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Percy set for retirement giving us many points to ponder

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by Rex Clementine

Those of us who love the game of cricket make a decent living from the sport and we need to be grateful for that. Players, match officials, ground staff and the media are able to keep the home fire burning thanks to the game we love. But here’s this man Percy Abeysekara, who had dedicated his life for the game of cricket expecting nothing in return. At every game be it in Colombo, Kandy, Galle, Suriyawewa or Dambulla Percy was ever present when a cricket game was on.

Some of these venues like Suriyawewa aren’t spectator friendly for the lack of public transport. You never saw Percy driving a vehicle. But he made sure that he was there at every nook and corner. Often, spectators, players, and officials are quick to give Percy a lift.

One day after a game at Suriyawewa several jeeps were heading towards Hambantota as Percy was walking back to his stay. One jeep stopped and Percy was told to get into the jeep in front. So who was in the jeep, we asked Percy. ‘It was Suriyawewa Ceaser.’ A notorious gangster in the south. Even the most hardcore criminal’s heart melted when he saw Percy.

Once former Board Chairman Gamini Dissanayake, a powerful government minister gave Percy a lift to Colombo after a game at Asgiriya. Mr. Dissanayake asked, ‘Percy you are so knowledgeable about the game. Why don’t you join the cricket board? For this Percy replied, ‘Sir, I’d rather be on the footboard than the cricket board.’

It was a rare occurrence to not see Percy during the recent Galle Test. He had fallen ill and had been advised to rest in bed. Amidst this some social media champions had spread rumours shocking the entire cricketing world.

Percy’s association of cricket dates back to over 50 years before the country gained Test status. While he got on well with most cricketers, Percy did get under the skin of a few of them.

What made Percy a class act from the others is that he knew the history of the game and his command of the English language was superb. He was equally good at his Sinhalese.

Before Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike took over the Christian schools in 1962, Catholic schools were run by foreign missionaries. There were Oblate fathers looking after North and Western Provinces while Jesuit Priests were put in charge of East and South. The Central Province belonged to the Benedictine Monks. Percy had his education at St. Aloysius College, Galle which was run by Italian Jesuits. His eloquence of English was thanks to his education.

Percy’s wit is quick and spontaneous. For the Zimbabwe Test in 2002 at Asgiriya, Russel Arnold had been dropped after a bad patch. He was doing 12th man duty. Percy was after a few drinks and Arnold wound him up saying, ‘Okay Percy, now enough. You are boring.’ Quick came the reply, ‘I’m boring but you are not scoring.’

During the 1984 Lord’s Test when Sri Lanka gave England an unexpected hiding, Percy was doing the rounds with the lion flag. An English lady asked Percy, ‘Is that a lamb in your flag.’ For which Percy replied, ‘Lamb is in your team.’ (Referring to Allan Lamb). ‘Lion is in my flag.’

Kudos to ACL Cables as well for employing Percy beyond 80 years. A company generally gives five to ten years extension even for their most loyal employees, but ACL Cables have supported him well beyond his retirement. There’s leave in abundance for cricket’s most famous face when there are games at both home and overseas. Such employers are rare and need to be appreciated.

Beyond his wit and funny side, Percy also has a human side. He deeply cares for former players who had fallen on hard times not able to make ends meet.

Former captain Roshan Mahanama irrespective of a person’s stature is quick to give the cold shoulder if he didn’t like a person’s values. This week he was making urgent phone calls to find out where Percy lives and to make a visit to his residence. That certainly is a high enough accolade for Percy as Roshan is someone who maintains such high standards.

The impact Percy has had over cricket stars is massive. Sir Richard Hadlee was Chairman of Selectors in 2002 when the Kiwis were playing a warm-up game at NCC. He had just turned up at the venue and having spotted Percy at the boundary rope made a beeline to greet his friend.

Another Kiwi Martin Crowe gave away his Man of the Match award in the 1984 tour. Ravi Shastri autographed one of his t-shirts with these words, ‘Dear Percy, don’t ever lose your voice. Sri Lanka needs it more than you.’

We are not sure whether we will see the same energetic Percy again. When you ask Percy his age, he proudly declares, ‘I am two days younger to Sir Garry Sobers. But certainly, fitter than Sir Garry Sobers.’

