Sports
Maxwell, Inglis make it 4-0 for Australia

Glenn Maxwell and Josh Inglis nullified Sri Lanka’s hopes of breaking duck in the T20I series as Australia went up 4-0 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Friday. Sri Lanka had a lowly 139/8 to defend but their bowlers made a bright start in the Powerplay, reducing Australia to 49 for 3 in the ninth over. Maxwell and Inglis joined forces to resuscitate the innings, and eventually turned what seemed like a tricky chase at one point to a rather comfortable one in the end. The hosts completed the chase with 11 balls and six wickets to spare.
Sri Lanka’s troubles all series have been linked to their batting, and Pathum Nissanka looked to set that right on Friday. He and Danushka Gunathilaka started briskly in the PowerPlay and despite the latter’s dismissal, the innings continued to flow seamlessly at a fair clip thanks to Nissanka’s shot-making and Kusal Mendis joining in the fun.
Sri Lanka got to 73 for 1 at the halfway stage, their best effort in 10 overs in the four T20Is in the series. Unfortunately for them, though, that’s where Australia’s turnaround began. Nissanka and Mendis took on Glenn Maxwell’s arm by trying to sprint across for a second run after hitting to him at long on.
Maxwell, however, caught Mendis short of his crease with a direct hit, giving Australia a much-needed breakthrough at that stage. Charith Asalanka brought his trademark exuberance to Sri Lanka’s innings, taking on Adam Zampa in the 15th over to get his side past the 100-run mark, but a collapse ensued.
Asalanka fell trying to hit out against Jhye, and Nissanka departed giving Zampa the charge, after which the lower-order crumbled. Sri Lanka went from 110 for 2 in the 16th over to 122 for 8 in the 19th. Chamika Karunaratne saw through Kane Richardson’s change of pace, carting him for two fours and a six in a 17-run final over that pushed Sri Lanka to 139 for 8.
Based on how the first half hour of Australia’s chase went, it felt like Sri Lanka may have actually scored enough on what was an uncharacteristically slow surface at the MCG. Australia stuck with their opening experiment of Ashton Agar, who struggled to get going against the offspin of Maheesh Theekshana, while Lahiru Kumara attempted to ping him back with excess pace.
Ben McDermott didn’t enjoy much success with run making either, and ended up departing with a soft return catch to Theekshana in the fifth over. Agar played out 23 balls in the PowerPlay, scoring just 17 runs as the dot-ball pressure ramped up. Sri Lanka’s quicks kept the foot on the pedal in the post-PowerPlay phase too, as Aaron Finch and Agar fell trying to break out of the rut.
At 50 for 3 in 9 overs, Australia were on shaky ground and in desperate need of a quick bail out to transfer the pressure back on the bowling side that had its tail up. Up stepped Josh Inglis, starting off by smashing leg spinner Jeffrey Vandersay for two fours – one a reverse hit – in the 10th over.
As Maxwell settled in, Inglis took control of the proceedings, and continued to get boundaries that helped dwarf the equation further. The duo played out Theekshana in his fourth over and targeted the quicks. The tables completely turned in a four-over span where Australia went from 73/3 in 11 to 109/3 in 15, with Maxwell too starting to cut loose.
Dushmantha Chameera had Inglis nicking to the keeper in the 16th over, but not before the Aussie batsman added 40 off just 20 deliveries. Maxwell took over from that point on to ensure there were no late and dramatic turnarounds for Sri Lanka. Off the first ball of the penultimate over, Maxwell secured the victory, while finishing on an unbeaten 48 off 38 deliveries.
(Cricbuzz)
Sports
Mandhana’s masterclass powers India to tri-series title

India capped off a dominant tri-series campaign in Colombo with a resounding win over Sri Lanka, posting their highest-ever women’s ODI total on Sri Lankan soil—344 for five —before bowling the hosts out for 245.
Smriti Mandhana led the charge with a superb 11th ODI hundred—her first against Sri Lanka—anchoring partnerships of 70 with Pratika Rawal and 120 with Harleen Deol.
Deol, Harmanpreet Kaur, and Jemimah Rodrigues chipped in with brisk 40s, while India smashed 90 runs in the last 10 overs.
Despite a spirited effort, Sri Lanka’s daunting chase faltered. Chamari Atapattu’s 50 and a few half-century stands weren’t enough to close the gap. Seamer Amanjot Kaur struck early, removing two of the top three, while offspinner Sneh Rana starred with four for 38, finishing as the tournament’s leading wicket-taker.
India’s batting wasn’t without drama—Rawal survived an early chance, and Mandhana was twice let off before unleashing her full range of strokes. She was especially brutal on Atapattu, sweeping her repeatedly through square leg and cover en route to a 92-ball century.
Amanjot’s return in the middle overs derailed the chase further, bowling Gunaratne and setting up Rana’s match-turning spell. Atapattu, despite reaching her 19th ODI fifty, was undone by Rana, who later removed three more to slam the door shut.
Late resistance from Sanjeewani and Kumari delayed the inevitable, but a run-out and two quick Rana strikes wrapped up the win.
India’s comprehensive display sent a strong message ahead of the Women’s World Cup, reaffirming their title credentials.
Brief scores:
India
342 for seven (Mandhana 116, Rodrigues 44, Kumari 2-59) beat Sri Lanka 245 (Atapattu 51, Rana 4-38, Amanjot 3-54) by 97 runs.
Sports
110th Colombo Championships Apna, Dinara win singles titles

Apna Perera and Dinara de Silvaemerged as the men’s and women’s singles champions respectively at the 110th Colombo Championships continued at the Sri Lanka Tennis Association clay courts.
In the men’s singles final, Apna beat Ashen Silva 7-6, 6-1. Dinara registered convincing 6-1, 6-2 win over Venuli Jayasinghe in the women’s final.
In the boys’ Under 18 semi-finals, Ashlin de Silva beat Nethmika Wickramasinghe 6-2, 6-1 while Mayooran Kubheran beat Aahil Kaleel 6-7, 7-6, 6-4.
Sports
Yodasinghe dazzles in Yupun’s return

National champion Chamod Yodasinghe secured a creditable second place rank for an impressive performace of 10.27 seconds as he out did a strong field in the 100 metres at the Dubai Grand Prix on Friday.
Yodasinghe who was entered only for the 4x100m relay received a golden opportunity in Dubai when his request to run the 100 metres there was granted by the organisers. The athlete trained by sprint coach Sanjeewa Weerakkody equalled his personal best (10.27 seconds) in winning his race.
Incidentally, his winning time was second only to the winner of the first race where top ranked athletes including Yupun Abeykoon competed.
Oman’s Ali Al Balooshi was the fastest as he clocked 10.19 seconds while Abeykoon finished fifth with a time of 10.39 seconds.
Abeykoon who was making his first 100 metres appearance of the year was ranked sixth overall.
In the 4×100 metres relay Sri Lanka’s quartet finished third in a time of 39.41 seconds.
Yodasinghe will next compete at the Asian Athletics Championships later this month.
Meanwhile, Sri Lanka’s 4×400 metres mixed relay team finished last in their heat at the World Relays in China yesterday.
by Reemus Fernando
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