win, just as Mexico did when they beat South Africa 2-0 in Thursday’s tournament opener.
The Toronto Stadium was packed, with the majority of the home fans wearing red shirts and those away supporters in blue, with both groups contributing to a superb atmosphere.
After Alanis Morissette had sung the Canadian national anthem, the fans were treated to an entertaining, open game.
Canada, managed by former Leeds boss Jesse Marsch, had seen Jonathan David, Oluwaseyi and Stephen Eustaquio all guilty of missing opportunities, with Bosnia looking to hold on to their one-goal advantage.
But Marsch’s attacking substitutions proved successful, with Larin’s goal coming 121 seconds after he was introduced.
Group B always looked like being one of the closest, and Canada will still fancy their chances of advancing with games against Qatar on 18 June and Switzerland on 24 June still to come.
[BBC]
Latest News
Wyatt-Hodge century drives England to statement victory in tournament opener
Danni Wyatt-Hodge led a command performance with the bat, and in the field, as England defied the gravity of their home World Cup opening match, to produce a thrilling statement victory over Sri Lanka, in front of a 14,865 crowd at Edgbaston.
Aided and abetted by Amy Jones and Nat Sciver Brunt, Wyatt-Hodge dominated a toiling Sri Lanka attack with a superb unbeaten 105 from 62 balls – her third in the T20I format and her first since returning from maternity leave only a handful of weeks ago.
In her eighth T20 World Cup, and at the age of 35, this was a performance to banish any doubts about England’s readiness to seize their opportunities in the coming weeks. She followed it up with a stunning running catch to ignite England’s fielding display, which was in turn seized by the left-arm seam of Freya Kemp, whose innings-breaking haul of 4 for 21 allowed her side to cruise to an untroubled 87-run win.
England’s openers make statement start
Sri Lanka chose to bowl first after winning the toss, though without much cause. “We don’t know these conditions and yesterday it rained,” Chamari Athapaththu said at the toss. Well, today it poured, with runs, as Wyatt-Hodge and her new-old opening partner, Jones, climbed onto the offensive with an uncompromising stand of 135 from 82 balls.
The pair hadn’t opened together in a full international since their unremarkable alliance at this same tournament in Australia in 2020, when the pair’s performances had included a brace of ducks against Thailand. But, with Sciver-Brunt restored to the XI after her calf injury, and Sophia Dunkley paying the price for a fallow run of form, the timing was right for a reunion, and the conditions could hardly have proved more conducive.
Sri Lanka’s nerves weren’t helped by a lengthy delay before the first ball – with something glinting behind the bowler’s arm, perhaps a left-over from the Wicked set that had served as the tournament’s opening ceremony – and Athapaththu duly rang the changes in the powerplay, with four different bowlers used in consecutive overs.
England didn’t come springing out of the traps, but nor did they need to, with the absence of a conventional midwicket kickstarting a diet of regular leg-side runs. But, after Jones had been dropped at backward square off Athapaththu – a one-handed attempt from Kavisha Dilhari, who perhaps had more time than she thought – the guard-rails came off, with Wyatt-Hodge battering three off-side fours off Malki Madara, to carry England to 51 for 0 after six.
Wyatt-Hodge takes command
With her new baby Daisy at the forefront of her thoughts, Wyatt-Hodge exuded experience and contentment in a showstopping performance. She had arguably been a touch short of runs since her return, though her domestic performances for Surrey – two centuries and a 96 in four innings – had left little doubt about her enduring class. There was never any doubt about her place at the top of England’s pecking order, and now we know why.
With Jones ticking over alongside her, Wyatt-Hodge took command of England’s tempo. She cracked eight fours in her 33-ball fifty, the last of which – up and over extra cover – brought out the first sighting of her Bebeto-style rock-a-baby celebration. She followed that up with the first six of the tournament, a muscular slap over long-on off Athapaththu, as England kept pounding along at a ten-an-over tempo that offered Sri Lanka no chance to collect their thoughts.
The only real jeopardy in her chanceless innings was the prospect of landing her third T20I century. She was on 96 as Madara began the final over, but immediately lost the strike to a miscued swipe across a slower ball. It could have been costly with Sciver-Brunt oozing familiar class in her unbeaten 46 from 22 balls, and proving merciless in her own boundary-hunting.
