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All paragon of virtues

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By Rex Clementine

At Thursday’s parliamentary debate on the affairs of Sri Lanka Cricket, several MPs who have held the portfolio of Sports Minister were expressing their views and each of them went onto point out how the game prospered under their watch. The truth, however, is far from it. Barring a couple of Ministers like Mangala Samaraweera, Dullas Alahapperuma and Naveen Dissanayake, most Sports Ministers interfered with the affairs of the cricket board and did more harm than good.

S.B. Dissanayake was the most eloquent pointing out to the House how he ensured better payments for players and other comforts so that the game thrived. But what has been not told is that retired Scotland Yard mastermind and the current head of the Anti-Corruption Unit of the International Cricket Council Alex Marshall had exposed that S.B. Dissanayake had been paid handsomely by one cricket board chief from the money a foreign broadcaster owed SLC.

Then there was Johnston Fernando. He was a Minister who tried to be popular with the players. Cheap popularity can have disastrous outcome. In 2002, Sri Lanka had taken a 2-0 unassailable lead over Zimbabwe and the selectors wanted to rest a senior player and try out young prodigy Chamara Silva. The seniors went and complained to Fernando who in turn sacked the selectors and brought in a new panel telling them that the senior should play.

Poor Chamara Silva suffered in silence and had to wait for five more years to make his Test debut. It was a massive waste as Silva scored a match winning 150 in just his second Test match at the Basin Reserve as Sri Lanka recorded a come from behind victory against New Zealand.

Hours after being appointed as Sports Minister, C.B. Ratnayake conducted a press conference and called the Cricket Board the third most corrupt institution in the country. Police took first place and education came second according to him. However, instead of putting the house in order, Ratnayake packed the Cricket Board with his kith and kin.

We also had Gamini Lokuge, who defected from opposition to government and was offered the Sports Ministry. Lokuge, sacked the board, appointed his Secretary as the Competent Authority with a tour of India to Sri Lanka looming large.

It is a well-known secret that tours by India makes the cricket board richer. Each white ball game that India plays is worth US$ 2 million. Lokuge, signed a deal with a television company that had been blacklisted by SLC – Nimbus. True to form, the company defaulted on the payment and SLC was left high and dry. There should be another Parliament debate on this debacle.

The introduction of Dayasiri Jayasekara as Sports Minister in 2016 was a timely move. Sidath Wettimuny as the board president had got the blessings of the ICC to change the constitution of SLC, which was seen as a major stumbling block for progress of the game. Interested parties told then President Maithripala Sirisena to get the Sports Ministry under his SLFP watch and Dayasiri became Minister of Sports. He prevented constitutional changes, and we are struck in this mess because of his interference.

Dayasiri is also known for his ego. The Sports Minister giving his approval to the team selected by the national selection panel is a mere formality. There had been an oversight and the selectors had failed to get Dayasiri’s approval for the tour of India in 2017 and the Minister recalled the team back after the players had boarded the flight to Delhi. This incident made Sri Lanka Cricket the laughingstock at the world stage.

When the UNP got the Sports Ministry back, they put the young Harin Fernando in charge of sports. He had his school interests more than the national interests in mind and given every opportunity he was looking to promote a Josephian. It was such a shame that a Sri Lankan Test captain had to be unceremoniously dumped while on tour and the captaincy taken to St. Joseph’s without any protocol.

Fernando also messed with the electoral process blocking deserving candidates and promoting friends on faulty technical grounds.

All in all, most of these Ministers have promoted their personal agendas than serving genuinely. SLC no doubt needs censure, but this lot pointing fingers is like pot calling the kettle black for they have plenty of skeletons in their cupboards.



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Cricket at LA 2028 Olympics set to be six-team competition

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Cricket was last part of the Olympic Games in 1900

Both the men’s and women’s cricket events at the LA 2028 Olympics are set to be six-team competitions, as approved by the Executive Board (EB) of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) on Wednesday (April 9). Further, a total of 90 athlete quotas have been allotted to each gender, allowing each nation to name a 15-member squad.

As reported earlier, T20 Internationals have been designated as the format of choice for the competition. The venues are yet to be confirmed although New York is in the fray to host the matches.

It is unclear how the six participating nations will be determined and the issue of representation, in the cases of Great Britain and the West Indies, is yet to be addressed as well.

Cricket was last part of the Olympic Games in 1900, when it was contested by just two teams – Great Britain and France. Great Britain went on to win the only cricket Olympics Gold Medal thus far by winning what was a 2-day game.

Cricket has recently been a part of other international multi-sport events. Both men’s and women’s cricket competitions were part of the Hangzhou 2022 Asian Games whereas the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games featured an eight-team women’s competition.

(Cricbuzz)

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Action from Schools Relay Carnival

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St. Benedict's dominated Under 20 4x800 metres

The three-day Schools Relay Carnival will conclude at Diyagama today. Here are some action pictures from day two of the event on Thursday.

Rathnayake Central lead Under 18 4x800m relay.

(Pix by Kamal Wanniarachchi)

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Susantha seeks sports minister’s intervention for sidelined Karunaratne

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Harsha Karunaratne

Karunaratne dropped from South Asian Championships

Veteran coach Susantha Fernando has questioned the credibility of the selection process of Sri Lanka Athletics after Harsha Karunaratne, the reigning national champion in the men’s 800 metres was dropped from the team for the up coming South Asian Athletics Championships.

The South Asian Athletics Championship will be held from May 3 to 5 in Ranchi, India. Unlike at previous editions, Sri Lanka Athletics has picked only one athlete per event for a majority of disciplines in a bid to cut costs.

Karunaratne who trains under Fernando was placed second in the 800 metres at the final selection trial. While the governing body has picked two athletes each for 100m, 200m, 400m, 110m hurdles, javelin throw and high jump, only one athlete each has been picked for all other events from 800 metres to 10000 m and other field events.

Fernando has requested the intervention of the sports minister to include Katunaratne in the team.

“Sri Lanka Athletics has sent two athletes each for the 800 metres for all South Asian Championships and South Asian Games since 1995. On all occations the governing body had picked athletes who had clocked sub 1:50 seconds. This will be the first time an athlete who had clocked sub 1:50 is not picked in the team,” Fernando has stated in a letter addressed to the sports minister.

Karunaratne, the elder brother of Asian Games gold medallist Tharushi, was pipped to the second place by G.K. Chathuranga at the selection trial held early last month. The two athletes were seperated only by miliseconds. While Chathuranga returned a time of 1:49.89 seconds, Karunaratne clocked 1:49.98 seconds.

Fernando has also stated that Karunaratne had recovered from a virus fever just a week prior to the selection trial.

When contacted on this regard an offical of Sri Lanka Athletics said that the governing body of the sport was reluctantly compelled to pick a pruned down team in a bid to reduce costs and all selection decisions were taken after careful consideration of the current rankings of the South Asian region in each discipline.

by Reemus Fernando

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