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Kicker Althaf gives Trinity inspiring Bradby Shield first-leg win

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A Trinity College forward tries to force his way toward the try line in the team’s first Leg of the Bradby Shield encounter against Royal which the former won 13-10 at Pallakelle Stadium on Saturday (July 22).

By A Special Sports Correspondent

Trinity College produced a piece of sensation when they recorded a remarkable come-from-behind 13-10 win against Trinity in the first leg of the 77th Bradby Shield which was played at Pallakelle Stadium on Saturday (July 22).

On paper Royal were the hot favourites having made a name for themselves as a team which can suck the energy out of any team in the second half. But that reputation of Royal’s rugby team was tested by Trinity all the way in a blockbuster 70-minute game of rugby where the hosts took away the game from Royal in the final 10 minutes of the encounter. Tell the Royalists were leading 10-3.

The unlikely hero for Trinity was 16-year-old fly-half Shan Althaf who kicked right two penalties and a conversion and also fed his threes who were threatening to score at every given opportunity.

Royal dominated much of the first half and did the most important thing; turning pressure into points. Royal lived up to their reputation of being one of the best sides this season and showed how easy try scoring is with a soft try by centre Philio Calyanaratne with the game just 11 minutes old. The backline move surprisingly caught Trinity napping when defence was most needed and when Calyanaratne scored there was hardly anybody there to even to stop him. The conversion went awry.

In the 29th minute of the game, Royal scored again his time through lock forward Buwaneka Senanayake who smashed his way over the line off a move which the forwards began. That conversion too failed to bring the additional points for Royal.

Trinity’s Althaf missed three vital penalties for his team in the first half; all of which were taken by him within kicking range.

Trinity had a moment to remember when Lakindu Herath scored near the left corner flag after bursting into action. But he failed to clearly ground the ball and then the try was disallowed by referee Ishanka Abeykoon after consultation with the television match referee.

What was promising to see in this game was Trinity pursuing kicking duties with Althaf in the second half too. It seemed the hosts were grooming him to continue being in charge of kicking duties for the next couple of seasons. Althaf kicked right an easy penalty in the 45th minute of the game.

Trinity’s proud moment in the game came when they crossed the Royal goal line with a forwards move which ended with Tissanka Dissanayake scoring that all-important try. Althaf made no mistake with the conversion and the scores read 10 all with about seven minutes left in the clock.

The game was closely contested from there onwards and would have gone down in the history of the Bradby Shield as one of the most exciting battles if not for the ball-handling errors by both sides. The line out play too was below par and both sides brought unforced errors to the game due to this handicap. Althaf then produced the winner with his boot by knocking over a penalty in the dying minutes of the game for Trinity.

In other games of the schools under 19 league rugby tournament played on Saturday St. Peter’s remained unbeaten in the Division 1 Segment A Group 2 of the tournament when they smashed the daylights out of Science in a game where they went on to score 29 points.

Isipatana too finished the first round unbeaten with a handsome 24-11 win against Wesley; earning their points through four tries and two conversions.On Friday (July 21) D.S. Senanayake produced a memorable 13-10 win against S. Thomas’ in a Division 1 Segment A Group 1 match of the schoools’ league rugby tournament at Havelock Park.



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Dananjana wins 100 metres silver

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Lyceum International Wattala sprinter Dananjana Fernando won a silver medal for Sri Lanka in the girls 100 metres at the sixth Asian Youth Athletics Championship in Dammam on Wednesday [16] evening.
She clocked 11.92 seconds to beat India’s Aarti to the third place. China’s Zhang Qian won the event in a time of 11.80 seconds.
[RF]
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Delhi Capitals win an IPL classic in Delhi after Super Over drama

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Mitchell Starc nailed his yorkers and set up a Super Over [Cricinfo]

Nine runs needed, six wickets in hand — it should’ve been a routine finish for Rajasthan Royals (RR) against Delhi Capitals in IPL 2025,  But Mitchell Starc flipped the script, delivering five pinpoint yorkers in a sensational final over. Dhruv Jurel couldn’t find two runs off the last ball, and Starc dragged the game into a dramatic Super Over.

RR imploded in the Super Over, lasting just five balls and losing both Riyan Parag and Yashasvi Jaiswal to run outs. DC chased down the 12-run target in just four deliveries.

With DC needing 5 off 3, Tristan Stubbs pulled Sandeep Sharma for six to seal DC’s fifth win in six games that takes them to the top of the points table. Stubbs had earlier contributed a vital unbeaten 18-ball 34 in regulation time to help DC score 42 off the last three overs.

The 200-run mark had been breached on each of the last eight T20s by the side batting first at Arun Jaitley Stadium. DC didn’t look like getting anywhere close, until Stubbs joined hands with Axar Patel, who also injected momentum with his takedown of Wanindu Hasaranga to make 34 off 14.

RR also didn’t finish well. Sandeep, who had figures of 3-0-14-0, bowled four wides and a no-ball in what proved to be a 11-ball over that ended with Maheesh Theekshana dropping a sitter off the last ball, the over costing 19.

RR also reprieved Stubbs on 12 when Riyan Parag put down a regulation chance at long-on. And he hurt them with some important runs at the death – all contributing to RR chasing a bigger total than they would have.

While Stubbs’ runs were crucial, a gun throw running around from wide long-on to restrict the penultimate delivery to a single in regulation time – with RR needing 3 off 2 – was invaluable.

It could’ve so easily turned pear-shaped for Stubbs, before that blockbuster finish. Nitish Rana was reprieved on 20 when Stubbs palmed the ball over the long-on boundary to deny Axar a wicket.

