Sports
Nilani to fight for Tokyo ticket as team leave for Patiala
by Reemus Fernando
A ten member athletics contingent inclusive of country’s highest ranked runner Nilani Ratnayake was schedule to leave for India today with the latter aiming to retain her hard earned berth for Tokyo Olympics at the Interstate Athletics Championship in Patiala.
The Athletics Federation of India is hosting the 60th National Inter State Senior Athletics Championships from June 25-29 to provide Indian athletes with a qualification opportunity for the Tokyo Olympic Games. The June 29th is the last date of the qualifying period for the postponed Tokyo Games. India’s top national athletes had been training in a bio secure bubble in Patiala and Sri Lanka’s athletes too will be competing under same conditions.
The Athletics Federation of India invited their Sri Lankan counterparts to send a team inclusive of a women’s 4×100 metres relay team as they look forward to qualify their women’s 4×100 metres team for the Games. South Asian Games medallist Amasha de Silva will anchor the Sri Lankan team.
The other five members of the team are the highest ranked Sri Lankan athletes closest to Olympic qualifying standards in their respective disciplines but it will be a tough ask for them to improve on their world rankings during the last week of the qualifying period as some of them have slipped down in rankings due to lack of competitions.
Ratnayake, who was the first Sri Lankan to secure a top position in the ‘Road to Olympic Rankings’ has slipped to the 39th position during the last couple of weeks. Her participation in the Tokyo Olympics is under threat. While her counterparts in Europe and elsewhere have quality competitions to improve their rankings, Ratnayake has only the competition in Patiala to retain her position. A win in Patiala will not earn her much points. If she falls below the 45th position in the World Ranking she will lose her ticket to Olympics. However it will be a totally different scenario if she clocks sub nine minutes and 30 seconds which only 28 athletes have achieved so far in the race to Olympics.
Rio Olympic participant Sumedha Ranasinghe who is ranked 46th in the Road to Olympics Rankings has a tough target as he has to climb 14 positions up to secure the Olympic berth in men’s javelin throw. A mighty throw of 85 metres is the only other option.
Nimali Liyanarachchi, 55th in the Road to Olympics Rankings in 800 metres, Nadeesha Ramanayake 57th in the 400 metres and Kalinga Kumarage (400m) have to reach the top 48 if they are to brush shoulders against the world’s best in Tokyo. Analysts consider it as a tough ask for them even if they reach their personal best in India.
Sri Lanka Athletics had earlier intended to send a bigger team to provide competition starved athletes a chance to gain exposure as the air tickets and lodgings of a better part of the team had been taken care of by the hosts. But the team had been pruned after the Sports Ministry advice.
However that has disappointed many top ranked athletes as the missed opportunity will affect their chances of improving the world rankings, which is a must for future events.
Local athletes missed vital opportunities to improve their world rankings when the Asian Athletics Championship, Asian Relay Championship and a number of other international events were cancelled due to the Covid 19 pandemic.
Team:
Sumeda Ranasinghe (Javelin), Kalinga Kumarage (400m), Nadeesha Ramanayake (400m), Nimali Liyanarachchi (800m), Nilani Ratnayake (3,000m steeplechase).
4x100metres Relay Team:
Amasha de Silva, Shelinda Jansen, Medhani Jayamanne, Shafiya Yamick, Lakshika Sugandi.
Officials:
Vimukthi Zoysa, Sujith Abeysekara.
Latest News
Sri Lanka squad named for ACC Men’s U19 Asia Cup
Sri Lanka Cricket Selection Committee has named a 15-member squad to participate in the upcoming ACC Men’s U19 Asia Cup (50 Over).
The team will depart for the United Arab Emirates today [0 December 2025] and has been placed in Group B, alongside Nepal, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh.

Sports
Hospital CCTV helps clear long jumper of doping
China’s world champion long jumper Wang Jianan has been cleared of doping after a review of hospital CCTV footage.
Wang, 29, became the first Asian man to win world long jump gold with his 8.36m leap in Oregon in 2022.
He failed an out-of-competition doping test in November 2024, which showed traces of terbutaline – a drug primarily used to treat and prevent breathing problems in patients with asthma.
The China Anti-Doping Agency (Chinada) said the presence of the drug had been caused by passive inhalation while Wang was accompanying a relative to hospital for nebuliser treatment.
Chinada decided Wang bore no fault or negligence for the violation and would not be banned.
The decision was reviewed by the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU), which used hospital security footage and patient records to investigate Wang’s movements before his drug test.
The AIU’s investigation sought opinion from an independent scientific expert, who concluded “a passive transfer of the substance to the athlete could not be excluded”.
The AIU also said there was “nothing suspicious” about the documents and CCTV files shared by Chinada.
