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Tharushi, Isuru beat odds to break meet records

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All Island Schools Games Athletics Championships

by Reemus Fernando

Both sprinter Isuru Kaushalya and Tharushi Karunaratne had to face ordeals in the run up to the All Island Schools Games Athletics Championships due to the unavailability of their regular training grounds. But those setbacks could not hold the duo from excelling as they went on to establish new meet records at the Sugathadasa Stadium on Sunday.

Ratnayake Central Walala runner Karunaratne had allegedly been ill treated by the officials of the Digana Sports Complex for failing to pay 30 rupees to enter the stadium for her daily routine. Her brother, Harsha Karunaratne, who is among top notch athletes in the country, had questioned the rationale behind such a move. Instead of solving the minor payment issue the Central Province Sports authorities had closed the Sports Complex for him for two weeks without conducting even an inquiry.

Despite the setback, Tharushi, who has represented Sri Lanka at back to back World Junior Athletics Championships lived up to her billing. By third day yesterday she had three first places against her name including two new meet records.

Yesterday she won the Under 20 girls’ 200 metres before anchoring the Under 20 girls’ 4×400 metres team to a new meet record time of 3:53.82 seconds. On Saturday she broke the Under 20 girls’ 400 metres record as well.

Ananda Sastralaya, Mathugama sprinter Kaushalya could not attend regular training at Public Ground Matugama in the run up to the meet. The ground had got muddied after a carnival held at the venue. The authorities had not taken measures to prevent heavy vehicles coming in to the ground during the carnival. Yesterday, Kaushalya overcame the setback to establish a new meet record in the Under 20 boys’ 200 metres. He clocked 21.47 seconds to erase Shehan Ambepitiya’s 2008 record. He was also the winner of the 400 metres of the age category on Saturday.

Deneth Induwara of Leeds International made his presence felt as he registered his second record breaking performance. Sprinter bagged the 200 metres title of the Under 18 age category with a 21.73 seconds meet record time. That was following his record breaking 100 metres dash. Today is the fourth day of the championship.



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Parvez Hossain Emon hits 53-ball hundred as Bangladesh brush off UAE

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Parvez Hossain Emon became Bangladesh's second T20I centurion

Parvez Hossain Emon smashed a 53-ball hundred to lead Bangladesh to 191 for 7 and set up a 27-run win for a 1-0 lead in the two-T20I series against UAE in Sharjah on Saturday. Big hits from Muhammad Waseem, Rahul Chopra and Asif Khan meant that UAE make a good fist of the chase, but clever death bowling from Mustafizur Rahman, who is headed for IPL 2025, gave Bangladesh victory.

Parvez’s century was only the second by a Bangladeshi in T20Is after Tamim Iqbal had scored an unbeaten 103 against Oman in the 2016 T20 World Cup. Parvez also set the Bangladesh record for most sixes in a T20I innings, hitting nine, beating Rishabh Hossain’s seven against Sri Lanka last year.

UAE had Muhammad Jawadullah to thank for keeping Bangladesh under 200 as the left-arm quick took four wickets. He became only the second Associate bowler to take a four-wicket haul against Bangladesh. The first was Hong Kong’s Nadeem Ahmed in the T20 World Cup in 2014.

UAE’s batters put pressure on Bangladesh’s attack, but a late collapse damaged their cause.

After Waseem’s fall in the 12th over with UAE at 103, Asif hit some massive sixes, giving Bangladesh a scare during his 21-ball 42. He took a liking to Mahedi Hasan, pasting him for three sixes down the ground in the 13th over. In all, Asif took the spinner for 23 off five balls at a strike rate of 460.

Wickets, though, kept falling at the other end. Chopra and Dhruv Parashar fell in successive overs, but Asif continued to go big, hitting Hasan Mahmud for a straight six and four in the 17th over.Sanchit Sharma and Muhammad Zuhaib fell in quick succession as well before Asif was the eighth UAE batter to be dismissed in the penultimate over. That meant game over.

In a surprising move, Bangladesh had offspinner Mahedi operating with the new ball against the right-handed Waseem, who launched him for six first ball. In that second over of the innings, Mahedi conceded 19 runs.