Percy named his only son Garfield, after his favourite cricketer. One Garfield wasn’t enough for the family. So, he named his grandson Garfield too. The other grandson was of course Sachin. Percy’s energy will be missed. He kept the crowd going. As he often declares, ‘Percy has no mercy, for cricketers and spectators who are lazy.’



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Tilak Varma, Shardul Thakur hand Punjab Kings fifth successive defeat

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Tilak Varma's 75* off 33 balls sealed the win [Cricinfo]

Punjab Kings’ (PBKS) playoff chances took a serious beating after they lost their fifth game in a row, this time going down to Mumbai Indians (MI) by six wickets in Dharamsala. They remain fourth on the table with 13 points from 12 games, while the two teams just below them, Chennai Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals, have 12 points each with a game in hand.

MI were without their regular captain Hardik Pandya, who is still recovering from back spasms, and stand-in captain Suryakumar Yadav, who missed out due to personal reasons. In their absence, Jasprit Bumrah led them for the first time in the IPL and put PBKS in after winning the toss. The hosts rode on Prabhsimran Singh’s chancy 57 off 32 to reach 100 in 11 overs before Shardul Thakur’s four-for derailed them. They were 140 for 7 in the 17th over but Azmatullah Omarzai, Xavier Bartlett and Impact Player Vishnu Vinod ransacked 60 in the last 22 balls to lift them to 200 for 8.

Ryan Rickelton set up the chase for MI with his 23-ball 48. But it was Tilak Verma who played the pivotal role with his unbeaten 75 off 33. With 50 needed from three overs, he, with the help of Will Jacks, took MI over the line on the penultimate ball of the match.

Priyansh Arya opened his account with a second-ball four off Deepak Chahar and Prabhsimran picked up two fours off Bumrah in the following over. In all, the two combined to hit ten fours in the powerplay but there were plenty of dot balls and not a single six. To make things worse for PBKS, Chahar bowled Arya with a knuckleball in the final over of the powerplay, after which PBKS were 55 for 1.

Prabhsimran was on 10 off 11 balls at one point. He was dropped on 5 by Naman Dhir off Bumrah and then on 28 by Corbin Bosch off his own bowling. He made full use of those reprieves and slog-swept Raghu Sharma for back-to-back sixes. He brought up his fifty off 29 balls and took PBKS past 100.

Shardul turned the tide in the 12th over. Bowling cross-seam into the pitch, he had Prabhsimran miscue an aerial hit to deep third. Two balls later, he got another cross-seam delivery to straighten and ping Shreyas Iyer’s off stump. From the other end, Raj Bawa bowled Cooper Connolly for 21 off 22 in the next over. A little later, Shardul removed Suryansh Shedge and Marco Jansen, leaving PBKS on 140 for 7 in 16.2 overs.

PBKS were so down and out that they decided to bring in Vinod as Impact Player, and the move seemed to have paid off. First, Omarzai struck four sixes and two fours in a 17-ball 38. Then Vinod (15 not out off eight) and Bartlett (18 not out off seven) added 34 off just 12 in an unbroken stand for the ninth wicket to take the side to 200.

Arshdeep Singh started the chase with a two-run over, after which Rickelton took over. He showed a preference for the leg side; 34 of his 48 runs and all four sixes came on that side of the wicket. Of the 59 runs MI scored in the powerplay, 47 came from Rickelton’s bat, while Rohit Sharma was struggling on 12 off 15.

PBKS made a comeback after the powerplay. Omarzai removed Rickelton, Dhir fell to Jansen, and Yuzvendra Chahal bowled Rohit to leave them 89 for 3 after ten overs.

While Tilak kept finding boundaries and moved to 22 off 11 balls, PBKS kept Sherfane Rutherford quiet. Jansen conceded just five singles in the 14th over and Arshdeep gave away only eight in the 15th, leaving MI with 72 to get from the last five.

Jacks and Tilak hit Jansen for two sixes and two fours in the 18th over. Arshdeep left Bartlett with 14 to defend in the final over but he started with a full toss, which Jacks hit over long-off for a six. A single and a dot brought it down to eight required from three. Tilak showed no nerves and smashed the next two balls for sixes to seal the win.

