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This simply isn’t cricket

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Too many batting collapses cost Sri Lanka dearly at the World Cup.

by Rex Clementine

Cricket is in shambles. The national cricket team has just returned home after our worst World Cup campaign. This is the first time that Sri Lanka has lost World Cup games to Afghanistan and Bangladesh. A ninth-place finish has knocked us out of the Champions Trophy. This is a time for us to do a postmortem as to what happened during the sport’s showpiece event, but instead the Sports Ministry and the Executive Committee of Sri Lanka Cricket are in a tug-of-war fighting a bitter battle to take control of the sport.

Given what an embarrassing defeat this was, the coaching staff and selection panel should have stepped down and so should have the Executive Committee paving way for fresh thinking. Instead, the authorities are at loggerheads not only fighting legal battles but requesting the sport’s global governing body for a suspension.

The egos of individuals can by no means come ahead of the national interest. When the entire country is asking you to pack up and go home for the mess you have created, you can not hang on to power by exploiting loopholes and the contacts that your office brings you. Unless there is a graceful exit, these individuals will face dire consequences in the form of public opinion.

This is not the first time an Interim Committee has been put in charge to clean up cricket. On all previous occasions, those boards exited gracefully paving way for smooth transition. This time though the administration is fighting tooth and nail to hang onto power.

Where the administration faulted was by placing wrong people at key positions. There were no checks and balances. Inconsistent selection policies, fielding woes and batting collapses existed well before the World Cup, but authorities failed to address these issues.

As for the selectors, they are hiding behind cooked up conspiracy theories without accepting responsibility for their utter failures.

They have had a three-year tenure, unlike any other selection panel to plan better for the World Cup and they have failed pathetically. There’s talk that why the team flopped was due to fielding lapses. There were 16 dropped catches and now it is being said that poor fitness levels had an effect. So, who endorse the unfit players? Didn’t the selection panel start off their tenure with a hue and cry about placing a high premium on fitness? Then what happened to those fitness standards?

Modern day fielding is much advanced. Sri Lanka’s training methods when it comes to fielding is outdated. Mr. Ranjit Fernando used to do high catches some 30 years ago and that is exactly what is being done at the moment.

Sri Lanka’s batting: across both red ball and white ball formats had collapsed this year on numerous occasions. The selectors and Batting Coach have failed to address the issue. It is time for a total clean up.



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Dharmaraja and Kingswood set for historic rugby clash on Saturday

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Dharmaraja Rugby Captain Gayan Samarathunga, and Kingswood Rugby Captain Samantha Nadeesha. with William Weerasinghe Memorial Trophy. 

The annual rugby encounter between Dharmaraja College and Kingswood College, played for the  William Weerasinghe Memorial Trophy, is set to take place tomorrow (July 11, 2026),  at 4:00 PM at the Bogambara Stadium, Kandy.

The official unveiling of the trophy took place this week at the Dharmaraja College premises with the participation of  the Principals of the two schools, teachers-in-charge of sports, coaches,  the Rugby teams, and several distinguished guests, including Dharmaraja College Old Boys’ Association President Mahesh Wijetunga, Kingswood College Old Boys’ Association President Muditha Abeykoon,

 by S  K SAMARANAYAKE

 

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Mbappe and Dembele net as France beat Morocco to reach World Cup semifinal

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Kylian Mbappe of France, centre,celebrates after scoring his team's first goal with Dayot Upamecano, left, and Ousmane Dembele, right, during the FIFA World Cup 2026 match [Aljazeera]

Kylian Mbappe and Ousmane Dembele were on target as France surged past Morocco 2-0 to book their place in the World Cup semifinals.

Mbappe curled in his eighth goal of the tournament on 60 minutes on Thursday before Dembele doubled Les Bleus’ lead six minutes later to settle a clinical victory at the Gillette Stadium outside Boston.

The win sends the 2018 champions into a last-four showdown against either Spain or Belgium in Arlington, Texas on Tuesday.

African champions Morocco had been tipped to pose a serious threat to France’s hopes of reaching a third consecutive World Cup final.

But Didier Deschamps’ men were always in control against a limited Morocco side who failed to register a single shot on goal until an 83rd-minute free-kick by Azzedine Ounahi was parried away by France goalkeeper Mike Maignan.

France, though, struggled to find a breakthrough, and missed the opportunity to take the lead on 28 minutes when Mbappe saw a penalty saved by Morocco goalkeeper Yassine Bounou.

Mbappe had won the penalty after being brought down by Noussair Mazraoui but was forced to wait several minutes before being allowed to take the kick after a protracted VAR check.

Morocco managed to hold out to half-time, but it was always only a matter of time before France’s relentless pressure paid off.

The breakthrough came on the hour mark, with Mbappe bending a brilliant right-foot shot past Bounou from the edge of the area.

Paris Saint-Germain star Dembele made the game safe in the 66th minute, striding forward menacingly from midfield before steering a low finish into the bottom corner.

France now await the winner of Friday’s quarterfinal in Los Angeles between European champions Spain and Belgium.

[Aljazeera]

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Aahil and Akesha crowned Under-18 champions

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Aahil Kaleel (Pix by Kamal Wanniarachchi)

111th Vision Care Colombo Championship

Aahil Kaleel of S. Thomas’ College, Mount Lavinia and Akesha Silva of Newstead College, Negombo emerged as the boys’ and girls’ Under-18 singles champions respectively at the 111th Vision Care Colombo Championship, played on Sri Lanka Tennis Association’s clay courts.

‎Aahil staged a remarkable comeback in the boys’ Under-18 final to defeat Rehan Gunawardhane 1-6, 6-4, 10-5 after dropping the opening set. The S. Thomas’ player enjoyed an impressive run to the title, overpowering Dehan Wickramasinghe 6-1, 6-1 in the quarter-finals before edging Mayooran Kubheran in a thrilling semi-final 4-6, 7-5, 10-7.

‎In the girls’ Under-18 final, Akesha Silva was crowned champion after Sahansa Damsiluni retired while trailing 1-0. Akesha booked her place in the final with a convincing 6-1, 6-4 victory over Gethmi Fernando in the semi-finals. Her toughest challenge came in the quarter-finals, where she outlasted Sandithi Usgodaarachchi 6-3, 6-7(4), 14-12 in a marathon encounter.

Akesha Silva

‎In the boys’ Under-18 doubles semi-finals, Mayooran Kubheran and Ashlin de Silva defeated Ranida Ranaweera and Ashmal Mohamed 5-4, 4-1, while Methika Wickramasinghe and Jayin de Seram overcame Jamal Sabry and Lithum Jayabandu 4-1, 2-4, 10-2 to set up the championship final.

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