Sports
Malisha, Dulnith lead Group A and B
Sri Lanka Youth Chess Grand Prix 2022
Maleesha Savindu Weerathunga of D.S. Senanayake College and Dulnith Sanviru of Royal College were leading Group ‘A’ and ‘B’ respectively with aggregates of 8 ½ points each at the end of the ninth round of the Sri Lanka Youth Chess Grand Prix 2022, conducted by the Chess Federation of Sri Lanka.
According to results circulated by CFSL, Maleesha has earned his points beating Piyumi Amarathunga, Lakindu Gamage, Sathini Liyanage, Ranul Kannangara, Shenal Francis, Pamok Samaranayake, Upeksha Wadduwage and Oneja Abeysekara and forcing a draw against B. Janukshan to stay on top in Group A.
Dulnith beat his closest rival Vivash to take the lead in Group ‘B’ in the eighth round. Both carried seven points each until Dulnith overcame Vivash in that round. Earlier he had beaten Insara Wickramaarchchi, MADD Munasinghe, Anujana Hasandi Sendanayake, Rehan Ekanayake, Hasindu Gamage and Chenaya Ekaratne while forfeiting a point with Mandiv Ariyaratne. He drew his ninth-round game against Jayandi Bimansa.
Oshini Devindya Gunawardena of Ferguson College was in the second spot in Group A with 7 ½ points, while Vivash Samarakoon was in the second spot in Group B with eight points. Oshini beat Sathini Liyanage and Ranul Kannangara in last two rounds to reach 7 ½ points. Vivash lost to Dulnith in the eighth round and beat Chanuth Jayakody in the ninth round.
Pamok Methindu Samaranayake (Rahula College, Matara) and B. Janukshan (Hindu College) had seven points each to share the third place in Group A. Pamok beat Upeksha Wadduwage and Lakindu Gamage in his last two rounds, while Janukshan held the leader, Maleesha for a draw in the eighth round and beat Upesksh Wadduwage in the ninth round. Thisarindu Induwara was in the third place with 7 ½ points in Group B.
The Sri Lanka Youth Chess Grand Prix 2022 conducted by the Chess Federation of Sri Lanka commenced on February 3. There are two round Robin Events of 11 rounds played as Group A and B in the first stage with 12 players taking part in each group. Then the winner and runner up of each group will play a knocked out round during the second stage. CFSL is offering cash awards of Rs. 65,000.00, trophies and medals for the winners.
Sports
Matthews’ century leads West Indies to six-wicket victory
Hayley Matthew’s tenth ODI century led West Indies to a six-wicket victory in the final match of the series against Sri Lanka and gave them their first points in the new Women’s Championship cycle.
Sri Lanka had already secured the series but couldn’t clinch a whitewash as Matthews dominated: she started the match by removing opposite number Chamari Athapaththu in the first over of the contest and then compiled an 118-ball hundred, which took West Indies most of the way in their chase.
“I felt like I was in a pretty good space batting-wise and probably just [in the] first game got pretty unlucky with how I got out and then in the second match gave my own hand away,” Matthews said. “So I certainly felt like I was in a space where I wasn’t exactly being too threatened at the crease and I knew I just had to lock in and try to take it a bit deeper.”
The home side was in early trouble in St George’s against a target of 218 with Qiana Joseph and Shemaine Campbelle falling to Malki Madara to leave West Indies 12 for 2. But after taking 12 balls to find her first boundary, Matthews did not look back as she took charge of the innings, adding 124 for the third wicket with Stefanie Taylor, who moved second on the all time run scorers list in ODIs.
Matthews’ fifty came from 48 balls before she slowed a little in the second half of her innings, but the asking rate was never a threat for West Indies. She did give a chance on 70 when Nilakshika Silva was unable to hold a return catch. The ball after reaching the century, though, Matthews picked out deep midwicket but a stand of 49 between Deandra Dottin and Chinelle Henry finished the job.
Following the early loss of Athapaththu, Sri Lanka’s innings was anchored by Harshitha Samarawickrema’s 70 off 112 balls. She added 78 for the third wicket with Vishmi Gunaratne, but the visitors struggled to lift the scoring rate in the latter stages as West Indies chipped away, with Karishma Ramharack removing Gunaratne and Samarawickrama in the space of four overs.
Brief scores:
West Indies Women 218 for 4 in 46 overs (Hayley Matthews 100, Stefanie Taylor 38, Chinelle Henry 32*; Malki Madara 2-33) beat Sri Lanka Women 217 for 7 in 50 overs (Hasini Perera 27, Harshitha Samarawickrama 70, Kavish Dilhari 45*, Hayley Matthews 2-33, Karishma Ramharack 2-39) by six wickets
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Trinity take first innings honours against S. Thomas’
Pulisha Thilakarathne top scored with 89 runs and held the top order batting together as Trinity scored first innings points and took major honours in the Ranil Abeynayake Memorial Trophy cricket encounter at BRC ground on Wednesday.
Trinity took a first innings lead of over 50 runs and declared their innings with two wickets in hand to find Thomians doing better in the second essay.
Jayden Amaraweera was in the forefront of the Thomian revival in the second innings as he scored his second half century of the match. Aaron Kodituwakku missed a second half century by five runs.
For Trinity, Mahendra Abeysinghe and Dinal Fernando were the others to make contributions with over 40 runs, while Aadham Hilmy made 32.
Scores:
S. Thomas’ 189 all out in 77.4 overs
(Aaron Kodituwakku 72, Jaden Amaraweera 50, Shanil Perera 37n.o.; Kanika Anthony 5/66, Dinal Fernando 3/34) and 182 for 5 in 53 overs (Jaden Amarawera 68, Aaron Kodituwakku 45;
Chaniru Senarathne 2/44)
Trinity 54 for 1 overnight 246 for 8 decl. in 58.2 overs (Pulisha Thilakarathne 89, Mahendra Abeysinghe 44, Dinal Fernando 45, Adam Hilmy 32; Abheeth Paranawidana 4/95, Gimhan Mendis 3/41) (RF)
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Blue jerseys on the backs of a teeming crowd along the Walajah Road on Thursday evening will finally not be out of context. Fans in Chennai have embraced every team that has set foot in the city and played at the iconic venue, turning up in tens of thousands even for sweltering afternoon matches here. But India are finally in town, with everything riding on their fixture.
[Cricbuzz]
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