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Selectors need to go

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Do the selectors have an axe to grind with Angelo Mathews? Or are they being used as cats’ paws?

Rex Clementine in Trivandrum

One-day cricket has been played for more than 50 years now and there have been over 4500 matches in this format and Sunday in the southern Indian city of Trivandrum we witnessed history as India bowled out Sri Lanka for a paltry 73 runs. The 317-run defeat is the heaviest in the history of the game by any team. This is no more an embarrassment. This is beyond repair.

The national selection panel’s flawed strategies have led us into this mess. Sri Lanka are unlikely to qualify automatically for this year’s World Cup and they could even miss out on playing the World Cup later this year if they have a horrible run in the qualifiers.

If that were to happen it would be a crying shame for a team that had reached three 50 over World Cup finals in the last 25 years winning it once.

The selectors should have stepped down when their decision to retain the injured Danushka Gunathilaka backfired in Australia and the player ended up in jail bringing shame to the entire nation. But they carried on regardless and Sunday’s result is further proof that their policies have doomed the sport that we all love.

In the last two years, there has been a lack of transparency and maybe this is an effort to target certain players.

When Dimuth Karunaratne was called back to play ODI cricket in 2019 having not played that format for more than four years, there was sound reasoning. It was explained that batting had too many collapses and the team needed someone to hold one end up. Then when the current panel came in they blamed Karunaratne saying that he was slowing down the innings conveniently forgetting why he had been brought in in the first place – to play the anchor role.

The selectors’ could be acting as cat’s paws of some individuals and they may not necessarily be board officials. Someone who doesn’t have the guts to call the shots directly may be using the national selection panel to settle scores.

Don’t forget that Karunaratne and other senior players were in the midst of a contracts row for bringing down salaries. All of a sudden you find them exiled from white ball cricket and we are told that there are concerns about fitness and that 50 and 20 over formats are a young man’s game.

Yes, 20 overs you can accept that argument but 50 overs is a different kettle of fish and you need some experience in your side.

Then, having flaunted so much on fitness being paramount and non-negotiable we find that fitness is no more a yardstick for selection. Unfit players are tolerated and the much-hyped fitness regime had been thrown out of the window. It’s a cock and bull story and secretly scores have been settled.

The fact of the matter is players like Dimuth and Angelo have not failed any fitness tests but the younger ones who have failed have found slots in the national cricket team. That’s simply not cricket!

Selectors behave like petty thieves retaliating to certain actions of players. You need a wise head of a Sidath Wettimuny who took on bigger boys aftermath of the 1999 World Cup campaign but didn’t burn bridges and took them to Pakistan because the Wasims and Waqars aren’t for the faint-hearted. In the end, a veteran helped Sri Lanka over the line with a broken finger and blood on the pitch.

Even Michael Tissera, Ashantha de Mel and Aravinda de Silva who have headed selection panels in recent years have diplomatically solved many a delicate issue. During their tenures, there was good communication and transparency. Players were challenged but never ever harshly treated. The current selection panel has not addressed a single media briefing to explain their policies. They are simply groping in the dark and the sport suffers.

We follow England’s blueprint for the 50-over format that they used in 1990s. The results have been horrible. England depended on too many all-rounders, in Sanjay Manjrekar’s words ‘bits and pieces cricketers’. There’s no way that in a playing eleven you can have four all-rounders. Despite this strategy backfiring time and time again they stick to it and it’s time that fresh thinking is brought in to take the game forward.



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Sai Sudharsan and Prasidh lead Gujarat Titans to top of IPL table

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Sai Sudharsan scored heavily behind square on the off side [Cricinfo]

B Sai Sudarshan and Prasidh Krishna once again stood up for Gujarat Titans (GT) as they beat Rajasthan Royals (RR) by 58 runs in Ahmedabad. This was GT’s fourth successive win in IPL 2025 and it took them to the top of the points table.

After RR opted to bowl on a red-soil pitch, Sai Sudharsan’s 82 off 53 balls, his third half-century of the season, steered GT to 217 for 6. With no dew in the second innings, it proved way too steep for RR to chase down. Mohammed Siraj and Arshad Khan struck in the powerplay before Prasidh picked up 3 for 24 in the middle overs to keep RR on the back foot. Despite Shimron Hetmyer’s fighting fifty, RR were all out for 159 in 19.2 overs.

Joffra Archer didn’t have a great start to IPL 2025. In his first two games, he conceded 109 from 6.3 wicketless overs. But he boucned back in his next two with a combined 4 for 38 from seven overs. He breathed fire tonight as well. In his first over, he rushed Sai Sudharsan with a 152.3kph bouncer. In his second, he got one to move in at 147.7kph and pegged back Shubman Gill’s off stump. His match-up against Gill in T20 cricket now reads: 15 balls, ten runs, three dismissals.

For his former captain Jos Buttler, Archer had two slips, a short leg and a catching square leg, and welcomed him with a menacing bouncer that Buttler did well to evade. Buttler inside-edged the next ball just wide of short leg, and then pushed Archer through the covers for four.

Sai Sudharsan generally takes time to get going. Here, he attacked right from the start. He ramped, scooped, drove and cut, and took his side to 50 in 5.1 overs. By the end of the powerplay, he had 39 against his name, off 22 balls. Only Wriddhiman Saha (54 vs Lucknow Super Giants in 2023) has scored more runs in an innings for GT in that phase.

