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St. Benedict’s likely to get new life at top Tier

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Promotions and Demotions of Under 19 Cricket tournament

by Reemus Fernando

The future of Mahanama College Colombo in the Under 19 Cricket tournament will be decided by Sri Lanka Schools Cricket Association shortly, after the school serving a suspension from the ongoing tournament failed to move the courts against the sports governing body.

Mahanama pulled out from the quarter-final against Trinity on the second day of the match aledging that the ground staff had prepared the wicket earlier than the scheduled time preventing the bowling side (Mahanama) from taking advantage of the conditions in the morning. In response, SLSCA barred Mahanama from the entire tournament.

A senior official of the SLSCA said that the executive committee of the association will soon take a decision regarding the future of Mahanama College. On previous occasions schools violating tournament rules were severely dealt with, imposing bans and demoting teams to lower divisions.

In the case of Mahanama getting demoted, St. Benedict’s will hae a new life in the Tier ‘A’ tournament. At the end of the relegation matches, Maliyadewa College Kurunegala and St. Benedict’s College, Kotahena were the lowest placed teams and are slated to be demoted to Tier ‘B’.

In Tier ‘B’, Holy Cross College Kalutara and Tissa Central Kalutara are the teams getting demoted as they ended up with the lowest points after the relegation league. A surprising outright victory by St. Sylvester’s against Tissa in the relegation matches secured the Tier B place of the Kandy team.

Their places in the top Division will be filled by St. Joseph Vaz’s College, Wennappuwa and Dharmaloka College Kelaniya who were the finalists of the Division II Tier ‘A’ tournament.

The former Division I team Kingswood College and Vidyaloka College Galle are the teams getting promoted to Tier ‘A’ after doing well in the Tier ‘B’ of the Division II tournament.

The teams advancing to Division II from the top Tier of the Division III tournament are Sri Sumangala College Hikkaduwa and St. Mary’s College Chilaw.

The other teams getting demoted to lower divisions are Galahitiyawa Central and St. Peter’s Negombo (from Division II Tier ‘A’) and Siri Piyarathana, Padukka and St. Mary’s Kegalle (from Division II Tier ‘B’).

Karunaratne Buddhist School and Wanduraba Central are demoted from Tier ‘A’ of the Division III tournament for not honouring their tournament commitments.



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Mahmudullah calls time on international career

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Mahmudullah played 239 ODIs for Bangladesh, scoring 5689 runs to go with 82 wickets • ICC

Mahmudullah has called time on his international career after announcing his retirement from ODIs through a social media post on Wednesday [12th March 2025]. Mahmudullah, who turned 39 last month, had already retired from Tests in 2021 and T20Is in 2024.

“All praises only for the Almighty Allah. I have decided to retire from international cricket,” Mahmudullah wrote on his official Facebook page. “I would like to thank all of my team-mates, coaches and especially my fans who have always supported me. A big thank you to my parents, my in-laws, especially my father in law & most importantly my brother Emdad Ullah, who has been there for me constantly since my childhood as my coach & mentor.”

“And finally, thanks to my wife & kids, who have been my support system through thick & thin. I know Raeid will miss me in red and green jersey. Not everything comes to an end in a perfect way, but you say yes and move forward. Peace, Alhamdulillah. Best wishes to my team & Bangladesh cricket.”

Mahmudullah finishes as Bangladesh’s fourth-highest run-getter, behind Mushfiqur Rahim, Shakib Al Hasan and Tamim Iqbal, with 5689 runs at an average of 36.46, including four hundreds and 32 fifties. His retirement comes a week after Mushfiqur, his long-time team-mate and brother in law, had also retired from ODIs.

On Monday, when the BCB informed in its press release that Mahmudullah had requested that the board not consider him in the central contracts list after February 2025, it was seen as a sign of impending retirement.

All of Mahmudullah’s centuries came in ICC tournaments. After scoring two hundreds in the 2015 ODI World Cup, he made an unbeaten 102 against New Zealand in the 2017 Champions Trophy in Cardiff.  More recently, in the 2023 ODI World Cup in India, he scored 111 against South Africa in Mumbai.

The ODI retirements of Mahmudullah and Mushfiqur come after Bangladesh suffered an early exit in the 2025 Champions Trophy. Mahmudullah played just one innings, managing 4 off 14 balls against New Zealand in Rawalpindi. Mahmudullah’s form in the lead-up to the tournament, though, was excellent: he had scored four ODI fifties in a row, against Afghanistan and West Indies, away from home late last year.

Mahmudullah made his ODI debut in 2007 as a utility player, batting mostly at No. 7 and bowling offspin. His first turning point came in the 2011 World Cup agsinst England, when he added an unbroken 58 for the ninth wicket with Shafiul Islam to guide Bangladesh to a two-wicket win. In the following year, his unbeaten fifties helped Bangladesh to a 3-2 ODI series win against West Indies.