[BBC]
Latest News
Tickner and Rae bowl West Indies out for 205 to give New Zealand the edge
New Zealand’s patchwork fast-bowling attack delivered a strong show on the opening day of the second Test in Wellington, dismissing West Indies for 205 inside 75 overs at Basin Reserve. But the sight of Blair Tickner being stretchered off late in the afternoon with a suspected dislocated left shoulder took some sheen off their day of dominance.
Tickner, playing his first Test in two years and leading the bowling with 4 for 32, was central to turning a bright West Indies start into yet another collapse, while Michael Rae, the 30-year-old debutant drafted into a severely depleted pace unit, complemented him with 3 for 67 in an energetic outing that gave New Zealand the bite they had lacked in the opening hour. That bite mattered because the first hour had belonged entirely to West Indies despite losing the toss, in a match where the hosts announced five changes and the visitors three.
On a pitch far milder than the traditional green seamer, John Campbell and Brandon King put on 66 for the opening wicket. Jacob Duffy and Zak Foulkes, burdened with heavy workloads from the first Test after the injuries to Matt Henry and Nathan Smith in Christchurch, bowled honest but ineffective spells that allowed scoring opportunities.
Campbell drove through the line, King played compactly, and West Indies looked assured.
But once New Zealand turned to Tickner and Rae – fresher workload-wise, and sharper in pace – the difference was visible. They operated either full or short but always at the stumps or the body, and the tone of the innings shifted dramatically.
Tickner was the first to strike when he prised out King in the 17th over. King, playing the Test after Tagenarine Chanderpaul picked up a side strain on the eve of the Test, and opening for only the second time in his Test career, was pinned lbw when Tickner’s delivery from a short-ish length jagged in and hit him on the pad. One over later, Kavem Hodge was undone for a duck by a fuller ball from Tickner that tailed in late and struck him in front of middle and leg. The double-blow helped New Zealand quickly erase an indifferent start heading into the lunch break.
Rae, who had leaked runs in his first spell in Test cricket, made an impact after lunch. Coming around the wicket, he angled a full ball across Campbell, who leaned into a drive with firm hands and edged to first slip, and at 93 for 3, West Indies’ position was slipping.
Shai Hope and Roston Chase attempted to restore stability with a 60-run stand for the fourth wicket. Hope scored freely but never convincingly; Tickner and Rae repeatedly hurried him with the short ball, and he took two blows to the helmet with concussion checks following as the afternoon surface grew livelier. Hope reached 48, but Tickner finally cracked him with another rising delivery that he tried awkwardly to fend off, gloving a catch to Kane Williamson at third slip. That, Tickner’s third wicket, had seemed almost inevitable given the sustained discomfort he had caused the batters, and Chase followed soon after, cramped by a Tickner delivery that jagged in sharply to catch the inside-edge on to leg stump for 29.
Justin Greaves, West Indies’ double-centurion in Christchurch, lasted 52 balls before Rae drew a faint outside edge with a tight off-stump line. Mitchell Hay completed the catch behind the stumps, leaving West Indies’ lower order exposed. Rae then trapped Kemar Roach lbw with a fuller delivery that kicked enough to beat the bat and straighten into middle stump, and at 184 for 7, the innings was in freefall.
But New Zealand’s mood would sour dramatically in the next over. Tickner sprinted across from fine leg to stop a boundary-saving flick from Tevin Imlach and dived full-length near the rope. He landed awkwardly, stayed down, and the players signalled urgently as medical staff from both New Zealand and the venue rushed to him. After several minutes of treatment, he was stretchered off – sitting up, but in pain – to warm applause from the Basin Reserve crowd. He later left the ground in an ambulance, with early indications pointing to a suspected dislocated shoulder.
Glenn Phillips, the most prolific wicket-taker in New Zealand’s XI with 31 strikes coming into the game, then removed the last recognised batter, bowling Imlach with a fuller ball that straightened just enough to beat the inside edge.
Anderson Phillip was run out soon after attempting a risky single – first surviving a throw from Devon Conway but then succumbing when an alert Kristian Clarke broke the stumps on the rebound. Duffy ended West Indies’ innings by having Ojay Shields edge to third slip to end the innings at 205. West Indies lost their last seven wickets for just 52 runs.
New Zealand openers Tom Latham and Conway batted nine overs before stumps, with West Indies’ seamers asking questions occasionally and inducing a couple of edges that didn’t carry to the slip cordon. The 24 runs they added before stumps gave New Zealand the firm upper hand, now behind by only 181 behind going into the second day where batting promises to be easier.
Brief scores:[Day 1 Stumps]
New Zealand 24 for no loss (Devon Conway 16*, Tom Latham 7*) trail West Indies 205 in 75 overs (Shai Hope 48, John Campbell 44; Blair Tickner 4-32, Michael Rae 3-67) by 181 runs
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