Waseem then tore into Tanzim Hassan,  hammering him for a six and two fours in the third over, before UAE lost two wickets in the space of four balls. Waseem then attacked Tanvir Islam with sweeps, taking 14 off another over, and then reached his fifty off just 32 balls in the tenth over.

Chopra was also similarly aggressive and had an answer for everything that Mahmud threw at him, including a scooped six. Chopra also struck Mustafizur for a superb boundary. The fall of Waseem and Chopra, though, hurt the chase.

Parvez offset the early dismissal of his opening partner Tanzid Hasan with a four and a six off Parashar in the third over. His second six, a belt over long-on against Matiullah Khan, went out of the stadium. Parvez also lined up Sanchit, hitting him for three straight sixes in an 18-run over.

The left-hand batter reached his fifty in the ninth over, with a straight four against the legspinner Haider Ali, before Parashar removed Towhid Hridoy to break a 58-run third-wicket stand. There was a short break from boundaries after that, but Parvez resumed the big-hitting the 14th over. The only one of his nine sixes that wasn’t hit down the ground came then as Parvez struck Zuhaib over square leg.

Jaker Ali also struck Zuhaib for a six but he fell off the next ball, caught at long-on, for 13. Parvez, though, kept swinging at the other end, hitting Zuhaib for his eighth six, breaking the Bangladesh record for most sixes in a T20I innings.

He got a life on 84 when he was caught down the ground but the bowler Matiullah had overstepped. Parvez struck his ninth six to move into 96 and went on to bring up his century in the penultimate over of the innings, with a quick single, before falling next ball.

The six-hitting mayhem, however, stopped whenever Jawadullah came into the attack. He conceded just one boundary in his four overs, picking up wickets at every opportunity.

Jawadullah removed the Bangladesh captain Litton Das, yorking him with his first delivery. He then removed Mahedi, Bangladesh’s new vice-captain, in the 12th over. Mahedi was late to Jawadullah’s hard length, falling caught behind for two. The dangerous Shamim Hossain was his next victim, given lbw swinging across the line, before Jawadullah signed off with Parvez’s wicket in the last over.

Impressively, Jawadullah only gave away six runs in the 20th over of Bangladesh’s innings, but his spell was not enough for UAE to topple Bangladesh.

Brief scores:
Bangladesh 191 for 7 in 20 overs (Tanzid Hassan 10, Parvez  Hosain Emon 100, Litton Das 11, Jaker Ali 13, Towhid Hridoy 20, Muhammad Jawadullah 4-21) beat UAE 164 in 20 overs  (Muhammad Waseem 54, Rahul Chopra 35, Asif Khan 42;  Hasan Mahmud 3-33, Mustafizur Rahman  2-17, Tanzim Khan  2-22, Mahedi Hassan 2-55) by 27 runs

[Cricinfo]

 

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Rain ends Kolkata Knight Rider’s playoff hopes and extends pause on IPL 2025

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The fans came in huge numbers to Bengaluru but the weather played spoilsport [Cricinfo]

Kolkata Knight Riders’ title defence ended with a washout in Bengaluru knocking them out of IPL 2025. The tournament’s return after a break because of tensions between India and Pakistan was a wet one as heavy rains lashed the city. The downpour was so consistent the players couldn’t even come out to stretch.

The one point from this match took KKR to 12, which means the maximum they can get to is 14.Three teams are already past 14, and there is a match remaining between the ones at 14and 13.

The one point also confirmed progress for Royal Challengers Bengaluru, but they were looking to maximise points in order to seal a top-two spot. They moved to 17 from 12 matches. Their closest rivals were Gujarat Titans with 16 from 11 matches and Punjab Kings with 15 from 11.

A top-two finish ensures two shots at making the final of the IPL. Unlike the usual semi-final formation, sides finishing in the top two don’t get knocked out with their first defeat in the playoffs. They get a chance to play a virtual semi-final against the winner of a playoff match between the third- and fourth-placed teams.

Only once has a side finishing outside the top two gone on to win the IPL: Sunrisers Hyderabad in 2016.

It was a frustrating night out for Virat Kohli fans, who came out in whites to pay tribute to Kohli, who announced his Test retirement during this break. They will be hoping for better luck with the weather on Friday as the rainy season in Bengaluru has kicked in, and RCB still have one home match to go. The said match is against Sunrisers, a team that has already been knocked out. They will want to have a shot at two points against them.