Rana’s wicket would’ve been the perfect double-strike for DC, who only five balls earlier dismissed Jaiswal when Kuldeep Yadav lulled him in flight and had him drag one to long-on.

Rana kicked on to make 31 more off 12 deliveries to take pressure off RR going into the last three overs from a slightly precarious 73 off 36, with the ball gripping. It needed a gun in-swinging yorker from Starc in his third over to dismiss Rana, with RR needing 28 off 14. Shimron Hetmyer and Dhruv Jurel then needed 9 off the final over, but couldn’t manage a single boundary as Starc nailed his yorkers.

Before the gun finish, Starc had a nightmarish start when Jaiswal hit him for a sequence of 4, 6, 4 in his first over. Jaiswal chewed into Starc’s full-length deliveries, clearing the front leg and moving them with brute force over the infield towards the short leg-side fence. When he bowled short and into the body, Jaiswal got inside the line and pulled him imperiously over deep backward square.

Jaiswal’s early impetus also seemed to have an effect on Sanju Samson, who found his hitting range until a suspected side issue forced him to retire hurt with RR 61 without loss in 5.3 overs. The two balls leading into him retiring out were picked for a four and a six. But it was only when he reached out to cut Vipraj Nigam, that he pulled up and went off straightaway.

DC lost Jake Fraser-McGurk and Karun Nair early. Fraser-McGurk holed out to mid-off, and Nair, fresh off an IPL high score in his comeback game, was run out for a three-ball duck after being roughed up by two Jofra Archer short balls. Before that, Abhishek Porel picked 23 off the second over, by Tushar Deshpande, to get going.

Rahul was cautious to begin with, the slowness of the surface making it tough for stroke making. At one stage, he was on 17 off 18 but couldn’t quite push on – eventually falling for a 32-ball 38 when he pulled Archer to deep midwicket.

Porel, too, struggled to bring out the big hits after his turbocharge, eventually falling for 49. Fortunately for DC, Axar injected momentum that Stubbs carried forward to give them a total to bowl at, which they defended in the end courtesy Starc’s mastery.

Brief scores:
Delhi Capitals 188 for 5 in 20 overs (Abhishek Porel 49, KL Rahul 38, Tristan Stubbs 34*, Axar Patel 34, Ashutosh Sharma 15; Jofra Archer 2-32, Maheesh Theekshan 1-30, Wanidu Hasaranga 1-38) tied with Rajasthan Royals 188 for 4 in 20 overs (Yashasvi Jaiswal 51, Nitish Rana 51, Dhruv Jurel 26, Shimron Hetmeyer 15*; Mitchell Starc 1-36,  Sanju Samson 31,  Axar 1-23, Kuldeep Yadav 1-33) DC won Super Over

[Cricinfo]

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Janith wins triple jump silver

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Sri Lanka team with officials.

Medal prospects Niduki, Ayesha miss events due to faux pas

Sri Lanka experienced mixed fortunes on day one of the Asian Youth Athletics Championship as St. Sylvester’s College, Kandy athlete Janith Lakshan Jenkins won a silver medal before the country’s 1500 metres medal prospects Niduki Prarthana and Ayesha Sewwandi missed their pet event due a faux pas in Dammam, Saudi Arabia.

Jenkins reached his personal best 15.10 metres in his final attempt to win the siver medal. The athlete trained by Indika Etipola and China’s gold medal winner Dong Zhiyuan were the only athletes to clear the 15 metres mark. China’s Ma Boyu who was placed third cleared 14.97 metres.

Ayesha Sewwandi

According to sources Niduki Prarthana and Ayesha Sewwandi had missed the 1500 metres after they arrived late to the call room. They had been with one of the coaches on tour. Veteran coaches Sujith Abeysekara and Madhura Perera who train the two athletes were not part of the touring team.

Ayesha Sewwandi of Namadagasweva MV, Hambantota, and Niduki Prarthana of Baranakankattuwa KV, Mundal were ranked among the top three and were looking foward for podium places. It is learnt that the official incharge of the athletes had not guided the two young athletes to reach the call room in time.

Sri Lanka were looking forward for at least couple of other medals in the evening yesterday after several athletes booked places in the finals schedled for evening.

Sri Lanka are fielding their biggest contingent to the Asuan Youth Championship.

Boys’ Team

Shavindu Awishka (Boys Captain- 800m), Imesh Silva (100m, 200m., Medley Relay), MP Sandaruwan Silva (100m, Medley Relay), Shanuka Costa (400m, Medley Relay), BIM Bogoda (400m, Medley Relay), Rehan Perera (800m), Lahiru Achintha (1500m., 3000m), MM Shavindu Nimasha Dias (400m Hurdles), P Nethya Sampath (High Jump), P Dinuka Dilshan (High Jump), Hansana Jayasingha (Triple Jump), JL Jenkins (Triple Jump)

Girls’ Team

Niduki Prarthana

Tharushi Abisheka (Girls Captain – 800m), Dhananjana Fernando (100m, 200m), K Niduki Prarthana (1500m), M.P. Ayesha Sewwandi (1500m), UM Sansala Himashani (400m Hurdles), KM Sachini Maduhansika (2000m Steeplechase), M. Dilki Nehara (triple jump)

Officials:

NAT Jayasinghe (Team Manager), Anuradha Nanayakkara (Coach), N. Indika Etipola (Coach), Buddika Nuwan (Coach), Lakna Waravita (Lady Chaperone).

 

by Reemus Fernando

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