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Sri Lanka team set to leave for World Championships today  

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Sri Lanka Track and Field Team for World Championships: (Seated from left): Kalinga Kumarage (Captain), Harjan Rathnayaka (coach), Ajitha Naragala (manager), Maj. Gen. Palitha Fernando (President SLA), Saman Kumara Gunawardana (Secretary General SLA), Irangani Rupasinghe (official).  (Back row from left): Pabasara Niku, Dinuka Deshan, Rajitha Rajakaruna, Pasindu Kodikara, Aruna Darshana, Dilhani Lekamge.  

By Reemus Fernando  

Sri Lanka’s seven-member track and field team, (the largest since 2013) for the World Athletics Championship were set to leave for Budapest today. The World Championship will commence on Saturday.

The men’s 4×400 metres relay team, the Champions of the Asian region, inclusive of Aruna Dharshana and Kalinga Kumarage are the second fastest men’s 4×400 metres relay team in the world this season.

Their performances at the recent Asian Championship have earned them due recognition ahead of the global event, though that does not guarantee a final berth.

Dharshana is the only male athlete taking part in an individual event- men’s 400 metres- after the sprinter finished among the top 48 in the Road to Budapest Rankings to secure his passage to the biennial event.

Kumarage missed out on that valuable opportunity but will be eager to deliver a strong performance in the relays. The duo are joined by Rajitha Rajakaruna and Pabasara Niku who were the members of the team that established the Asian Championship record and Pasindu Kodikara and Dinuka Deshan.

Javelin thrower Dilhani Lekamge is the only female athlete in the team after Gayanthika Abeyratne pulled out to concentrate on her training for the Asian Games.

Lekamge, who won the bronze medal of her pet event with a new Sri Lanka record mark at the Asian Championships booked her berth by finishing among the top athletes in the Road to Budapest rankings.

The team is accompanied by Rajitha Rajakaruna’s coach Olympian Harjan Rathnayaka as team coach. Irangani Rupasinghe is joining the contingent as an official.

The team manager Ajitha Naragala will not be leaving with the team. According to Sri Lanka Athletics sources he is set to join the team later.



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Colombo BC and Track Masters win basketball championships

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The basketball fraternity came together to witness a closely fought final of the Sri Lanka Basketball League as Colombo Bulls and Colombo Basketball Club locked horns at Royal College indoor basketball courts on Sunday.

Although Colombo BC looked to be the better team on paper, Bulls held their own and looked set to end their dominance. However, during the closing stages of the game, Bulls committed a few costly errors and Colombo were quick to make them pay holding onto a four point win. The final score was 73-69. One highlight during the game was the efficacy of both teams in shooting free throws, but during the final few seconds Bulls were off the target with the pressure getting to them.

Colombo were the deserved winners as they won all seven games in the competition.

Rukshan Atapattu, Dasun Mendis, Nimesh Fernando and Simron Yoganathan performed exceptionally well in the final.

In the women’s final, Track Masters secured a seven point win over Bulls. They were trailing by four points at the end of the first half but turned the tables in the second half winning 53-46.

Devduni Perera, Anjalee Ekanayake and Benika Thalagala came up with superb performances during the final.

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Omel and team set to keep Sri Lanka’s 400m legacy alive

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Omel Shashintha

Sri Lanka’s long-standing dominance in the men’s 400 metres received another major boost as talented young sprinters, led by Omel Shashintha, delivered outstanding performances at the Junior Selection Trial held at Diyagama earlier this week.

‎The trial was conducted to select the national team for the upcoming Asian Junior Athletics Championships scheduled to be held in Hong Kong from May 28 to 31. The performances at the meet underlined that the 400 metres — widely regarded as Sri Lanka’s signature track event — continues to produce athletes capable of maintaining the country’s proud tradition.

‎Shashintha produced the highlight of the meet with a brilliant sub-46 second run to win the men’s 400 metres. The St. Sebastian’s College, Kandana athlete clocked an impressive 45.79 seconds, a time that would have been competitive even at senior national level. His performance currently stands as the fastest time in Asia in his age category this year and matches the 12th fastest time in the world so far in 2026, recorded by South Africa’s Kryn Romijn.

‎While Shashintha was the only athlete to dip under the 46-second barrier, two other promising runners also achieved the qualifying standards for the World Junior Athletics Championships which will be held later this year in Oregon, USA. Representing Kurunegala District, Sadew Rajakaruna finished second in 46.39 seconds, while Thisen Ranvidu of St. Peter’s College clocked 46.83 seconds to secure the required qualifying mark of 47.40 seconds.

