Sports
Prabath Jayasuriya; COVID’s gift to Sri Lanka
Rex Clementine in Galle
We all agree that COIVD has caused havoc all over the world. The country has lost some of its finest statesmen, musicians and entrepreneurs to the virus. Some of us have lost our loved ones while some of us have lost our livelihood. It’s been a tough couple of years. But COVID also has done a good thing or two, like gifting Prabath Jayasuriya to Test cricket.
World cricket would have never heard of the left-arm spinner if the Sri Lankan camp had not been struck by the virus on the eve of the second Test against Australia.
Despite taking heaps of wickets in domestic cricket, Jayasuriya, who was educated at the rural Christchurch College, Matale never got a look in. He didn’t have any godfathers in cricket. Last year, he was on the verge of representing Sri Lanka but was dropped on fitness grounds. At the age of 30, Jayasuriya wasn’t the most fancied spinner in the country as those who matter were fascinated with their flawed and fraud youth policy. But life gives you moments that you are not ready to deal with.
After four players tested for COVID during the Australian series, the selectors were left with Hobson’s choice. They had to set aside their pride and call up Jayasuriya.
Throughout these four Tests in Galle, the spinners that Sri Lanka chose have failed to make an impact despite the conditions suiting them. The reason being that they gift away too many freebies faulting with their lengths. Jayasuriya, however, with ten years of First Class cricket behind him can keep bowling at one place for hours. He has been a sensation having taken 29 wickets in his first three Test matches.
Jayasuriya’s 12 wickets in the second Test against Australia was followed by eight scalps in the first Pakistan Test and nine in the second game that ended yesterday including a five wicket haul in the second innings.
The final day’s play yesterday started with Pakistan on 89 for one chasing a target of 508. It was an improbable target. The realistic goal was for them to bat out three sessions. With bad light having ended play early on the previous two days, Sri Lanka had to rush things and possibly finish it off by tea. There was the occasional drizzle as well but Sri Lanka wrapped it up before play could be halted.
The 76 run stand for the third wicket between Pakistan’s most experienced pair – Babar Azam and Mohammad Rizwan was threatening to take the game away from Sri Lanka. Jayasuriya then provided the breakthrough with a clever piece of bowling. Rizwan left one expecting the ball to turn away from him. But he was foxed. It was the straight one and instead of going away it followed the batsman and hit the stumps.
Soon, from 176 for two, Pakistan collapsed to 188 for five at lunch. A few batsmen were indecisive while there was a comic run out involving Babar and Fawad Alam.
Babar was the key for Pakistan and nemesis for Sri Lanka. Jayasuriya was smart though. Again setting up the batsman with a straight ball. Babar reviewed more in hope than conviction. But it was plumb. There was not much resistance from Pakistan’s tail as Sri Lanka wrapped up a 246 run win to square the series. Jayasuriya was Player of the Series having taken 17 wickets.

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Sanju Samson and Jamie Overton deliver first points for Chennai Super Kings
Sanju Samson’s first century for Chennai Super Kings (CSK) set up the team’s first win in IPL 2026 and their first win at home after six successive defeats, stretching back to the previous season.
Samson flew out of the blocks in the powerplay, scoring 45 of CSK’s 61 runs, in the first six overs. He had over 32,000 fans whistling at Chepauk when he reached his half-century off 26 balls. He had those fans whistling louder and chanting his name when he converted it into a 52-ball century.
A fifty from Ayush Mhatre, before he was retired out, and a cameo from Shivam Dube took CSK up to 212 for 2. That total, however, appeared smaller when DC’s openers Pathum Nissanka and KL Rahul blazed past fifty in the fourth over of their chase. CSK then struck thrice in the next three overs to send the chase spiralling out of DC’s control.
Though Tristan Stubbs battled with 60 off 38 balls, the mounting asking rate was too much to overcome. Jamie Overton’s 4 for 18, which included the prized scalp of Stubbs, was central to CSK’s successful defence.
After CSK were asked to bat first, Samson scythed the second ball he faced from debutant Auqib Nabi for four. He never let his attacking intent or enterprise let up in the powerplay, crashing a total of nine fours in 19 balls in the powerplay. In stark contrast, Ruturaj Gaikwad managed to find the boundary just once in 17 balls during this phase.
Gaikwad’s first-15-ball strike rate of 104.54 in four innings this season is the lowest among 20 batters who have opened at least twice.
When Gaikwad was itching to break free after the powerplay, Axar Patel darted one into the red-soil pitch and cramped the batter on the pull, having him splice a catch to deep midwicket for 15 off 18 balls.
Lungi Ngidi’s slower ball, which he developed during his time at CSK under Dwayne Bravo, has made a number of batters look silly in this IPL and the T20 World Cup prior to it. But when Ngidi pulled out the variation for the first time on Saturday, Samson picked it, held his shape for long enough and flayed it away past sweeper cover. When Ngidi responded with an on-pace short ball outside off, Samson opened the face of the bat and dinked it between the keeper and short third for four more.
