Sports
Teams convene in Buenos Aires for Americas T20 WC Qualifying
Qualification for the 2024 T20 World Cup resumes in Buenos Aires on Saturday (February 25) as six teams gather in the Argentine capital to contest the Americas Sub-Regional Qualifier T20. Hosts Argentina are joined by Bermuda, The Bahamas, Belize, Cayman Islands and Panama to vie for three qualifier berths alongside Canada at the Americas regional finals, one step away from the T20 World Cup.
With the United States automatically qualifying for the 2024 World Cup as co-hosts with the West Indies, combined with the replacement of the Global Qualifier with direct regional qualification, the path to the ICC’s pinnacle T20 event is less arduous than usual for lower-ranked Americas Associates.
For the three teams winning through this tournament, a turn on the global stage will be just one step away as they head to the Regional Final in Bermuda at the end of September. Though there will be only one qualification spot on offer at the regional final and Canada remain firm favourites to take it, for the six teams in Buenos Aires this cycle represents a rare opportunity to make a bid for World Cup qualification should they secure a podium finish this week.
The Format
In the absence of Brazil and Suriname, both of whom pulled out of the tournament, the six teams will compete in a single group, playing a simple round robin with the top three sides on the table progressing to join Canada at the four-team regional final.
The Teams
The only team at the tournament with a World Cup pedigree, Bermuda have slipped back into the pack somewhat since their heyday, but remain overwhelming favourites to win the tournament.
Convincing wins over the hosts in two warm-up matches ahead of the tournament underlined their status, with Delray Rawlins and Kamau Leverock especially looking a cut above the grade. Argentina will fancy their chances of a top-three finish, with home conditions in their favour and a recent winning record over most of the rest of the field.
An exception there is the returning Cayman Islands side however, Raymon Sealy’s team having a strong claim to the title of “best of the rest” in the region behind the USA, Canada and Bermuda. A five-nothing whitewash at the hands of the Caymans in their most recent competitive outing last year suggests that the Bahamas will be outsiders to progress, though if skipper Marc Taylor or Kervon Hinds fire they may have the next best shot at a podium finish.
Belize and Panama both start as underdogs, despite boasting potentially match-winners in the likes of Bernan Stephenson or Irfan Hafejee respectively, neither have yet been able to consistently compete at regional level.
Squads Argentina:
Hernan Fennell (c), Bruno Angeletti, Pedro Arrighi, Pedro Baron, Ramiro Escobar, Alejandro Ferguson, Agustin Husain, Alan Kirschbaum, David Mauro, Lautaro Musiani, Augusto Mustafa, Agustin Rivero, Santiago Rossi, Tomas Rossi
Bahamas:
Marc Taylor (c), Jonathan Barry, Festus Benn, Turan Brown, Keith Burrows, Narendra Ekanayake, Sandeep Goud, Everette Haven, Kervon Hinds, Julio Jemison, Ashok Nair, Junior Scott, Gregory Taylor, Dwight Wheatley
Belize:
Kenton Young (c), Andrew Banner, Garret Banner, Glenford Banner, Nathan Banner, Lebron Broaster, Ordell Casasola, Maurice Castillo, A Dominguez, Terrel Flowers, Tayshawn Moses, Glenroy Reynolds, Bernan Stephenson, JJ Wade
Bermuda:
Delray Rawlins (c), Jacob Albertze, Derrick Brangman, Zeko Burgess, Jabari Darrell, Terryn Fray, Malachi Jones, Kamau Leverock, Tre Manders, Justin Pitcher, Jarryd Richardson, Dominic Sabir, Sinclair Smith, Charles Trott, Matthew Watson
Cayman Islands:
Ramon Sealy (c), Jahmeal Buchanan, Paul Chin, Brian Corbin, Sacha De Alwis, Patrick Heron, Thilina Hewa, Alistair Ifill, Demar Johnson, Paul Manning, Troy Taylor, Omar Willis, Adrian Wright, Conroy Wright
Panama
: Irfan Hafejee (c), Anilkumar Natubhai Ahir, Khengar Bhai Ahir, Nikunj Ahir, Rahul Ahir, Vishal Ahir, Abdullah Jasat, Mahmud Jasat, Ahmed Patel, Faizan Patel, Huzaifa Patel, Sohel Patel, Mohmad Sohel Patel, Ahmadi Ravat.
Sports
Pakistan lodge official complaint about Bangladesh’s review at end of chase
Pakistan have complained to match referee Neeyarmur Rashid over the on-field umpire Kumar Dharmasena’s decision to allow Bangladesh to take an lbw review off the penultimate ball of the third ODI in Mirpur. ESPNcricinfo has learnt the Pakistan management registered their complaint on the grounds that they believe Bangladesh took the review after a replay of the delivery flashed up on the big screen.
The decision to take the review, and its ultimate consequences helped Bangladesh assume an unassailable position in the game. Before that delivery, Pakistan needed 12 to win off two balls. Rishad Hossain flighted one up onto leg stump that spun down the leg side, away from Shaheen Afridi. The umpire called it a wide as it went down leg. After brief discussions, Bangladesh decided to take a review for lbw, even though, to the naked eye, the ball was nowhere near Afridi’s legs or any part of his body.
*As per the playing conditions, the fielding team can seek a review for a dismissal only once they have appealed. Also, the appeal can be made any time before the next delivery is bowled. It could not be ascertained whether the on-field umpire, after signalling the wide, informed Bangladesh that in case they want to review, they would need to appeal for lbw or whether Bangladesh asked for the review themselves. Only once the review is signalled by the on-field umpire does the 15-second timer start.