‎Another promising athlete, I.M. Bogoda, narrowly missed the qualifying standard but came close with an encouraging performance.

‎The impressive depth displayed in the one-lap event also raises hopes of Sri Lanka fielding a strong 4×400 metres relay team at both the Asian Junior Championships and the World Junior Championships later this year.

‎Shashintha and Rajakaruna further strengthened their credentials by achieving qualifying standards in the 200 metres as well. Shashintha clocked 21.22 seconds, while Rajakaruna recorded 21.07 seconds, underlining their versatility across sprint events.

‎Both athletes already possess valuable international exposure, having competed alongside senior athletes on the global stage. Shashintha and Rajakaruna represented Sri Lanka at the World Athletics Indoor Championships last year, experience that is expected to benefit them greatly when they take on Asia’s best at the junior championship.

‎With such promising performances, the young sprinters appear ready to carry forward Sri Lanka’s rich 400-metre tradition established by legendary quarter-miler Sugath Thilakaratne and continued by current national stars Kalinga Kumarage and Aruna Dharshana.

‎Their performances at Diyagama suggest that Sri Lanka’s next generation of quarter-milers is well on track to keep the nation firmly among Asia’s leading sprinting powers.

by Reemus Fernando

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Thushara vs SLC and Greig vs ECB

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England captain Tony Greig and business magnate Kerry Packer outside London High Court in 1978.

Sri Lanka seamer Nuwan Thushara hauling his employer Sri Lanka Cricket before the courts has echoes of a legal duel that shook the game some half a century ago, when Tony Greig took on the England and Wales Cricket Board. The two cases, however, are chalk and cheese. Greig was England’s captain, a man calling the shots; Thushara, for all his slingy menace, is still trying to cement his place in the XI. Yet, in the eyes of the law, whether you’re the world’s premier all-rounder or carrying drinks, the playing field is meant to be level.

Thushara’s grievance stems from SLC refusing him a ‘No Objection Certificate’ to feature in the Indian Premier League. The board has drawn a hard line in the sand, no fitness, no NOC.

Those who passed the two kilometer run and skinfold test, the likes of Pathum Nissanka, Kamindu Mendis and Eshan Malinga, are cashing in in India. Thushara, having failed to meet the cut, has been left padded up in the pavilion. The Colombo District Court must now decide who has overstepped the crease. The learned judge knows better than us all.

Greig’s battle, by contrast, was taking on the authority head on. As England captain, he nailed his colours to the mast with Australian media tycoon Kerry Packer and his breakaway World Series Cricket. In doing so, he helped prise open the gates for several of the game’s leading players. The English board responded with a ban, barring him from Test and county cricket. Greig cried foul, calling it an “unlawful restraint of trade”. The case, famously known as Greig vs Insole, went the distance, with the court eventually ruling in favour of the England skipper.

Thushara’s case, though, appears to be on a stickier wicket. His argument hinges on his SLC contract expiring on March 31, freeing him to ply his trade in franchise cricket. But SLC seem to have a clause tucked up their sleeve that NOCs remain under their purview for a further three months post-contract. If that holds water, Thushara may find himself caught down the leg side.

From the board’s perspective, the argument is straightforward: professional cricketers must meet minimum fitness standards. In modern cricket, there are no passengers, every player must pull his weight in the field. Rather than take the legal route, Thushara might have been better served biting the bullet, hitting the gym and staging a comeback the hard way.

History offers a telling example. Aravinda de Silva, the nation’s finest batsman, once found himself given the cold shoulder by selectors in 2001 despite being the country’s leading run-scorer. The charge? Not fit enough. It seemed curtains on a glittering career as he spent 18 months out in the wilderness.

Then came a turning point. Mr. Michael Tissera, a selector with a keen eye and a cricketing brain, called Aravinda for a chat. Aravinda left the meeting having told Tissera that he needed six weeks. Over the next six gruelling weeks, he shed 21 kilos, rediscovered his edge and forced his way back into contention. What followed was vintage Aravinda, fast bowlers taken to the cleaners in Australia and South Africa. Everyone remembers the flicked six bisecting the mid-wicket and fine-leg fielders at Centurion. But not many know Tissera’s role in brining back the best of Aravinda.

That, perhaps, is the long and short of it. When the chips are down, the greats rewrite the script themselves.Sadly, such characters are few and far between these days. Equally rare are selectors in the mould of Tissera, men who know when to drop the axe and when to extend a lifeline.

by Rex Clementine

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