But it wasn’t until the 11th over that he hit a six, which was also CSK’s first six on the day. When T Natarajan missed a yorker and bowled a full-toss, Samson slugged him high and far over midwicket. In all, Samson took the left-arm seamer for 33 off 13 balls. It also included the edged four that brought him his hundred in the 18th over.
This was Samson’s fourth ton in the IPL. Only Virat Kohli (8), Jos Buttler (7), Chris Gayle (6) and KL Rahul (5) have hit more hundreds than Samson in the league. DC could’ve cut Samson’s knock short on 52 had Nissanka not dropped a catch at long-off.
Mhatre raised his fifty off 27 balls, but was retired out after he managed only eight off his last nine balls. Samson and Dube then combined to push CSK past 210.
The presence of three right-handers in DC’s top three encouraged CSK to bring in left-arm fingerspinner Akeal Hosein as their Impact Player. Hosein, though, showed signs of early nerves, bowling two front-foot no-balls in the first over of the chase. One of the resultant free hits was swiped over midwicket for four by Nissanka. Hosein ended up conceding 20 runs in his two powerplay overs and didn’t return to bowl.
Nissanka also lined up left-arm seamer Khaleel Ahmed for a pair of fours and a six in the second over. Rahul moved to 18 off 10 balls before Khaleel stopped him in his tracks with a short ball into the pitch. Despite that, DC scored 61 in their first five overs.
At the start of the final over of the powerplay, Anshul Kamboj had Nissanka glancing the ball to Khaleel at short fine leg, but he shelled the chance. It didn’t cost CSK anything as Kamboj had Nissanka chipping it to mid-on, where Dewald Brevis, who had recovered from a side injury, held onto the catch.
Left-arm quick Gurjapneet Singh then marked his IPL debut with a first-ball wicket. He darted one short and wide, having Axar slicing it to point, where Sarfaraz Khan dived to his right and plucked the ball out of thin air.
Overton then hit a hard length and had Sameer Rizvi holing out to deep midwicket for 6 off 19 balls. Overton kept hitting a hard length and made life harder for DC’s middle order.
Stubbs then mounted a late fightback with a half-century and narrowed the equation to 32 off 12 balls. Overton, though, cranked it up to nearly 145kph and had him splicing a catch to mid-off in the penultimate over. Kamboj then finished off DC in the final over, sending a packed weekend crowd into raptures.
Brief scores:
Chennai Super Kings 212 for 2 in 20 overs (Sanju Samson 115*, Rutraj Gaikwad 15, Ayush Mhatre 59 retired out, S hivam Dube 20*; Axar Patel 1-39) beat Delhi Capitals 189 in 20 overs (Pathum Nissanka 41, KL Rahul 18, David Miller 17, Tristan Stubbs 60, Ashutosh Sharma 19; Khaleel Ahmed 1-40, Jamie Overton 4-18, Gurjapneet Singh 1-39, Anshul Kamboj 3-35, Noor Ahmad 1-36) by 23 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Arya, Prabhsimran and Shreyas help Punjab Kings ace another 200-plus chase
Punjab Kings trumped Sunrisers Hyderabad in a battle of explosive top orders, chasing down 220 with more than an an over to spare. Abhishek Sharma and Travis Head put on 120, and Prabhsimran Singh and Priyansh Arya responded with a 99-run partnership of their own before Shreyas Iyer ensured the rest of the chase went smoothly.
The winning runs were scored by Shashank Singh, who was more pivotal on the day with the ball, dismissing both SRH openers in a single over to begin a slowdown they couldn’t recover from. Having got to 120 for no loss in eight overs, SRH scored just 99 in their last 12.
Shashank took 2 for 20 in three overs, finishing with an economy rate of 6.66 in a game where 442 runs were scored.
This was the tenth time PBKS had chased down a 200-plus target, the most times by any team in the IPL.
They teased it against Kolkata Knight Riders, but in New Chandigarh, the Travishek show well and truly arrived at IPL 2026. Abhishek slapped the first legal delivery of the game over covers to lay down the marker. He drove Xavier Bartlett down the ground twice next up. And then in the third over, the fireworks really began.
Abhishek pulled a short ball from Arshdeep Singh over midwicket and then slapped a slower ball down the ground for back-to-back boundaries. Arshdeep went on to bowl four wides in his next five attempts to keep the ball out of Abhishek’s arc. Under pressure, he ended up bowling closer to off and was thumped down the ground for the first six of the game. When Arshdeep went around the wicket and bowled short and across the left-hander, Abhishek went up and over short third for another six.
Head, on 3 off 5 at this point, joined the party by taking down Marco Jansen for two fours and a six in the fourth over.
