Sports
Australia tighten the screws as Sri Lanka pray for rain
Rex Clementine in Galle
Only 27 overs of the scheduled 98 were possible on the third day of the first Test in Galle on Friday, but Australia tightened their grip on the contest, reducing Sri Lanka to 136 for five. Still trailing by a massive 518 runs, the visitors will be praying for the rain gods to come to their rescue over the next two days.
Resuming on a shaky 44 for three, Sri Lanka were dealt an early blow when Kamindu Mendis feathered one down the leg-side off Mitchell Starc.
Since his return to the side last year, Kamindu’s numbers had been Bradmanesque, earning him the ICC Emerging Cricketer of the Year award. But cricket, as they say, is a great leveler, and in recent months, the runs have dried up.
Skipper Dhananjaya de Silva followed suit before lunch, undone by Matthew Kuhnemann’s guile. Attempting to take the left-arm spinner on, he charged down the track but found himself in no man’s land, stumped in rather tame fashion.
The Aussies have been meticulous in plotting their dismissals. From the Dutch Fort End, Starc roughed up the surface outside the right-hander’s off-stump, creating treacherous footholes. From the other end, Nathan Lyon was like a surgeon landing the ball precisely in those rough patches, making survival an ordeal for Sri Lanka’s batters.
Yet, amid the wreckage, Dinesh Chandimal stood tall, playing spin with soft hands, sharp footwork and a rock-solid defense. With little support from the other end, he farmed the strike smartly, picked the gaps, and notched up yet another half-century.
Since his elevation to number three last year, Chandimal has been Sri Lanka’s batting mainstay, averaging over 50. He remained unbeaten on 63, looking every bit the man for a crisis, well set for a big one.
With more rain expected on day four, a bit more grit from Sri Lanka’s batters could help them salvage a draw. But this pitch is no featherbed – spinners have plenty to work with, and batting through two days will be a tall order.
“It’ll be up to the captain and coach to decide whether to enforce the follow-on,” said Kuhnemann.
“They’ll get together tonight and come up with a plan for us tomorrow morning and we’ll go from there,” he added.
“Chandimal is batting beautifully at the moment. He played some lovely shots against all of us. It’s just whether or not we’re trying to block that boundary option for him and get him defending, get him out caught bat pad or slip.”
Sports
Sri Lanka Under 19s pull off two wickets win against Afghanistan
Sri Lanka Under 19s scored back to back victories as Mahanama College batsman Chamika Heenatigala anchored the tail with an unbeaten half century to seal two wickets victory over Afghanistan U19s in their second group match of the Under 19 Asia Cup in Dubai on Monday.
Chasing 236 runs to win Sri Lanka U19s were eight wickets down for 217 runs in the 48th over but Heenatigala with Rasith Nimsara kept their cool to seal the victory with four balls to spare.
In their chase, Viran Chamuditha top scored with 62 runs and put on a first wicket stand of 55 runs with Dimantha Mahavithana (27).
While Kavija Gamage (34) and Dulnith Sigera (22) made vital contributions with the bat, Sethmika Senevirathne and Sigera took three wickets each.
It was Sri Lanka Youth team’s second consecutive win in the tournament after registering their first win against Nepal.
Sports
Dasun Shanaka’s all-round effort can not hold Vipers
Dasun Shanaka scored an unbeaten 29 and took two wickets but that could not hold Desert Vipers becoming the first team to seal a playoffs spot as they made it six wins out of six on Sunday (December 14) halfway through the league stage of the ILT20 2025-26.
Sam Curran produced an all-round effort as Vipers chased down Dubai Capitals’ 166/4 with five wickets in hand and a ball to spare.
Asked to bat, Capitals lost Shayan Jahangir to Naseem Shah in the third over and were kept on a tight leash by the Vipers pacers in the powerplay, reaching 35/1. Gulbadin Naib and Leus du Plooy then added 39 at close to a run-a-ball before Noor Ahmad removed his Afghanistan teammate. Capitals were 68/2 at the halfway mark and in need of momentum through the second half of the innings.