Pakistan have argued normal protocols were not followed, with the big screen at the stadium showing the ball passing the bat, and potentially giving Bangladesh enough information to suggest it may have made contact. Pakistan are also understood to be aggrieved at the possibility Bangladesh were allowed to review outside the maximum 15 seconds within which such a decision must be made. No timer appeared on the broadcast, so whether Bangladesh reviewed in time could not be independently confirmed.
However, the reason for Afridi’s visible frustration became clear as soon as the DRS went to Hawk-Eye, with a spike at the moment the ball passed the bottom of his bat, suggesting it had kissed the toe end and could not, therefore, be a wide. Bangladesh lost the review, but the wide decision was reversed and the equation became 12 in one ball. Afridi was stumped off the final delivery and swung his bat over the stumps in frustration. It secured victory for Bangladesh by 11 runs, and a 2-1 series win.
It is not yet clear yet what action the PCB wants from the match referee, though it is believed they expect at minimum a public acknowledgment that an error was made.
The decision is the second in as many games Pakistan have felt they may have come out the wrong side of. Salman Agha was run out after being caught outside his crease trying to hand the ball to Mehidy Hasan Miraz in the second ODI. Agha’s frustration spilled over and he had heated words before throwing his bat and gloves down, earning him a demerit point.
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Thirty years since the World Cup win
Today marks the 30th anniversary of Sri Lanka’s unforgettable World Cup triumph. Ask any Sri Lankan where they were on the 17th March 1996 and chances are they will recall it in vivid detail. It was a red-letter day for a small island nation that punched above its weight, became world champions and changed the course of its cricket forever.
It had been a crazy, turbulent month. The Central Bank bombing had shaken the country to its core, crippling the economy and casting a shadow over the tournament. Australia and the West Indies refused to travel to Colombo, forfeiting their games amid security fears. Yet capable hands steadied the ship. Foreign Minister Lakshman Kadirgamar and cricket board president Ana Punchihewa ensured the show went on, steering the nation through stormy waters.
Adversity, as it often does, forged resolve. The troubled times brought the country together and the team responded by playing the brand of cricket that would become their trademark; fearless, inventive and unapologetically bold. Sri Lanka went through the tournament unbeaten, finding a man for every crisis and a solution for every problem.
The signs had been there from 1994 onwards. Sri Lanka were knocking on the door, threatening to do something special, and when the big stage arrived, they did not merely walk through it, they kicked the door down.
Three years earlier, Sir Garry Sobers had been asked who might break his world record of 365 in a Test innings. The great West Indian reckoned the race was between Brian Lara, Sachin Tendulkar and Aravinda de Silva. Aravinda never quite threatened that particular milestone, but what he did in Lahore remains etched in cricketing folklore. His majestic century in the final, steering a tense run chase with the composure of a grandmaster, remains one of the finest innings played under pressure. Kumar Sangakkara may have better numbers, but for many Sri Lankans Aravinda remains the darling of their cricketing hearts. Travel anywhere in the cricketing world, India, Pakistan, New Zealand or the West Indies and once people learn you are from Sri Lanka, the inevitable question follows: “What is Aravinda doing these days?”
Then there was Sanath Jayasuriya, the man who turned the Powerplay into a demolition derby. Bowlers barely had time to loosen their shoulders before the ball was disappearing over midwicket. His whirlwind starts tore attacks to shreds and rewrote the playbook of one-day cricket. Such was his impact that England captain Michael Atherton famously suggested the ICC should intervene and rethink the playing conditions. Jayasuriya had simply taken the first 15 overs away from them, lock, stock and barrel. Limited-overs cricket has never quite been the same since.
At the helm was Arjuna Ranatunga, a captain cut from rare cloth. Leadership, after all, is not just about calling the shots on the field but about standing by your men when the chips are down. Ranatunga literally opened the doors of his house to more than half a dozen members of that World Cup squad, treating them like family and backing them through thick and thin. Like Allan Border, Clive Lloyd and Imran Khan before him, Arjuna was a leader of men whose tactical acumen and fighting spirit sometimes overshadowed his considerable contributions with the bat.
Every great side also has its unsung heroes. Asanka Gurusinha was one of them. Naturally an aggressive striker of the ball, he curbed his instincts and played the anchor role, allowing the stroke-makers around him to cut loose. That willingness to put the team before personal glory summed up the camaraderie and collective spirit that defined the side.
The World Cup win did more than fill trophy cabinets , it changed the game at home. Cricket in Sri Lanka turned professional almost overnight. Players who once juggled day jobs with the demands of international sport found themselves with central contracts and proper match fees. Schools across the island embraced the game and its popularity soared, inspiring a new generation to pick up bat and ball.
Some argue that Sri Lanka later rested on their laurels. While other nations took a leaf out of our book and modernised their cricket structures, we were slow to move with the times. There may be some truth in that argument.
But what is also true is that players of the calibre of Arjuna, Sanath and Muttiah Muralitharan come along perhaps once in half a century. And as for Aravinda, well, there won’t be another like him, not in our lifetimes.
by Rex Clementine
Sports
Sri Lanka win first encounter against Guam
Sri Lanka registered 3-0 win over Guam as Annaya Norbert, Akesha Silva and Buvindi Jithsara recorded victories in their matches of the 2026 Junior Billie Jean King Cup Asia Oceania Pre-Qualifying Event in Colombo on Monday.
While Annaya Norbert beat Rachel Anne 6-0, 6-1 in the first singles match, Akesha Silva beat Faith Perera 6-1, 6-2 in the second.
In the doubles encounter Annaya Norbet and Buvindi Jithsara beat Faith Perera and Leah san Agustin 6-0, 6-3.
Singapore, Pakistan, Macau, Maldives, Oman, Brunei, Mongolia, Guam, Pacific Oceania, Myanmar, Bhutan and Sri Lanka are the teams taking part in the tournament.
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