When PBKS turned to Vijaykumar Vyshak, Abhishek welcomed him with a six over cover and then hit him for three more for the second 24-run over of the powerplay, in the process bringing up an 18-ball fifty. Head followed up with a hat-trick of boundaries against compatriot Bartlett. One legal ball later, when Abhishek pulled a short ball in front of square for a six, SRH brought up their hundred in 35 balls, making it the fifth time a team had reached 100 inside the powerplay – three of them had come courtesy this opening pair. Their 105 for no loss at the end of the sixth over was the joint-third-highest powerplay score in the IPL.
With PBKS’ frontline bowlers getting hit around the park, Shreyas turned to Shashank’s medium-pace, and it turned out to be the turning point in the game.
He conceded just six runs off the first over after the powerplay, and off the first ball of his next over he foxed Head with a slower ball that he chipped tamely to long-off. A single and a wide later, he had Abhishek slicing to cover for 74 off 28. With that, Shashank had three IPL wickets, and they were of Abhishek, Head and Abhishek.
From there, the scoring rate dropped significantly. Ishan Kishan scored briskly, but Jansen took a screamer running from deep midwicket to end his cameo in the 14th over. Heinrich Klaasen, meanwhile, could never really get going, and fell as he tried to accelerate at the death, falling for 39 off 33. In the end, SRH finished on 219 for 6, the lowest first-innings total when an IPL team has scored 100 or more in the powerplay.
Chasing 220 can be daunting. But perhaps less so if you’re chasing 220 when you know your opponents left some runs out there, especially in the Impact Player era.
SRH opted for Harsh Dubey’s left-arm spin first up and Arya welcomed him with a sweep for four, before launching the last two balls of the over down the ground – once over the rope and once along the carpet – to knock 18 runs off the target.
Then Prabhsimran took over the scoring. The next three overs went for 37, to which Arya contributed just the one run. Prabhsimran took a special liking to Jaydev Unadkat, whom he hit for three sixes.
The fifth over by Eshan Malinga went for 17, and PBKS saved the best of the powerplay for the last over, with Arya going 6, 6, 4, 4 to bring up a 16-ball fifty and welcome Harshal Patel into the attack with a 21-run over.
Brief scores:
Punjab Kings 223 for 4 in 18.5 overs (Priyansh Arya 57, Prabhsimran Singh 51,Cooper Connolly 11, Shreyas Iyer 69*, Nehal Wadhera 14, Shashnak Singh 16*; Harsh Dubey 1-38, Shivang Kumar 3-33) beat Sunrisers Hyderabad 219 for 6 in 20 overs (Abhishek Sharma 74, Travis Head 38, Ishan Kishan 27, Heinrich Klaasen 39, Aniket Verma 18; Arshdeep Singh 2-50, Xavier Bartlett 1-42, Shashank Singh 2-20) by six wickets
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Ten-try Trinity tear Royal apart
Trinity College ended a 15-year wait for silverware with a commanding 58-26 win over Royal College, running in ten tries to clinch the Dialog Schools Rugby Knockouts 2026 President’s Trophy at Sugathadasa Stadium.
In a final rich in rivalry, Trinity struck early and never relented. Royal’s indiscipline proved costly as Trinity moved the ball fluently, Kevin Weerakoon opening the scoring. Royal briefly responded through a driving maul finished by Lemitha Amerasinghe, but their lead was short-lived.
Trinity hit back with precision, Sadeesha Weerawansa and Dimath Abeypitiya combining before the latter crossed twice. Despite another maul try from Disas Pathirana, Trinity’s attacking edge stood out. Abdul Malik’s cross-kick found Ammaar Manzil, while Malik added a try of his own as Trinity led 27-12 at the break.
Any hopes of a Royal comeback were swiftly ended. Skipper Shan Althaf struck twice after the restart, while Malik orchestrated proceedings. Further tries from Hamza Abdeen and Manzil underlined Trinity’s dominance.
Royal managed late consolation scores through Hiruka Jayadinu and Akira Yatawara, but it was Althaf who sealed the rout, completing his hat-trick to cap a memorable triumph.
Meanwhile, Lumbini Vidyalaya etched their name in history with a 17-10 win over Dharmaraja College in the Premier Trophy.
In the Chairman’s Trophy final played at the Royal College Sports Complex between Madina National School, Kandy and Central College, Maharagama, Central College Maharagama won 20-19.
In the run-up to the President’s Trophy final, Royal beat S. Thomas’ College 25-5 in a lopsided quarter-final before defeating Isipathana in the semi-final 39-13 to reach the final. Trinity College downed Zahira College 32-23 in their quarter-final fixture before beating a strong Wesley outfit 49-29 to book their berth in the final.
A highlight of this year’s Chairman’s Trophy Final was the inspiring journey of Madina National School, Kandy, whose rise to the final reflects the success of grassroots rugby development initiatives supported by Dialog.
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