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Nirmala prefers to nurture talent over being dragonslayer at TT

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Nirmala Jayasinghe is a senior table tennis player and coach who spends much time nurturing young talent.

By a Special Sports Correspondent

Table tennis veteran Nirmala Jayasinghe sees a competitive atmosphere around him, but he still believes extending the hand of camaraderie to youngsters who are hungry for success and practicing hard.

Jayasinghe is a coach cum player and has been playing for the national team for the past 14 years (2010-2023). He is aged 41 now and spends much of his time sharing knowledge with players and nurturing young talent. He worked 17 long years for Mass Holdings, a giant in the merchandising business, but has now quit his place of employment and concentrates on making a living through his involvement in table tennis.

One might ask him whether it’s wise to share knowledge with youth players who have the age advantage over him when he too envisions retaining his slot in the national team. This is his response, “I believe that a senior player like me must do his part to nurture young talent. These young players must come up and older players like me can benefit by playing against young players possessing new skills and fitness. I too improve my skills when playing against up and coming players”.

Jayasinghe has completed the ITTF –PIT Level 1 coaching exam, ITTF Level 2 coaching exam and has now qualified for the ITTF Level 3 coaching course. He coached Kingswood College Kandy for 8 years and also had stints with Girls’ High School Kandy and the University of Peradeniya as table tennis coach. He wishes to see table tennis in Sri Lanka being lifted a few notches and for that he has two recommendations. “You either have to send the coaches abroad and train them at the next level or send players abroad and get them exposed to new knowledge,” opined Jayasinghe.

He remembers playing table tennis for his alma mater Vidyartha College Kandy from a very young age. That was a time when the school had the influence of a legend in the sport called Thilina Piyadasa. Jayasinghe remembers playing table tennis at that time when this great player was around. Piyadasa left Sri Lanka in 2007 and the responsibility of taking over table tennis in the Central Province fell on players like Jayasinghe. This is one reason why he has juggled a playing career with a coaching. A player with a large heart always sees the sport as a bigger entity than his personal goal. Players in the likes of Udaya Ranasinghe and Prasad de Silva came up and dazzled here and abroad thanks to his influence on them in coaching. Both Ranasinghe and De Silva are old boys of Vidyartha College. Thanks to the commitment and guidance given to the sport by players like Jayasinghe table tennis is today among the top most popular sports in Kandy.

As the years rolled on he became national champion (2012) and has emerged as men’s open singles champion in ranking tournaments over 10 times. He also plays in the men’s doubles and mixed doubles events. It was a little late when he was picked to represent the national side for the first time because he had reached the age of 28 by then. At that time (2010) he was the only known national player from Central Province to make it to the national team.

He has had the good fortune of representing Sri Lanka at top events like Commonwealth Games, World Championships, Lusofonia Games and the South Asian Games. Jayasinghe said that he has played his best table tennis when competing against European talent. For the record he won a second place in the ‘Fifth Division’ at the World Table Tennis Championships in 2012 held in Germany. He won a Silver medal at the South Asian Games in 2016, a Bronze medal at the 3rd Lusofonia Games in India in 2014 and finished among the best 8 players in the South Asian Region Qualifying Championships in 2022 and held in Nepal.

He is a married man and said that he receives the fullest support from his wife Sachi for his endeavours in table tennis. He has two daughters and both of them are playing the sport at a competitive level. “Unlike before I have time for my family and don’t wish to move out from where I live when pursuing my table tennis coaching because there is much support for me here in Kandy for whatever I do” said Jayasinghe.

Jayasinghe is a household name in table tennis at home and a lovely personality who’ll stop at nothing to extend a helping hand to a player in need of advice or coaching. Fans will remember him for the shots he has played at the tables and the victories he has recorded in the sport. But what will stand the test of time are the memories associated with him for being a such a humble guy and not allowing any of his success go to his head.



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Police investigating death of Cricket Malawi operations director Arjun Menon

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[File photo] Malawi were runners-up in Group A of the Men's T20 World Cup Sub-Regional Africa Qualifier in September 2024 [Cricinfo]

Arjun Menon, Cricket Malawi’s operations director, has died aged 48. Police are reported to be investigating the circumstances of his death in Blantyre, Malawi’s financial and commercial capital, on Sunday.

Menon played for Singapore and held coaching roles with various international teams including Chile, Botswana, Indonesia and Singapore before taking on the Malawi role in 2020.

“As Cricket Malawi, we are devastated by this loss because Arjun did so much to  our transformative agenda,” Vivek Ganesan, the president of Cricket Malawi, told Nation Online. “All the successes we have so far are attributed to him. This is a very painful loss.”

Dr. Henry Kamata, CEO of the Malawi National Council of Sports, also conveyed his condolences in a statement. “Arjun was a dedicated coach and a passionate advocate for the development of cricket in Malawi,” he said. “His contributions to the sport were immense and far-reaching, playing a pivotal role in the growth and success of the Malawi cricket team on regional and international platforms.

“His commitment, professionalism, and vision were truly inspirational, and his loss is a devastating blow to the sporting fraternity in Malawi and beyond.”

