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Kandy SC understands the supreme reality of rugby!

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This season too Kandy SC has created that vibe that their prestige in rugby cannot be dented that easily (Picture courtesy Sri Lanka Rugby’s Media Unit)

By a Special Sports Correspondent

Kandy Sports Club is riding on a high wave this season too and their presence in the domestic rugby scene has given the sport at home the much needed lift to attract attention of fans and sponsors.

Imagine being the only division 1 rugby playing club in the Central Province and having to compete against seven other teams which are scattered all over in another province which is 72 km away from Kandy! Till very recently Kandy didn’t see that easily their opposition at rugby and perhaps what happens in terms of preparations in Colombo. But now, thanks to a leading sports website, boasting of massive live coverage given to rugby matches, Kandy can follow move for move when the other top teams in the tournament clash in matches organized in venues in the Western Province. The same is true for other teams; you don’t a need video spy recording matches which feature other teams. This sports website is doing it for all the teams and you only need internet connection to keep yourself in the loop.

But still, Kandy SC is alone; and the players surely must be getting that feeling of being isolated in the central hills of this country. The players have ‘demi god’ status and probably their private lives also must be coming under the scrutiny of the public when they step into town. This is not an exaggeration when you consider that rugby in Kandy SC has the potential to close down the town and bring in the crowds to Nittawela in their numbers on match day.

Kandy as a town has got used to a few luxuries where sports are concerned. The list will be long if the number of sports practiced in Kandy is jotted down. But what is the supreme reality of sport one must understand when the individual continues practicing the discipline he or she chooses after leaving school? The answer is ‘can the individual engage in the sport for a living, pay his bills and survive 30 days of the month with what he makes as earnings’. I know this might be confusing because there is a question and the answer is also coming in the form of a question. If the answer after analyzing this question is ‘yes’ then it’s worthwhile doing sport at a competitive level or a semi professional level because then the sport seems to be looking after you. But here in the Central Hills or Nittawela to be precise the club takes good care of its players.

Kandy SC can be a too larger institute to enter into at first. Remember that Kandy SC is not restricting membership to players born in the Central Hills. So many players have left Colombo and moved to Kandy and furthered their careers. A few players who broke off from their Colombo roots and ended up in Kandy are the late Sajith Mallikarachchi, Sanjeewa Jayasinghe, Dhanushka Ranjan and Srinath Sooriyaarachchi. There may be more like them, but these four players did not only Kandy SC proud, but made their contributions to the country’s national team in both sevens and fifteen-a-side rugby. There were players who originally schooled in academic institutes in Central Province and moved to Western Province in search of greener pastures; choosing to go with Colombo based clubs. But the really good players virtually came back to the place of their birth and found Kandy SC to be like ‘Hotel California’; we remind readers of the line in that song which goes-you can check out any time you like, but you can never leave’. Kandy SC shares similar sentiments!

In Colombo, players come and go and they are soon forgotten. But at the Nittawela club players in the likes of Denzil Kobbekaduwa, Lasantha Wijesuriya, Priyantha Ekanayake, Indrajith Bandaranayake, Sean Wijesinghe, Nalaka Weerakkody and Fazil Marija were honoured by the club by naming stands inside Kandy Sport Club in their names. This goes on to prove how big the rugby culture is in Kandy and underscores the fact that the club throws its weight behind players in making them brands or icons in the sport.

Marija is in charge of coaching the side he represented as a player for many seasons. This is the club at which he grew from a skinny lad playing the game to a beefy muscular thinking player. When he retired in 2018 he was given a majestic send off by rugby fans of Central Province at the Nittawela ground itself. That year Kandy SC managed to defuse a charge by Havelock Sports Club and eventually finished the season as triple champions. Havies finished as runners-up that season.

Marija has some seasoned campaigners in the likes of Jason Dissanayake, Tharinda Ratwatte, Nigel Ratwatte, Lavanga Perera, Srinath Sooriyabandara and Danushka Ranjan to carry their hopes this season. The club has added more strength to the coaching team by bringing in South African Johan Taylor; not a stranger to Kandy SC and also to the national rugby players. There is former Sri Lanka player Viraj Prashantha who has a slot in the coaching staff too.

Up in the cool climes of Kandy these players have the least distractions and can concentrate on their rugby. However the stakes are high when playing for Kandy SC because those in the starting line-up can see more hungry ‘foxes’ climbing up the hill to wear the white, red and blue jersey. This team just cannot lose at rugby; akin to the Indian national team making a cricket crazy nation weep every time they lose and bow out of a competition. Kandy SC can take a bow for establishing a loyal spectator base. We can see some of the most colourful faces at rugby matches cheering Kandy SC on; face paint and the waving of the ‘lion’ flag are now built in features of spectator behavior.

This season too Kandy SC has created that vibe that their prestige in rugby cannot be dented that easily. Four week into the inter-club league rugby tournament the side from Nittawela is heading the points table with four wins out of four outings. The ‘Lion’ in their flag reminds the Kandy SC players that the king of the jungle must stay alert; even if it calls for practicing eternal vigilance both on and off the field!



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IPL 2025: Chennai Super Kings suffer fifth loss on the trot as Kolkata Knight Riders register monster win

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Sunil Narine capturedthree wickets and scored 44 runs for KKR

So that’s what happens when Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) get the kind of pitch their spinners like. Sunil Narine, Varun Chakravarthy and Moeen Ali (12-1-55-6) went into Chepauk and burgled wickets away from the five-time IPL champions until they were a pale, weak shadow of themselves. Chennai Super Kings (CSK) crumbled to 103 for 9, their lowest IPL total at home, suffered a fifth successive defeat, which had never happened before in their entire history, and are marooned in ninth place on the points table. Welcome back to captaincy, MS Dhoni.

