Connect with us

Sports

Stoinis thrills and crushes Sri Lanka

Published

on

Rex Clementine in Perth

Australia are such a balanced side and that’s why their embarrassing defeat in the opening encounter of the ICC T-20 World Cup against New Zealand is hard to comprehend. The defending champions had lost by 89 runs in Sydney to their Trans-Tasman rivals and Sri Lanka had to bear the brunt of their efforts to improve the Net Run Rate. Eventually, the hosts crushed them by seven wickets with 24 deliveries to spare yesterday night.

The Aussies have so many match-winners in their ranks and someone like Steve Smith can’t even find a place in the side. They chased down a target of 158 with Marcus Stoinis starring having reached his half-century in just 15 balls. The all-rounder smashed four fours and five sixes.

Sri Lanka had their moments. Lahiru Kumara bowled with fire and hit Glenn Maxwell on the chin and the batsman was hopping around like a cat on a tin roof. Losing Binura Fernando in the very first over was a massive blow for Dasun Shanaka and the team’s injury list just keeps growing. The left-arm seamer who was flown in for the injured Dilshan Madushanka has barely lasted a week in Australia. Fernando himself is returning from injury and someone has to tell us the reasons why we have had so many injuries in recent months.

Optus Stadium in Perth is Australia’s third biggest ground and has been used for other sports like rugby too. Not too long ago the All Blacks graced here and at times fielders looked to be needing the speed and athleticism of that magnificent rugby team. Even miss-hits fell between the players.

Sri Lanka managed just two sixes in their innings both scored by Charith Asalanka, who got his break only because of injuries. Asalanka was such a hit during the last World Cup and looks to be the man destined to take Sri Lankan cricket forward. For him to be given the cold shoulder is a no brainer.

A total of 25,069 fans witnessed the proceedings yesterday. In Perth’s old ground – the WACA – it would have been a full house. Two thirds of the posh Optus Stadium where cricket shifted in 2018 was empty but the Papare band kept everyone entertained. Most of the numbers they chose were of Sunil Perera’s. Some of his finest hits although were released in the early 1980s, they are still popular even among the younger generation. Sunil may be not the baila king, with another Moratuwaite – M.S. Fernando owning that title, but he was one guy known for creativity and such talents need to be celebrated.

Sometimes a nation’s old-timers are celebrated even overseas. A couple of Aussies were wondering yesterday what Aravinda de Silva is up to these days. Aravinda may not have the numbers of Kumar Sangakkara or Mahela Jayawardene, but if there was one batsman who gave the Aussies nightmares it was Aravinda. One of the chaps who asked about Aravinda was Malcolm Conn, Australia’s celebrated cricket writer. Conn in 1999 exposed that Cricket Australia had secretly fined Shane Warne and Mark Waugh for accepting money from a bookie.

Conn won a national award for the story that brought Australian cricket to its knees. Soon, Cricket Australia put their house in order.



Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

Olympics decision on gender eligibility to come in early 2026

Published

on

By

International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Kirsty Coventry says a decision about eligibility criteria for transgender athletes will come in the early months of 2026 [Aljazeera]

The International Olympic Committee says it will announce eligibility criteria for transgender athletes early next year, after months of deliberation as it seeks to find a consensus on how to protect the female category.

The issue has been a source of controversy, with no universal rule in place for the participation of transgender athletes at the Olympic Games.

The IOC, under its new President Kirsty Coventry, did a U-turn in June, deciding to take the lead in setting eligibility criteria for Olympic participation, having previously handed responsibility to the individual sports federations, leading to a confusing patchwork of different approaches.

In September, Coventry set up the “Protection of the Female Category” working group, made up of experts as well as representatives of international federations, to look into how best to protect the female category in sports.

“We will find ways to find a consensus that has all aspects covered,” Coventry told a press conference on Wednesday following an IOC executive board meeting. “Maybe it is not the easiest thing to do, but we will try our best, so when we talk about the female category, we are protecting the female category.”

Coventry said a decision would come in the first months of 2026.

“We want to make sure we have spoken to all stakeholders, taken adequate time to cross the Ts and dot the Is,” she said.

“The group is working extremely well. I don’t want to try to constrain the working group by saying they need to have a specific deadline, but I am hopeful in the next couple of months and definitely within the first quarter of next year we will have a clear decision and way forward, which I think we are all looking forward to,” said Coventry, a former Olympic swimming champion.

Before Coventry’s decision in June, the IOC had long refused to apply any universal rule on transgender participation for the Games, instructing international federations in 2021 to come up with their own guidelines. Under current rules, still in force, transgender athletes are eligible to take part in the Olympics.

Only a handful of openly transgender athletes have taken part in the Games. New Zealand’s Laurel Hubbard became the first openly transgender athlete to compete in a different gender category to that assigned at birth when the weightlifter took part in the Tokyo Olympics in 2021.

Currently, some international federations have rules in place, but others have not yet reached that stage.

US President Donald Trump has banned transgender athletes from competing in sports in schools in the United States, which civil society groups say infringes on the rights of trans people, as Los Angeles prepares to host the 2028 Summer Olympics.

Trump, who signed the “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports” order in February, has said he would not allow transgender athletes to compete at the LA Games.

[Aljazeera]

Continue Reading

Latest News

Sri Lanka squad named for ACC Men’s U19 Asia Cup

Published

on

By

Sri Lanka Cricket Selection Committee has named a 15-member squad to participate in the upcoming ACC Men’s U19 Asia Cup (50 Over).

The team will depart for the United Arab Emirates today [0 December 2025] and has been placed in Group B, alongside Nepal, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh.

Continue Reading

Sports

Hospital CCTV helps clear long jumper of doping

Published

on

By

Wang Jianan won gold at the World Championships in Oregon in 2022 [BBC]

China’s world champion long jumper Wang Jianan has been cleared of doping after a review of hospital CCTV footage.

Wang, 29, became the first Asian man to win world long jump gold with his 8.36m leap in Oregon in 2022.

He failed an out-of-competition doping test in November 2024, which showed traces of terbutaline – a drug primarily used to treat and prevent breathing problems in patients with asthma.

The China Anti-Doping Agency (Chinada) said the presence of the drug had been caused by passive inhalation while Wang was accompanying a relative to hospital for nebuliser treatment.

Chinada decided Wang bore no fault or negligence for the violation and would not be banned.

The decision was reviewed by the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU), which used hospital security footage and patient records to investigate Wang’s movements before his drug test.

The AIU’s investigation sought opinion from an independent scientific expert, who concluded “a passive transfer of the substance to the athlete could not be excluded”.

The AIU also said there was “nothing suspicious” about the documents and CCTV files shared by Chinada.

[BBC]

Continue Reading

Trending