Du Plooy injected some urgency with two fours off Lockie Ferguson in an over, followed by a six off Naseem Shah to bring up a 38-ball fifty. But Curran turned the innings again with a double-wicket over, dismissing du Plooy and Rovman Powell off successive deliveries. Jordan Cox and Dasun Shanaka, however, ensured a strong finish, striking six fours and three sixes in an unbroken 72-run stand off 40 balls.
Max Holden set the tone in the chase, accounting for six of the seven fours Vipers struck in the powerplay. Fakhar Zaman fell to Mustafizur Rahman in the fifth over but Vipers still reached 50 in six overs. Holden was dismissed for 34 by Haider Ali while attempting a slog sweep, and although Hasan Nawaz struck three sixes, he fell to Waqar Salamkheil to leave Vipers at 88/3 after 10 overs.
Dan Lawrence and Curran steadied the chase with a 32-run stand before Lawrence was dismissed by Shanaka for 20 in the 14th over. In the same over, Shimron Hetmyer struck a four and a six and was later reprieved by Shanaka. A couple of tight overs followed, but Vipers remained in control, needing 31 from the final four overs.
Curran took them closer with two fours off David Willey and a six off Muhammad Jawadullah. With three required in the final over, Hetmyer fell to Shanaka, but Curran finished the chase with a six off the fourth ball, completing a 33-ball fifty to cap a fine all-round performance.
Brief scores:
Dubai Capitals 166/4 in 20 overs (Leus du Plooy 54, Jordan Cox 49*; Sam Curran 2-17)
Desert Vipers
171/5 in 19.4 overs (Sam Curran 52*, Max Holden 34; Dasun Shanaka 2-19)
Sports
Akbar Brothers crowned MBSA A-Division champions
Akbar Brothers Ltd delivered a commanding all-round performance to clinch the ‘A’ Division title at the 33rd MSBA League Basketball Tournament, defeating defending champions Fairfirst Insurance 70–60 in a thrilling final held recently.
Despite a group stage loss to Fairfirst, a revitalized Akbar Brothers team returned for the final with renewed focus, executing a strategic and disciplined game plan with some excellent passing and defense. Akbar Brothers came in with all guns blazing right from the outset. The first quarter was all Akbar’s that stacked up a 13 to 4 lead. Fairfirst mounted a strong challenge in the second quarter, narrowing the margin, but Akbar’s momentum secured a 35–28 lead at halftime, a margin they maintained with composure through to the final whistle.
Dasun Mendis led the charge for Akbar Brothers with 18 points and was named the tournament’s Most Valuable Player (MVP). Chenura De Alwis added 17 points to the tally, while Shehan Udayanga posted a valiant 22 points for Fairfirst. Dimitri Grebe anchored Akbar Brothers with strong leadership, with Hiran Wijesooriya captaining Fairfirst.
Earlier in the tournament Akbar Brothers beat Sampath Bank (82-71), Seylan Bank (91-68) David Pieris (110-78) and Seylan Bank in the semi final (83-60)
The final, held at the Royal College Indoor Sports Complex, saw a vibrant turnout of supporters as Akbar Brothers proved their championship mettle with teamwork, resilience, and clinical execution.
Akbar Brothers – Dimitri Grebe (Captain), Dasun Mendis, Chenura De Alwis, Randil Henry, Taher Akbarally, Selvam Savarimuttu, Franklyn Morais, Sanketha Jayarathne, Jeewan Priyankera , Praneeth Udumalagala, Ajith Kuruppu (Coach), Adrian Gabriel (Asst. Coach)
Fairfirst Insurance – Hiran Wijesooriya (Captain), Shehan Udayanga , Lakshan Kulathunga, Roshan Randima, Arnold Brent, Isuru Perera, Denzil Nicholas, Nimesh Fernando, Keshawa Perera, Charaka Anuhas, Asanga Perera (Coach)
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