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Maris Stella Thimbirigaskatuwa Under 15 Division III cricket champs

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Maris Stella College Thimbirigaskatuwa emerged champions in the Under 15 Division III cricket tournament

Maris Stella College, Thimbirigaskatuwa emerged champions in the Under 15 Division III schools cricket tournament with an impressive first innings win over Mahinda Maha Vidyalaya Ganthiriyagama ‎Ipalogama on Wednesday.

‎The boys from Thimbirigaskatuwa restricted Mahinda MV to 44 runs as left arm spinner Biwan Fernando claimed six wickets for 10 runs in eight overs (with 3 maidens) in the final played at Wijerama Mawatha.

‎In their essay they scored 115 runs as skipper Kevin Fernando (36 runs) and Dulek Fernando (33 runs) put on a stand of 60 runs for the fifth wicket.

‎Maris Stella, Thimbirigaskatuwa remained unbeaten throughout the tournament which commenced with a participation of 690 teams.

‎The final appearance is a significant milestone for both teams as they are now eligible to compete in the Division II tournament from next season. (RF)



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New Zealand and South Africa look ahead to Super Eights in low-pressure contest

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South Africa beat Afghanistan in their last game in what was a matter of inches [Cricinfo]

Wednesday afternoon’s all-time classic in Ahmedabad was a game of inches. A couple of inches this way or that, and Saturday night’s game, at the same venue, could have had a whole lot more riding on it.

But as things stand, New Zealand and South Africa look set for safe passage out of Group D and into the Super Eights, leaving Afghanistan bemoaning fate and small margins, and praying for miracles from UAE and Canada – or is probably unlikely to cut it.

There’s no mystery about which of the Super Eights groups New Zealand and South Africa will end up in either. Pre-tournament seedings already decided that.

So this game, which could have been one of the tastiest clashes of the tournament, pitting two title contenders and featuring several tactical sub-plots, doesn’t really have much riding on it at all.

It could still turn out to be one of the games of the tournament, of course, because that can happen when you put two T20 teams of elite power and skill on the field together. But the title of this section, big picture? There isn’t much of it at all.

He is one of South Africa’s greatest cricketers of all time, but is Kagiso Rabada under some pressure to hold his place in their first XI in T20Is? He has the pace and skills to operate in any phase, but he has had an indifferent time in T20Is of late. Rabada averages 34.55 with the ball since 2025, with an economy rate of 9.82. But in his defence, he has only played nine T20Is in this time, thanks to injury and workload management. The chaotic 20th over against Afghanistan, during which Rabada overstepped twice, shouldn’t put his spot in danger. But he’ll want to pick himself up and remind the world of the impact he can make at his best.

Rachin Ravindra looks like he could be the archetypal modern-day T20 No. 3, but his international record in the format is… not good, with a strike rate of 135.19, an average of 19.09, and just three half-centuries in 40 innings. All that doesn’t take away from Ravindra’s potential – which he has shown in flashes in recent weeks, in a pair of cameos against India – and he could make a big difference on Saturday if he and his fellow left-handers in New Zealand’s line-up could get stuck into Keshav Maharaj’s left-arm spin.

New Zealand played the same XI against both Afghanistan and UAE, and they seem unlikely to make any changes unless a used pitch prompts them to pick an extra spinner in Ish Sodhi.

New Zealand (probable): Tim Seifert (wk), Finn Allen, Rachin Ravindra, Glenn Phillips,  Daryl Mitchell, Mark Chapman,  Mitchell Santner (capt),  James Neesham,  Matt Henry,  Lockie Ferguson,  Jacob Duffy

South Africa replaced seam-bowling allrounder Corbin Bosch with spin-bowling allrounder George Linde when they played Afghanistan. They might, however, worry about having two left-arm fingerspinners in Linde and Maharaj against a New Zealand side with four left-hand batters in their likely top eight. Bosch, therefore, could come back in.

South Africa (probable):  Aiden Markram (capt),  Quinton de Kock (wk),  Ryan Rickelton, Dewald Brevis,  David Miller,  Tristan Stubbs,  Marco Jansen,  Corbin Bosch/George Linde,  Kagiso Rabada,  Keshav Maharaj,  Lungi Ngidi

[Cricinfo]

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Kolkata the stage as England, Scotland resume auld rivalry

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Scotland were comfortable winners against Italy last time out [Cricinfo]

Scotland vs England. The sense of occasion isn’t lost on Scotland captain Richie Berrington. Earlier this week, Berrington dared to dream of the headlines should his side beat England in Kolkata a matter of hours before the Scotland rugby team face England in the Six Nations with the Calcutta Cup on the line.

