Sports
Royal claw back Bradby despite Colombo stumble
Royal College reclaimed the Bradby Shield on Saturday, edging out Trinity College on aggregate despite slipping to an 8–3 defeat in the return leg of school rugby’s showpiece event at the Royal Sports Complex in Colombo.Bradby brings Royalists and Trinitians from all over the world together and this time it was no difference. True to form both sides put up a splendid show to give everyone great entertainment.
The 79th edition of the blue-riband contest saw Royal ride home on their first-leg cushion, the 10-point buffer from Kandy proving decisive in a bruising arm-wrestle that swung like a pendulum but never quite tilted Trinity’s way.
The visitors, newly minted league champions, charged out of the blocks with purpose. A booming kick from Shan Althaf pinned Royal deep, and Trinity’s pack rolled up their sleeves with a grinding maul and pick-and-drive routine straight from the coaching manual. Prop forward Achintha Jayasena rumbled over after Manusha Silva punched a rare hole in Royal’s granite wall. Yet the missed conversion felt like a dropped ball on the try-line.
Royal, like seasoned campaigners, refused to panic. They had more ball, more territory and more bite at the cherry — but their kicker Mohomed Shimak had a day he would rather forget, pushing three penalties wide, two from inviting range. Trinity too squandered their shot at points when Althaf’s penalty drifted astray.
Half-time came with the scoreboard reading 5–0 in Trinity’s favour, but Royal still five to the good on aggregate.
The second half was a slugfest. Royal hogged possession yet frittered chances with knock-ons and wrong options, while Trinity sniffed a comeback. Althaf clipped over a penalty to narrow the margin and stir the old boys in maroon and gold. But the riposte was swift: Royal’s Idris Farook held his nerve to land a penalty and restore daylight on the overall tally.
From there it was trench warfare. Tackles thundered, boots clattered and the Bradby’s fate hung on every ruck. Royal’s forwards, disciplined and unyielding, tightened the screw in the dying minutes, snuffing out Trinity’s hopes and sealing back the silverware they lost a year ago.
Final score:
(2nd leg): Royal College 3 (1P) – Trinity College 8 (1T, 1P)
Aggregate:
Royal College 18 – 13 Trinity College
Points scorers:
• Royal College: Idris Farook (1P)
• Trinity College: Achintha Jayasena (1T), Shan Althaf (1P)
by Carlos Van de Berg ✍️
Latest News
Heartbreak for Scotland as Sri Lanka clinch thriller to stay alive
Sri Lanka kept alive their slim hopes of making it to the semi-finals of the 2026 T20 World Cup with a nervy win over Scotland in Manchester.
Chasing 152, they found themselves needing seven from the final over. Nilakshika Silva and Sugandika Kumari took four off the first three balls of Rachel Slater before the seamer hobbled off with what looked like a knee issue. Priyanaz Chatterji came on to bowl the remaining three balls. She conceded a single off the fourth delivery but with two needed from two, Sugandika slashed through short third for four to seal the win.
Sri Lanka now rely on England beating New Zealand and Ireland handing a thrashing to West Indies to make it to the final four. On the other hand, Scotland would rue a golden opportunity of securing a direct qualification to the 2028 edition of the tournament.
Darcey Carter and Katherine Fraser gave Scotland a brisk start. Carter didn’t hesitate to take the aerial route and picked up four fours off the first ten balls she faced. Fraser too chipped in with a couple of boundaries but Silva’s excellent catch diving to her right at mid-off off Mithali Ayodhya ended her innings on 12.
Carter and Kathryn Bryce took the side to 45 for 1 in the powerplay. During this period, Carter also became the leading run getter in the tournament, going past England’s Danni Wyatt-Hodge’s tally of 193.
Sri Lanka made a comeback once the field restrictions were relaxed. Even though Kathryn hit Athapaththu for a six and a four off successive balls in the ninth over, she could manage only 23 off 23 before being caught and bowled by Kavisha Dilhari.
Carter tried to break the shackles but her aerial shots failed to clear or beat the boundary riders. After being 18 off ten at one point, she could manage only 16 off the next 26 deliveries she faced. As a result, Scotland could score only 43 in eight overs after the powerplay.
Sarah Bryce and Ailsa Lister put the Scotland innings back on track with a fourth-wicket stand of 53 in just 32 balls. The stand was broken when Lister was run out for 26 off 17 as Silva nailed a direct hit at the non-striker’s end after fielding the ball in her follow-through. Chatterji was also run out on the very ball but Sarah carried on. She hit two fours off Ayodhya in the final over to take her side past 150. That meant Scotland scored 63 in the last six overs.
Coming off an unbeaten 106 against Ireland, Athapaththu once again was at her attacking best. She started by smashing two fours off Kathryn in the opening over before taking down Gabriella Fontenla in the next. She hit Fontenla three fours and a six in an 18-run over. Imesha Dulani fell cheaply but Athapaththu and Hasini Perera took Sri Lanka past fifty in just 4.4 overs.
Just when it started to look like another easy chase for Sri Lanka, Fraser bowled Athapaththu from around the wicket for 33 off 16. Harshitha Samarawickrama showed good intent, hitting two fours off the first three balls, but just like the first innings, the scoring rate dropped after the powerplay. Kathryn then had Perera caught at mid-off in the ninth over and Fraser trapped Hansima Karunaratne lbw in the tenth to make it 78 for 4.
Fraser and Kirstie Gordon bowled enough dots to keep Sri Lanka under pressure. But with 27 required from 18 balls, Gabriella Fontenla dropped two catches in two overs. In the penultimate over, Kathryn also felt the pressure and gave away ten, including two in the form of wides. In contrast, the experienced Silva stayed calm and took her side home in the company of Sugandika.
Scores:
Sri Lanka Women 154 for 7 in 19.5 overs (Chamari Athapaththu 33, Hasini Perera 23, Harshitha Samarawickrama 27, Kavisha Dilhari 18, Nilakshiaka Silva 21*, Kaushini Nuthyangana 12; Kathryn Bryce 2-28, Rachel Slater 2-31, Kathryn Farser 2-25, Kirstie Gordon 1-24) beat Scotland Women 151 for 6 in 20 overs (Sarah Bryce 47*, Darcey Carter 34, Katherine Fraser 12, Kathryn Bryce 23, Alisa Lister 26; Mithali Ayodhya 2-34, Sugandika Kumari 1-25, Kavisha Dilhari 1-19) by three wickets
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Finals of CDB – MCA T10 cricket tournament under lights on Sunday
CDB –MCA T10 CRICKET TOURNAMENT 2026
The finals of both the Tier A and Tier B of the Mercantile Cricket Association T10 cricket tournament sponsored by Citizens Development Business Finance PLC [CDB] will take place under lights at the CCC grounds on Sunday.
The tier A finalist will be decided after Abans Group take on Sampath Bank and CDB ’A’ take on David Peiris Group of Companies ‘A’ in the semifinals which will be played at the same venue in the morning. The losing semifinalists of both Tier A and Tier B will vie for the third place spots in the afternoon.
The final of Tier ‘B’ is scheduled to commence at 5.45 PM while the final of Tier A will commence at 7.45PM on Sunday.
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