The major characteristic of a black-soil pitch is that it is slow and it grips. It felt like home, which is ironic because home hasn’t felt like home for them this season. KKR would prefer to play most of their matches in conditions like this but their efforts to procure them at the Eden Gardens hasn’t gone well. Ajinkya Rahane doesn’t even want to talk about it now. He did, however, spearhead a phenomenal bowling performance. He brought Moeen into the XI and set him loose on CSK’s two left-hand openers. Devon Conway couldn’t overcome the handicap. The KKR offspinner pocketed a wicket maiden. In the next over, Rachin Ravindra was gone. CSK were bleeding by the end of the powerplay, their 31 for 2 only slightly better than the season low of 30 for 3 that they themselves had set, against Royal Challengers Bengaluru.

Exposing this CSK team’s middle order is the only thing their oppositions need to do to win against them. Rahul Tripathi was brought in as Ruturaj Gaikwad’s replacement but he couldn’t figure out whether he wanted to hit out or play through and that indecision was reflected in his final score – 16 off 22. Vijay Shankar could have been dismissed for a duck, or for 20, had KKR held onto their catches. Even with those two lives he couldn’t push on to make a big score. Shivam Dube walked out with CSK at 59 for 3. He had faced only 13 balls and that was still enough time for the score to slip to 75 for 8, at which point his team was in danger of recording their lowest total in IPL history.

For the 16th time in his IPL career, Narine bowled his four overs without conceding a boundary. No one, having got through their full quota, has done it more times. He also knocked off Tripathi, who didn’t know which way the ball would turn, and Ravindra Jadeja and MS Dhoni, who didn’t know which way the ball would spin. There was some doubt over the Dhonii lbw, though. UltraEdge showed what looked like faint murmurs as the ball passed the bat.

CSK were being smothered. They had to wait 63 balls between boundaries – only two teams have ever been that emphatically silenced in this tournament – and hit just three after the eighth over (one of them off a top edge). They had to bring in Deepak Hooda as Impact Player, accepting the risk of going in with a bowler short when they would have to defend this total. But even that gamble backfired. Hooda fell for a duck and one of their key players, Matheesha Pathirana, could not take part in the game.

Defending 103 is a thankless job because bowlers tend to go hard searching for wickets and in that process they leak runs. After under-performing in their batting powerplay, CSK underwhelmed with their bowling powerplay. KKR ransacked 71 runs in the first six overs. This game was no contest.

Brief scores:
Kolkata Knight Riders 107 for 2 in 10.1 overs  (Sunil Narine 44, Quinton de Kock 23, Ajinkaya Rahane 20*, Rinku Singh 15*; Anshul Kamboj 1-19, Noor Ahmad 1-08) beat Chennai Super Kings 103 for 9 in 20 overs (Devon Conway 12, Rahul Tripathi 16, Vijay Shankar 29, Shivam Dube 31; Sunil  Narine 3-13, Varun Chakravarthy 2-22, Harshit Rana 2-16, Moeen Ali 1-20, Vaibhav Arora 1-31) by eight wickets

[Cricinfo]

 

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Dharshana and co win invitational relay

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Sri Lanka ‘A’ team inclusive of Olympian Aruna Dharshana, Sadew Rajakaruna, R. Madushan and Kalinga Kumarage won the invitational 4×400 metres relay ahead of Sri Lanka ‘B’ and India at Diyagama a little while ago.
They returned a time of 3:05.60 seconds( not the official time) to win.
They remained unchallanged from the gun to finish as Dharshana provided a solid start for the others to maintain. Their only challange came from the Sri Lanka ‘B’ team who beat India to the third place.
India did not field their best team.
Kalinga Kumarage did the anchor leg for Sri Lanka.
The Maldives and the Phillippine teams were well behind the winners.
Sri Lanka Athletics conducted the event in a bid to provide the country’s 4×400 metres team a chance to produce a top timing.
(RF)
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Mohamed Salah signs new two-year contract with Liverpool

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Mohamed Salah has scored 243 goals in 394 games for Liverpool [BBC]

Egypt forward Mohamed Salah has signed a new two-year contract with Liverpool.

The 32-year-old’s previous deal was scheduled to run out in the summer and there had been doubts he would stay with the Reds following comments from him during the season and speculation linking him with a move to Saudi Arabia.

However, he is staying and will have the chance to add to his 243 goals and 109 assists for the club in 393 appearances.

“Of course I’m very excited – we have a great team now,” said Salah.

“Before also we had a great team. But I signed because I think we have a chance to win other trophies and enjoy my football.

“I have played eight years here, hopefully it’s going to be 10. I’m enjoying my life here, enjoying my football. I have had the best years of my career here.”

Salah has scored 32 goals in all competitions this season, including 27 in the Premier League as the Reds chase a 20th top-flight title. Liverpool are 11 points clear of second-placed Arsenal with seven games remaining.

Salah, who joined Liverpool from Roma in 2017, has won the Champions League, Premier League, FA Cup, League Cup and Fifa Club World Cup with the Reds.

He was one of three key Liverpool players who will be out of contract this summer, along with right-back Trent Alexander-Arnold and centre-back Virgil van Dijk.

Netherlands defender Van Dijk has said there has been progress on talks over a new deal but Alexander-Arnold has been heavily linked with a move to Real Madrid.

[BBC]

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