Brief scores:
Mumbai Indians 205 for 4 in 19.5 overs (Rohit Sharma 25, Tilak Varma 75*, Ryan Rickelton 48, Sherfane Rutherford 20, Will Jacks 25*; Azmatullah Omarzai 2-36, Marco Jansen 1-55, Yuzvendra Chahal 1-32) beat Punjab Kings 200 for 8 in 20 overs (Prabhsimran Singh 57, Cooper Connolly 21, Azmatullah Omarazai 38, Vishnu Vinod 15*, Xavier Bartlett 18*; Shardul Thakur 4-39, Deepak Chahar 2-36, Corbin Bosch 1-42, Raj Bawa 1-11) by six wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Sri Lanka’s ’96 Champions relive glory days in Malaysia

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Sri Lanka’s 1996 World Cup-winning team will arrive in Kuala Lumpur today (Friday) for a series of events marking the 30th anniversary of their triumph that stunned the cricketing world. The tour, organised by Tourism Malaysia, Cricket Malaysia and the Royal Selangor Club, will feature several events spread across four days.

The highlight of the visit will be a T20 game involving the World Cup-winning side on Saturday, starting at 11:30 a.m. Sri Lanka time. The match will be telecast live on Dialog TV.

A gala dinner, coaching clinics for underprivileged children conducted by the former world champions and several fan engagement activities are also part of the programme.

Sri Lanka’s dependable number three from the 1996 campaign, Asanka Gurusinha and team physiotherapist Alex Kountouri, both based in Melbourne, had already arrived in Kuala Lumpur ahead of the event, while the rest of the squad were due to leave Colombo on Thursday night.

“I am really excited and looking forward to the event. It’s always fun to get together with the boys and relive the good old days. It’s going to be a cracking few days,” Gurusinha told The Island.

“Without us even realising it, 30 years have gone by since we became world champions. All the boys are still close to each other just like we were back then and as I said, it’s going to be an exciting few days,” he added.

The organisers have secured several sponsors for the occasion and hope the presence of Sri Lanka’s celebrated side will help generate greater interest in cricket in Malaysia.

Malaysia became an associate member of the International Cricket Council in 1967 and remains an active member of the Asian Cricket Council. Earlier this year, they appointed former Sri Lanka coach Dav Whatmore as Director of Cricket.

The country has previously hosted ICC events, including the Under-19 World Cup, but the national side has struggled to keep pace with emerging Asian teams such as Nepal, Oman, UAE and Hong Kong.

Badminton remains Malaysia’s most popular sport, accounting for ten of the country’s 15 Olympic medals. Football too enjoys a passionate following, leaving cricket fighting an uphill battle for wider appeal.

Rex Clementine

in Kuala Lumpur

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Vaibhav Sooryavanshi picked in India ‘A’ squad for one-day tri-series in Sri Lanka

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The 'A' team call-up for the 15-year-old Sooryavanshi follows a breakout year since he announced himself on the big stage in IPL 2025 (Cricbuzz)
Vaibhav Sooryavanshi has been named in a 15-member India ‘A’ squad for the forthcoming one-day tri-series in Sri Lanka, scheduled to be held in June 2026. The squad, which will face ‘A’ sides of Sri Lanka and Afghanistan in the competition, will be led by Tilak Varma with Riyan Parag named his deputy.

The ‘A’ team call-up for the 15-year-old Sooryavanshi follows a breakout year since he announced himself on the big stage in IPL 2025 with a sensataional 35-ball century against Gujarat Titans. He was then a member of India’s Under-19 World Cup winning squad earlier this year, a feat that he helped achieve with a sensational 175 in the final against England. Sooryavanshi has continued his fine run in the ongoing IPL 2026, having aggregated 440 runs from 11 innings so far at a strike-rate of 236.56. This also includes a league-leading 40 sixes.

The squad also features notable performers from the ongoing IPL including Priyansh Arya, Prabhsimran Singh, Anshul Kamboj and Suryansh Shedge.

The tri-series will begin with the hosts taking on India A on June 9 and feature a double round-robin format before the top two teams face off in the final on June 21. India A will also play two multi-day matches against Sri Lanka A, with the squad for the red-ball fixtures to be announced at a later date. The white-ball series will be played in Dambulla while the red-ball games will take place in Galle.

Squad:

Tilak Varma (c), Priyansh Arya, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, Riyan Parag (vc), Ayush Badoni, Nishant Sindhu, Harsh Dubey, Suryansh Shedge, Prabhsimran Singh (wk), Kumar Kushagra (wk), Vipraj Nigam, Yash Thakur, Yudhvir Singh, Anshul Kamboj, Arshad Khan

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