[Cricinfo]

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No half measures for king Kohli

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Virat Kohli

The curtain has finally come down on Virat Kohli’s influential Test career, with the former Indian skipper hanging up his whites this week. Although his tour down under was far from a masterclass, many expected him to soldier on for the five-Test series in England and the busy home season to follow – especially with just 800 runs separating him from the hallowed 10,000-run mark. But perhaps the scars of Australia cut too deep and with the selectors subtly showing him the red light, Kohli may have been nudged toward the exit door.

Test cricket, that unforgiving school of hard knocks, doesn’t grant longevity lightly. No matter how skilled or gritty you are, age starts bowling the tough questions – short of a length, rising awkwardly. In Kohli’s case, the chinks were showing. The man who once drove with arrogance and flicked with disdain was now tentative, caught fishing outside off, a far cry from the front-foot aggressor of old. The writing, as they say, was on the dressing room wall.

When it comes to the Fab Four of modern-day Test batting, Kohli’s name doesn’t quite roll off the tongue with the same weight as Kane Williamson, Steve Smith or Joe Root. His average – sub-50 – tells a tale of a batsman who shone brighter under white lights and white balls. On flat tracks, he was a bully with the bat, feasting on bowlers like a shark in a goldfish tank. But red-ball cricket? That was a different kettle of fish.

Yet, stats alone don’t paint the full picture. Kohli wasn’t just a cricketer; he was a standard-bearer, a trailblazer who dragged Indian cricket into the modern era with bloody-minded intensity. He didn’t just walk the talk – he sprinted it, grunted through it, and demanded others do the same.

From his Under-19 days, it was clear Kohli had the hunger. But few would’ve predicted he’d go on to lead India to the summit of Test cricket, standing tall as both captain and mainstay with the willow. His transformation – from a chubby, butter-chicken-loving Delhi boy to a fitness-obsessed machine – was nothing short of inspirational. Staff at Colombo’s Taj Samudra or Galle’s Jetwing Lighthouse still speak in awe of the Indian skipper hitting the gym at 5 a.m. while his teammates were still chasing dreams under hotel duvets.

In the Kohli era, there were no shortcuts – just sweat, sacrifice, and steel. And when the captain sets the bar that high, the rest of the team either followed suit or were left behind. It wasn’t just fitness. It was attitude, a mindset. You didn’t just represent India; you fought for every inch, every session, every ball.

At times, Kohli did what the Indian board failed to do. Realising India couldn’t win overseas without firepower, he threw his weight behind fast bowling like no other Indian captain had. He made the bold calls – dropping a proven match-winner like R. Ashwin for a pace-heavy attack. Controversial, yes. But in Kohli’s playbook, sentiment never trumped strategy.

At home, he wasn’t afraid to roll out rank turners. Kohli believed his spinners could run through any opposition and that his batters could tame any spin that came their way. Gone were the belters that served up inflated averages. Kohli chose the harder path, knowing full well it might dent his own stats. But personal milestones were never the endgame – winning was.

He didn’t always play pretty. He played ugly when needed. Picked fights with opponents, needled fans, crossed swords with umpires. He wasn’t the darling of overseas crowds, but he couldn’t care less. For Kohli, it was always team first, reputation later. He didn’t believe in drawing matches – he played for the win.

Here in Colombo, how we wish we had a Kohli of our own. A cricketer willing to forgo comfort, push the envelope and leave nothing to chance. But too often, we sit back and admire Kohli as if what he did was beyond reach. Truth be told, he wasn’t born with Tendulkar’s divine touch or Ponting’s brute gift. Kohli’s mantra was simple: grind till you shine.

It’s disheartening to see our boys fold their arms and listen to him with reverence. Respect is fine – but Test cricket isn’t a prayer meeting. Someone has to ruffle feathers, get under the opposition’s skin. Niroshan Dickwella had the potential to be that livewire but we all know how he lost it.

Sri Lanka doesn’t lack talent; it lacks the Kohli mindset – the refusal to take a backward step, the will to outwork fate, the belief that every match is a final and every session a war. Kohli played like every day was Judgement Day. He changed the grammar of Indian cricket. His numbers may not match the pantheon’s best – but his impact? That’s a whole different ball game.

by Rex Clementine

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