But a sharp piece of fielding on the bounce at backward square denied Sciver-Brunt a third boundary in a row, and Wyatt-Hodge was left with two balls to seal the deal. She needed just one – a pre-meditated shuffle to the off-side, and a firmly placed sweep through backward square. Edgbaston roared, as the Bebeto came out again, and one final launch up and over long-off completed an exceptional evening out for England’s longest-serving campaigner.
England’s support act show their class
Jones is an enthusiastic England opener, having thrived in the ODI role of late, including with back-to-back centuries against West Indies last summer. And though she was outshone by her partner in the final analysis, her return to the top was ample justification for England’s rejig. With a fifty from 34 balls, she scarcely paled in terms of tempo, even if she had a touch more fortune along the way, including a bad drop on 48, as Sugandika Kumari fumbled a return chance at the third attempt. It was left to the skipper to show how it should be done, with a comfortable low take at cover to give Madara her first World Cup wicket.
If that felt like respite for Sri Lanka, it was nothing of the sort. Sciver-Brunt’s calf tear has been a lurking concern for England all summer long, and the fact that she is playing solely as a batter is proof that she’s not entirely out of the woods. And yet this was a return to allay any immediate fears.
Notwithstanding a tough chance in the deep on 14, Sciver-Brunt’s timing was exquisite from the outset, and her range of shots remains a cut above. Her six fours included a dinky ramp over the keeper off Mithali Ayodhya, whom she immediately drilled down the ground one ball later, as well as arguably the shot of the night in the final over – a contemptuously powerful drive through the covers to bring up England’s 200. Barring an untimely ‘pop’ of that pesky calf, England’s skipper is in the form, and the mood, to make hay at this tournament.
England close it out with attitude
Even allowing for an Athapaththu masterpiece, a target of 220 was never realistic for Sri Lanka. The main contest in the second half was England against themselves – and they won hands-down with a hugely encouraging display of confidence and skill. All six of England’s bowlers were given a sighter inside the first nine overs, just to get them involved in the World Cup vibe, and by the time the last of those, Kemp, had ripped through the lower order, including taking three in four balls, they had utterly nailed their brief.
The honour of England’s first wicket of the World Cup went to Lauren Bell, with a pinpoint lbw that Vishmi Gunaratne reviewed to no avail whatsoever. But the moment of ignition went to the player of the moment, Wyatt-Hodge, with a sprinting, swirling, sprawling catch at deep square leg to prise out Sri Lanka’s queen-pin, Athapaththu. It was a catch she had no right to take, but she styled it out all the same, not unlike Ben Stokes’ epic at The Oval in the men’s opening match of the 2019 World Cup.
Wyatt-Hodge did take the gloss off her own display with two subsequent drops, though neither was anything close to a sitter, but her standards were upheld by the rest of England’s fielders. Kemp clung onto a sharp take at short backward square to see off Imesha Dulani and give Linsey Smith her first wicket; Smith then returned the favour at deep square leg, to ignite Kemp’s remarkable late surge.
After a history of back stress-fractures, Kemp’s return to bowling has been gradual and micro-managed, with this tournament the absolute end-game. Her first ball of the evening was inauspicious, but ultimately misleading, as Harshitha Samarawickrama cuffed her dismissively over deep midwicket for six. Before the over was done, she’d got her vengeance with an offcutter – the first of six chances in the space of ten balls.
It was left to England’s other old stager, Sophie Ecclestone, to mop up the resistance with two wickets in the match’s final over, to put the seal on the most morale-boosting night out imaginable for the tournament hosts.
SCORES:
England 219 for 1 in 20 overs (Amy Jones 53, Danni Wyatt-Hodge 105*, Nat Sciver-Brunt 46*; Malki Madara 1-51) beat Sri Lanka 132 in 20 overs (Harshitha Samarawickrama 29, Hansima Karunarathne 11, Kavisha Dilhari 19, Nilakshi Silva 39; Lauren Bell 1-15, Linsey Smith 1-24, Charlie Dean 2-18, Sophie Ecclestone 2-27, Freya Kemp 4-21)by 87 runs
[Cricinfo]
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