During Menon’s tenure, the Malawi men’s team were runners-up behind Tanzania in Group A of the T20 World Cub Sub Regional Africa Qualifier in September 2024. The Under-19 women’s team, meanwhile, topped Division 2 of the 2025 Under-19 Women’s T20 World Cup Africa Qualifier, gaining entry to Division 1 where they achieved a seventh-place finish.

[Cricinfo]

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Ashlin wins third title at Colombo Championships

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Ashlin de Silva (Pix by Kamal Wanniarachchi)

St. Peter’s College, Bambalapitiya player Ashlin de Silva won his third title of the 110th Vision Care Colombo Championships when he beat Mayooran Kubheran in the Under 16 boys’ sigles final at the Sri Lanka Tennis Association clay courts.

While Ashlin clinched the Under 16 boys’ title, Akesha Silva bagged the girls’ singles title of that age category.

Akesha Silva

Ashlin beat Kubheran 6-0 in the first set before the latter retired when the score was 3-1 in Ashlin’s favour.

Ashlin was also the winner of the Under 18 boys’ singles and joined Kubheran to clinch the Under 16 boys’ doubles title, beating Yudheerya Atapattu and Damsath Peiris 7-6, 6-2.

In the Under 16 girls’ final Newstead College player Akesha Silva beat Annaya Norbert 7-6 (3), 6-3.

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IPL 2025 to resume on May 17, final to be played on June 3

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IPL 2025 will resume on May 17 and end on June 3, as per the revised schedule announced by the BCCI on Monday night.

The remainder of the tournament, which was suspended on May 9 for a week due to cross-border tensions between India and Pakistan, will be played at six venues: Bengaluru, Jaipur, Delhi, Lucknow, Mumbai and Ahmedabad. The venues for the playoffs will be announced later, but the matches will be played on the following dates: Qualifier 1 on May 29, the Eliminator on May 30, Qualifier 2 on June 1 and the final on June 3. A total of 17 matches will be played after the resumption, with two double-headers, both of which will be played on Sundays.

The revised schedule features 13 league games and the four playoff matches. This means that the Punjab Kings (PBKS) vs Delhi Capitals (DC) game,  which was called off midway through the first innings on May 8 in Dharamsala, will be played again, on May 24 in Jaipur, which will be the temporary home base for PBKS. Two days later, PBKS will play against Mumbai Indians (MI), a match they were originally meant to play in their second home base of Dharamsala on May 11. The match that will restart the tournament on May 17 will be played between Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) and Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) in Bengaluru.

On the first of the two double-header days, Rajasthan Royals (RR) will meet PBKS in the day game (3.30pm IST) on May 18 and DC will take on Gujarat Titans (GT) in the evening (7.30pm IST). The next Sunday – May 25 – will see GT take on Chennai Super Kings (CSK) in the day game in Ahmedabad and Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) meet KKR in Delhi at 7.30pm IST. The last league game will be between Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) and RCB on May 27 in Lucknow.

The change in venues also means that three teams – PBKS, CSK and SRH – won’t get to play on their original home grounds anymore. With CSK and SRH out of the playoffs race, PBKS will count themselves unlucky to be playing two of their home matches at a neutral venue. With 15 points from 11 matches, PBKS were third on the points table  before the tournament was suspended.

The official release said the BCCI held “extensive consultations with government and security agencies, and with all the key stakeholders” before finalising the resumption of the tournament.

The delayed finish of the IPL, which was originally scheduled to end on May 25 in Kolkata, means it will now coincide with the entire ODI series between England and West Indies starting on May 29 in Birmingham and ending on June 3 at The Oval. It will lead to a clash for Romario Shepherd (RCB), Shamar Joseph (LSG) and Sherfane Rutherford (GT), who have all been picked in the West Indies ODI squad. England have not named their squad yet but the players likely to be affected are Jos Buttler (GT), Phil Salt (RCB), Jacob Bethell  (RCB), Liam Livingston (RCB), Will Jacks (MI) and Reece Topley (MI), depending on which teams make the playoffs.

The revised IPL schedule also squeezes the gap between the IPL final and the WTC final  to just seven days, with Australia and South Africa set to contest the Test world title from June 11 at Lord’s. Both Australia and South Africa are scheduled to announce their squads on Tuesday. The players who are currently part of the IPL teams and are likely to be picked for the WTC final are Australia captain Pat Cummins and Travis Head (both SRH), Mitchell Starc and Tristan Stubbs (both DC), Josh Hazlewood (RCB), Marco Jansen and Josh Inglis (both PBKS), Aiden Markram (LSG), Kagiso Rabada (GT), Ryan Rickelton (MI) and Kwena Mphaka (RR).

The revised schedule will also potentially impact the India A tour of England, which is scheduled to begin from May 30, for two unofficial Tests in Canterbury and Northampton. Several fringe India players, some of whom are likely to be part of the India squad for the five-Test series starting on June 20 in England, will now be part of the IPL when the A matches begin.

For now, the biggest challenge for the 10 IPL franchises will be to re-assemble their squads and bring back overseas players and support-staff members who had begun flying back home over the weekend. The team that could find it easiest to get back together will be GT, currently on top of the table, who had seen only two of their overseas players fly back: Buttler and Gerald Coetzee. The rest of their squad was continuing to train in Ahmedabad. MI could also benefit from the revised schedule, as their first game is on May 21, four days after the tournament resumes.

(Cricinfo)

 

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