Both Scotland teams are underdogs but, unlike their rugby counterparts who are licking their wounds after a poor showing against Italy last weekend, Berrington’s men are coming off the back of a resounding 73 run win over an Italian team making their debut at this tournament and ruffling some feathers along the way.

“That rivalry has always been there between Scotland and England, obviously a long history there between the two nations, it’s there in every sport,” Berrington said. “But yeah, next Saturday’s going to be exciting. We’ve also got the Scotland rugby team taking on England the same day, so it would make quite a nice headline if Scotland has two wins on the Saturday.”

As banana skins go, this should be one England back themselves to avoid. But it will be no easy stroll, especially with another unexpected obstacle down the road in Italy, surprise 10 wicket winners against Nepal, who had themselves pushed England to the max in their opening match of this T20 World Cup.

Both of England’s remaining group-stage opponents pose an element of the unknown, a point noted at the start of the tournament by Mark Watt, Scotland’s veteran left-arm spinner making his fifth World Cup appearance. “Quite funny thinking about the England analysis team trying to find club cricket games of some of our youngsters,” Watt said. “We’ve all had a laugh about that.” England have never played Italy and, in their only previous T20I meeting with Scotland – at the last World Cup in Barbados – George Munsey and Michael Jones staged an unbroken opening partnership worth 90 before the match was washed out.

Only Jofra Archer and Adil Rashid remain from the bowling line-up which took the field that day, the latter going at 13 runs an over from his two overs. And while those figures are reminiscent of Rashid’s three wicketless overs at 14.00 against Nepal, he turned that around against West Indies, where he was easily the pick of England’s bowlers in a losing cause on a turning Wankhede pitch.

If they trip up in their first outing in Kolkata, where Scotland have already played their first two matches of this World Cup, England’s last group encounter with Italy becomes crucial. So too does Scotland’s final clash with Nepal. On paper, England’s progression to the Super 8s should be assured, but they absolutely cannot take their Associate opponents lightly.

So far, this campaign has shown England need more consistency from their enviably deep batting line-up. Half-centuries to Jacob Bethell and Harry Brook still required the back-up of Will Jacks’ 18-ball 39 against Nepal and, even then, it took Sam Curran’s sublime death bowling to let them escape with victory. Against West Indies, it was Curran who ran out of partners and captain Brook believed his charges were too careful chasing. For Scotland, they need more than just the few plucky moments they produced in a 35-run loss to West Indies. They need everything to fire, as it did against Italy, and then some, to be in with a shot.

Three consecutive single-figure scores across this tournament and the Sri Lanka series that preceded it leave Tom Banton searching for runs, particularly amid calls for Harry Brook to leapfrog him into the No. 4 spot. An unbeaten 54 in a Player-of-the-Match performance against Sri Lanka in the second of their three games in the lead-up suggests the touch is there. Now he must rediscover it at a time when his side needs it most.

Having managed just one run against West Indies as Munsey too departed cheaply after a promising start, Michael Jones further highlighted the importance of Scotland’s opening duo with a 30-ball 37 in a 126-run stand – Munsey struck 84 off 54 – that set up victory over Italy. With the quality of the opposition now magnified, it is imperative that he supports his partner with an even bigger contribution to a union that could prove critical in getting enough runs on the board against England.

England confirmed an unchanged XI on the eve of the match, with Jamie Overton preferred to Luke Wood in the attack.

England:  Phil Salt,  Jos Buttler (wk), Jacob Bethell,  Tom Banton, Harry Brook (capt),  Sam Curran,  Will Jacks,  Liam Dawson,  Jamie Overton,  Jofra Archer,  Adil Rashid

Brad Wheal, who replaced Safyaan Sharif for the win over Italy, said Scotland had not made any decisions on their side.

Scotland: (possible) George Munsey,  Michael Jones,  Brandon McMullen,  Richie Berrington (capt),  Tom Bruce, Michael Leask, Matthew Cross (wk),  Mark Watt,  Oliver Davidson,  Brad Wheal,  Brad Currie

[Cricinfo]

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Dinara set to meet Shiwali in final

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Dinara de Silva [pic by Kamal Wanniarachchi]

J30 ITF Junior Week 3 Tennis

‎Dinara de Silva is set to meet Shiwali Gurung of Nepal in the girls’ singles final of the J30 ITF Junior Week 3 Tennis tournament after emerging victorious in the semi-finals in Colombo on Friday.

‎Dinara beat Haritha Venkatesh of India 6-2, 6-2 in her semi final

‎Nepal’s Shiwali Gurung beat Kirika Fuku of Japan 7-5, 4-6, 6-2.

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