Buttler was on 12 off 13 at one point but hit four fours in his next six balls to move to 31 off 19. He and Sai Sudharsan added 80 off 46 balls before Maheesh Theekshana trapped Buttler lbw. After a brief dip in the scoring rate, M Shahrukh Khan opened up and smashed 36 off 20 to re-inject momentum.

Sudharsan was dropped on 81 by Shubham Dubey off Archer in the 18th over, but he only added one more to his tally. Then Rahul Tewatia and Rashid Khan ransacked 30 in the last two overs to take GT past 200.

RR did not have a great start. Yashasvi Jaiswal slashed Arshad to deep third in the second over of the chase and Nitish Rana did the same against Siraj in the next. Sanju Samson and Riyan Parag counterattacked and added 48 off 26 balls for the third wicket. The stand was broken when Impact Sub Kulwant Khejroliya had Parag caught behind in the seventh over. Parag immediately reviewed the decision, confident that his bat had only hit the ground, but the third umpire thought otherwise, with Ultra Edge also bringing up a second spike when the ball passed the bat.

Coming into this game, Rashid had picked up just one wicket in four outings. Tonight, he struck in his first over. It was a shortish ball that didn’t bounce as much as Dhruv Jurel expected, and Sai Sudharsan at deep midwicket gobbled up the mistimed pull.

Rashid enjoys a favourable match-up against Hetmyer, having dismissed him six times in 63 balls for 79 runs before this game. He almost had Hetmyer lbw for a first-ball duck but the ball had pitched fractionally outside leg stump. From there on, Hetmyer dominated Rashid and hit him for 26 runs off 12 balls with the help of two fours and two sixes. However, Rashid was too good for RR’s Impact Sub Shubham Dubey and had him lbw for 1.

In his final over, the 16th over of the innings, Prasidh had Archer caught at mid-off and Hetmyer at deep-backward square leg, both off short balls. With RR 145 for 8 after 16 overs, the result was sealed. They dragged their innings into the final over but that did little to reduce the margin of their defeat.

Brief scores:
Gujarat Titans 217 for 6  in 20 overs (Sai Sudharsan 82, Jos Buttler 36, M Shahrukh  Khan 36, Rahul Tewatia 24*, Rashid Khan 12; Joffra Archer 1-30, Tushar Deshpande 2-53, Sandeep Sharma 1-41, Maheesh Theekshana 2-54) beat Rajasthan Royals 159 (Shimron Hetmyer 52, Sanju Samson 41, Riyan Parag 26; Mohammed Siraj 1-30, Arshad Khan 1-19, Prasidh Krishna 3-24, Kulwant Khejroliya 1-29, Sai Kishore 2-20, Rashid Khan 2-37) by 58 runs

[Cricinfo]

 

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Birthday boy Manasa shines as Joes savour title

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Manasa Madubashana cuts a cake to celebrate his birthday with his team after St. Joseph's beat Trinity in the Under 19 Division I Tier 'A' Limited Overs Cricket tournament final at the Surrey Village ground.

Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ Limited Overs Tournament

Speedster Manasa Madubashana celebrated his 19th birthday sharing four wickets each with spinner Yenula Dewthusa as St.Joseph’s sealed a comfortable 71 runs victory over Trinity in the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ Limited Overs tournament final at Surrey Village ground on Wednesday.

Chasing 205 runs to win Trinity’s top order batsmen were rattled by Madubashana who took four wickets in a decisive seven over spell. He took wickets in consecutive balls in his second over to trigger a collapse from which Trinity never recovered.

The four wicket hauls by Madubashana and Dewthusa restricted Trinity to 133 runs. In their chase, Trinity lost wickets at reguler intervals and a laboured 48 runs from Sweath Anurajeewa only managed to delay the outcome till the 48th over. His innings came to an end when Madubashana held on to a regulation catch off the bowling of Aveesha Samash.

Earlier put to bat, St. Joseph’s too lost wickets at reguler intervals, but mini partnerships between Abishek Jayaweera and Senuja Wakunegoda (52 for the second wicket), and Jayaweera and Nimthaka Gunewardena (45 for the 3rd wicket) enabled them to stay aloft.

Gunawardena top scored with 47 runs, while skipper Kenath Liyanage played a vital role anchoring the tail with an unbeaten 29 runs.

The title victory capped a remarkable end to the Joes limited overs tournament campaign after having reached the knockout stage with only two victories under their belt.

by Reemus Fernando

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Action from the Schools Relay Carnival 

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St. Benedict’s win Under 20 boys’ distance medley relay. (L) / Himansi Pradeepani anchored Lyceum International Wattala to victory in the Under 20 girls’ distance medley relay. (R)

Schools Relay Carnival commenced at Diyagama on Wednesday. Here are some pictures from day one of the three-day championship.

(Pix by Kamal Wanniarachchi)

Lyceum International Wattala were the winners of the Under 20 distance medley
relay. (From left) Himansi Pradeepani, Shalomi Rashni, Rashini Karunarathne
and Jithma Wijethunga.

 

.Under 20 boys medley relay winners, St. Benedict’s College, Kotahena. (From
left) Andrew Akash, Kalana Jayamanna, Kavindu Jayamanna and Denuth Nimesh.

 

Under 12 boys’ 4x100m relay winners, Maris Stella College. Negombo (From left) Tanujitha Weerasekara, Senith Ranasinghe, Milan Fernando and Denuth Thenujan.

 

Girls’ Under 12 4×50 metres relay winners, St. Bridget’s Convent, Colombo. (From left) Jenuli Perera, Sanah Fernando, Glesha Nanayakkara and Dehara Alwis.

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