He enjoyed more success in the 2015 World Cup, when he struck centuries against England and New Zealand in successive matches while batting at No. 3. His hundred against New Zealand in the 2017 Champions Trophy, in a 223-run stand with Shakib, is an iconic innings in Bangladesh cricket history.

Mahmudullah made a comeback ahead of the 2023 World Cup after he had been dropped from the side. He also proved his value with the ball, taking 82 wickets at an economy rate of 5.21. Mahmudullah never led Bangladesh in ODIs, though he had captained them in T20Is and Test cricket.

Mahmudullah’s retirement brings the curtain down on Bangladesh’s most successful quintet of cricketers who played between 2006 and 2025 in white-ball cricket.

Apart from Mahmudullah, Tamim reconfirmed his retirement from international cricket earlier this year. Shakib had announced his Test and T20I retirement in India last year, while also informing at the time that the Champions Trophy would be his last ODI assignment. Having missed the tournament due to various reasons, his ODI career now seems finished, too.

Mashrafe Mortaza last played ODIs in 2020, when he also signed off from captaincy. Mushfiqur has retired from ODIs and T20Is, but is in line to become the first Bangladesh cricketer to reach the 100-Test landmark.

[Cricinfo]

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Gujarat Giants face bogey team Mumbai Indians in bid for final spot

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A big-match player like Beth Mooney will be crucial for Giants [BCCI]

Even though both Gujarat Giants and Mumbai Indians come into the eliminator after losing their last league games, Mumbai look a little more wounded. They lost their first home game at Brabourne Stadium in the WPL on Tuesday,  they dropped four catches in the game, leaked a lot of runs in the field, and they are playing non-stop cricket at the end of the tournament. The eliminator on Thursday will be their third game in four days after back-to-back matches to start the week and should they make the final, it will be four games in the span of six days for Mumbai.

Giants have no such issues. The margin of their loss to Mumbai on Monday was just nine runs after Bharti Fulmali’s blazing finish, their Indian players are stepping up at the right time to take some of the load off the overseas stars, and their run of three straight wins before heading to Mumbai would have given them bundles of confidence.

Except they have never beaten Mumbai. In these three seasons of WPL, Mumbai boast of a 6-0 record against Giants but going by their last clash, the next contest may not be as lopsided as this stats suggests. One of the factors behind Giants’ rise in the points table was their middle-order batting led by captain Ashleigh Gardner and Deandra Dottin, even if they struggled to find the perfect opening partner for Beth Mooney. Giants have been the slowest starters in the powerplay this WPL (run rate 5.97), but then they pick up fabulously in the middle overs with a scoring rate of 8.81 (better than anyone else), and have been the second-best finishers at the death (10 per over) behind only Royal Challengers Bengaluru.

Going by this WPL’s trends, what could possibly decide the match will be Giants’ middle overs, when they will be looking to press the pedal but will be up against the mighty bowling of Mumbai – the best bowling side in that phase. Amelia Kerr, their star bowler in the middle overs, might have leaked plenty of runs on Tuesday, but had all the catches been taken off her bowling her figures might have been different. Her ability to excel under pressure – as was seen in the T20 World Cup last year – could be on display again on Thursday.

Going into the toss, both captains would be relieved to know which way the coin falls might not matter too much: while teams have still been opting to chase, the tide has turned at the end of the league stage with teams batting first winning the last three games. Before that, only two games had been won batting first out of 17.

While Mumbai will be eyeing their second final in three years after losing to RCB in the eliminator last year, the onus is on Giants to not make this year’s final match-up a repeat of what we saw in 2023.

Both teams went unchanged into their last league games but will be concerned about their opening combinations. If Giants haven’t found anyone to partner Mooney, Mumbai’s strategy to promote Kerr to the top hasn’t worked in three attempts.

Gujarat Giants (probable):  Beth Mooney (wk),  Kashvee Gautam,  Harleen Deol,  Ashleigh Gardner (capt),  Phoebe Lichfield,  Deandra Dottin,  Bharti Fulmali,  Simran Shaikh,  Tanuja Kanwar,  Meghna Singh,  Priya Mishra

Mumbai Indians (probable):  Hayley Matthews,  Amelia Kerr,  Nat Sciver-Brunt,  Harmanpreet Kaur (capt),  Amanjot Kaur,  Yastika Bhatia (wk),  G Kamalini,  S Sajana,  Sanskriti Gupta,  Shabnim Ismail,  Parunika Sisodia

[Cricinfo]
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St. Aloysius’ book Tier ‘B’ final spot

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St. Aloysius’ College Galle registered a crushing 76 runs victory over Isipatana in the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘B’ limited overs tournament semi-final played at Surrey Village ground on Wednesday.

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