Sports
Tharupathi, Sadeesha dazzle after returning from World Cup
Tharupathi takes nine wickets, Sadeesha scores double century
by Reemus Fernando
Sri Lanka Under 19 spinner Malsha Tharupathi and batsman Sadeesha Jayawardena who were sparingly used by the team at the recently concluded ICC Youth World Cup came out all guns blazing for their respective schools when they returned to commence the Under 19 schools cricket season yesterday.
While the former Madampa Central spinner Malsha Tharupathi made a memorable First XI debut for Richmond College taking nine wickets in an innings, open batsman Sadeesha Jayawardena hammered an unbeaten double century for St. Joseph’s College to post 352 for four wickets declared against Maliyadeva.
Tharupathi who represented Sri Lanka at the recently held ICC Under 19 World Cup in West Indies was playing his first match for Richmond after joining the premier cricket playing school in Galle from Madampa Central. He took nine wickets to restrict Prince of Wales to 213 runs on day one of the Under 19 encounter at De Soysa Stadium on Monday.
Bowling the bulk of overs for Richmond, Tharupathi took nine wickets for 67 runs (23.4-4-67-9).
Jayawardena scored an unbeaten 207 (in 234 balls) inclusive of 24 fours and two sixes and put on 163 runs for the first wicket with Hirun Matheesha before combining Hiran Jayasundara to post a partnership of 134 runs for the fourth wicket.
Incidentally, Jayawardena and Tharupathi did not play a single match during the Under 19 World Cup. Jayawardena’s teammate Dunith Wellalage was the captain of the Sri Lanka Under 19 team.
On a spinners’ day Maris Stella’s Hasindu Perera claimed an innings haul of seven wickets to restrict St. Aloysius’ to 235 runs in their match at Bandaragama.
Tharupathi shines at Moratuwa
Scores:
Prince of Wales
213 all out in 64.4 overs (Tharindu Amarasinghe 35, Omesh Mendis 46, Thanuja Kavishan 44, Chanuka Mandiv 27; Malsha Tharupathi 9/67)
Richmond
74 for 2 in 30 overs (Tharinda Nirmal 31n.o., Bhanuka Manohara 18n.o.)
Hasindu takes seven wicket at Bandaragama
Scores:
St. Aloysius’
235 all out in 77.2 overs (Vidura Lakshan 24, Kavindu Kesara 26, Charya Yasara 81, Dineth Nimsara 22, Hasitha Suranga 27; Hasindu Perera 7/74)
Maris Stella
17 for no loss in 7 overs
Sadeesha scores double century at Darley Road
Scores:
St. Joseph’s
352 for 4decl. in 73 overs (Sadeesha Jayawardena 207n.o., Hirun Matheesha 59, Hiran Jayasundara 55; Nemsith Chanul 2/53)
Maliyadeva
65 for 2 in 21 overs (Jayamin Muthukumarana 21, Matheesha Weerasinghe 28n.o.)
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A rivalry renewed – Sabalenka and Osaka meet again
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Both have won four Grand Slam titles, been top of the world rankings and built their legacies on hard courts.
The big-hitting pair broke through on the WTA Tour around the same time, but their journeys have been very different.
While one peaked early, the other had a longer wait for success.
After they first met at the 2018 US Open – with Osaka going on to win her maiden major – they did not face each other again until 2026.
The pair have now faced each other three times in the space of three months – and today ( Sunday) they will go head-to-head again in a blockbuster fourth-round clash at Wimbledon.
(BBC)
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Babar Azam takes charge after Shan Masood is removed as Pakistan Test captain
Shan Masood has been removed as Pakistan’s Test captain, with Babar Azam taking over the reins for the second time in his career. The decision came as part of Pakistan’s squad announcement ahead of their upcoming two-match Test series in the West Indies, starting later this month.
The end of Masood’s tenure brings down the curtain on a historically poor stint. Appointed nearly three years ago, Masood captained Pakistan in 16 Tests and lost 12 of them. No captain in Test history has ever lost 12 of their first 16 Tests, and despite ten men having captained Pakistan in more Tests, only Misbah-ul-Haq, who lost 19 of his 56 Tests, has overseen more defeats than Masood. They have also lost their last seven Tests, the joint-highest across Pakistan’s history.
Aaqib Javed, Pakistan’s high-performance director, said it was the repetitive nature of Pakistan’s Test defeats, and their tendency to give up losing positions, that led them to decide they needed a change at the helm.
“We saw many close Test matches [under Shan’s captaincy]. But a few things were not being addressed. Like the Centurion Test, South Africa’s two batters at No. 10 [for the tenth wicket] put on a 60-70 run partnership [51 runs]. The game was in our hands. Against the West Indies in Multan, in the second Test, the team was rolled over easily.
“Shan’s own performance during his tenure has been good, but as captain, he has not been able to bring the desired results. We wanted to look for a captain who comes in and leads the team better” – Aaqib Javed
“The captain has a responsibility of finishing games. Same with the South Africa Tests at home. Some things are the responsibility of the team, some are the responsibility of the selectors, and some are the responsibility of the captain. The captain’s responsibility also includes maintaining the team’s over rate, taking DRS decisions, making the right call at the toss.”
Masood’s tenure began with what has always proved Pakistan’s biggest challenge, an away series in Australia, which they lost 3-0. It was a bad start from which Pakistan never really recovered, going on to lose 2-0 at home to Bangladesh; the first time they lost even a Test to them. A come-from-behind win over England later that year was the high point of his time; notably, however, it was the only high point. It was the only one of seven series under his leadership Pakistan won as they lost four, leaving them at the bottom of the World Test Championship 2023-25 table.
That Masood kept his place in the side was a reflection of his personal form with the bat, which has seen an upswing with the armband on. His average as captain rose to 34.06, nearly six runs higher than the 28.51 before his appointment. It included two centuries, one in South Africa, as well as seven half-centuries, including two in a game at the MCG.
Aaqib said the change of change of captaincy was a separate decision to Masood’s place in the team. “Shan’s own performance during his tenure has been good, but as captain, he has not been able to bring the desired results,” Aaqib said. “We wanted to look for a captain who comes in and leads the team better.”
Pakistan’s decision to return to Babar, the man from whom Masood took over, perhaps reflects the dearth of attractive candidates the PCB had available. In the years since he was last captain in 2023, Babar has struggled with his form across formats, but especially in Test cricket, where he has averaged just over 27 under Masood.
His time as captain of Pakistan, however, was a markedly happier stint – Pakistan won ten of the 20 Tests Babar led in, starting off with a 2-0 home win over South Africa, and included clean sweeps away from home in Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. It was also when Babar’s form with the bat was close to its best; as captain, he averaged over 50 in Test cricket. However, there was still plenty of disappointment, too, most notably a crushing 3-0 home series whitewash at England’s hands, the only such defeat in Pakistan’s Test history.
Babar takes over at a busy time in Test cricket. The series against the West Indies is immediately followed by a three-match series in England, Pakistan’s first to the country in six years. A busy home winter season comes soon after, and includes Tests against New Zealand and Sri Lanka.
[Cricinfo]
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