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Bangalore – India’s garden city

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Rex Clementine in Bangalore

Of all India’s cricketing centers, Dharamshala is quite special for its natural beauty situated in the footsteps of Himalayas. But travelling there costs you an arm and leg with just a couple of flights available from Delhi. The road trip is the best option through the hills of Punjab. Sri Lanka of course do not have a game in Dharamshala. Two of their nine games of the tournament will be played in Bangalore – the garden city.

There are multiple daily flights from Colombo to Bangalore and a family trip in the long weekend to this lovely city is not a bad idea. The weather is pleasant and entertainment is plenty. IndiGo, a budget airline gets you here for a decent price. If you want to cut costs the best option is to fly to Madras and then catch the train.

Bangalore’s airport is of course a marvel. It is a state-of-the-art facility and many European airports are far behind Bangalore. The immigration and customs takes you less than 15 minutes. Hassle free parking and convenient cab services, all these make Bangalore airport a pleasant experience.

Out of the airport as you hit the highway to get to the city, you see all sorts of modern European cars on the road. Then, you wonder whether this is the same India that you visited 20 years ago. They have come a long way in the last two decades.

International cricket in Bangalore is of course played at Chinnaswamy Stadium. The venue is named after Chinnaswamy Mudaliar, a lawyer, who was a founding member of the Mysore State Cricket Association. He went onto become the President of Board of Control for Cricket in India (1977-1980).

It was at Chinnaswamy Stadium a certain Vivian Richards made his Test debut almost 50 years ago in 1974. He wasn’t alone. There was a certain Gordon Greenidge as well receiving his maroon cap for the first time.

Bangalore is also the home for some of India’s all-time greats of the sport. There was Gundappa Viswanath, Anil Kumble, Rahul Dravid, Javagal Srinath, Roger Binny and many more. Binny incidentally is the President of Board of Control for Cricket in India.

Some say that Binny, the 1983 World Cup winner is only a figurehead while the man who calls shots in cricket is Jay Shah, the son of India’s Home Minister Amit Shah. The correct way to put it is that Jay Shah isn’t Indian cricket’s most powerful man but world cricket’s most powerful man.

Not very far from Chinnaswamy Stadium, there is an exclusive club called Century Club. Like SSC, NCC, CCC and Tamil Union, Century Club is over 100 years old.

An Engineer in Bangalore named M. Visvesvaraya during the British rule of India tries to get a membership of Bangalore Club. But he’s refused membership as at that point the membership is exclusive for the British nationals.

Determined to form a club for the locals, Visvesvaraya meets the Mysore Maharaja floating the idea to form a club where Indians can get together. Generously, Mysore Maharaja donates a five-acre land inside the pristine Cubbon Park.

Then, 100 Indian civil servants come together to form the club and hence the name Century Club.

Getting membership at Century Club is extremely difficult these days. The club currently has a membership of 6000 and there is a 30 year wait if someone wants to get a new membership.

Members gather to Century Club for recreation and there are both indoor and outdoor sports and card games. The club also has some posh restaurants and several bars.

The club’s hotel with 30 room is also quite popular. It’s decently priced, at the heart of the city and has fabulous facilities. The only problem is booking a room there is a tedious task. Which is why during your travels to other parts of the world you need to make friendships. It doesn’t matter how many people you know in a city. All what matters is you need to know the right person. If you are in New Delhi, the go to person is Vijay Lokapally, the longstanding cricket writer of English daily Hindu. In Bombay, all your needs are taken care of by G. Viswanath, the cricket writer of Indian Express. If you are in Bangalore it is R. Kaushik, a freelance cricket writer. Knowing them is as good as knowing the Prime Minister of India.

Some Indians repay the complement saying that they don’t have to know the President of Sri Lanka when they come to Colombo. They only need to know the right reporter.



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Eran Wickeamaratne named new Sri Lanka Cricket chief

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Former Member of Parliament, Eran Wickeamaratne has been named the chairman of  the Interim Committee appointed to run Sri Lanka Cricket by Sports Minister Sunil Kumara Gamage today [29]

The other Members of the Interim Committee include Roshan Mahanama, Kumar Sangakkara, Sidath Wettimuny. Prakash Schaffter, Dinal Phillips, Thusira Radella, Upul Kumarapperuma and Ms. Avanthi Colombage

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President and Exco of Sri Lanka Cricket step down

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Sri Lanka Cricket has announced today (29) that the President of Sri Lanka Cricket and members of the Executive Committee have tendered their resignations.

The decision has been formaly communicated to  President Anura Kumara Dissanayake and the Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports.

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Ferreira, Shubham, Rajasthan Royals openers hand Punjab Kings their first defeat

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Donovan Ferreira played a blitzing cameo at the death [BCCI]

Shubham Dubey underlined the importance of an Impact Player, Donovan Ferreira proved why Rajasthan Royals were keen to have him traded in, while Yashasvi Jaiswal and Vaibhav Sooriyavanshi  continued their stellar run as RR handed Punjab kings their first defeat of IPL 2026. In another run-fest in New Chandigarh, where 222 played 228, Ferreira and Dubey added 77 runs off 32 balls for the fifth wicket to turn what looked like a tricky chase at one point into a cakewalk and secured victory with four balls to spare.

Yuzvendra Chahal picked up 3 for 36, while Marcus Stoinis bludgeoned an unbeaten 62 off 22 balls but their returns weren’t enough as RR moved to third place on the points table.

Priyansh Arya was coming into the game with a powerplay strike rate of 260.27. Within his first five balls, he showed why he is one of the most fearless batters going around. He started with a spliced pull off Nandre Burger, before flat-batting him through midwicket and then following up with two of the most audacious strokes. Burger bowled a back-of-a-length ball outside off stump and Arya stood tall and played a nonchalant on-the-up aerial back-foot punch over covers for a clean six. The next ball was carved over backward point, before some luck got him another four. RR had raced to 29 for 0 after two.

At the other end was Jofra Archer. He started the third over with a hard length outswinger, which Arya edged to the vacant slip area. Archer nearly yelled at his captain for not having a slip, but soon got his reward as Arya sliced a 150kph thunderbolt for mid-on. Prabhsimran Singh took on Burger but wasn’t his fluent self. Despite that, PBKS raced to 65 in the powerplay.

Cooper Connolly was off quickly, scoring 30 off 14 balls but he misread a Yash Raj Punja googly and shanked him straight up. Prabhsimran, meanwhile, reached his fifty off 35 balls, but the RR bowlers controlled the middle overs, majorly through their two spinners, Punja and Ravindra Jadeja. Through overs seven to 16, PBKS scored 95 runs, while losing Connolly and Prabhsimran.

Coming into this game, Stoinis had faced 26 balls this IPL. But he showed off once he got his chance. He smashed Archer for two sixes in the 19th over, but reserved his best for the last. Fast bowler Brijesh Sharma had gone for just 18 runs off his first three overs, his slower balls were gripping and hard to hit. But Stoinis smashed the bowler for 24 to power PBKS past 220 as they scored 62 in the last four overs.

Sooryavanshi was quick off the blocks (again), smashing 43 off just 16 balls. After jamming two yorkers, he went 6, 4, 4 against Arshdeep Singh to close the opening over in style. Lockie Ferguson, playing his first match of the season, took time to find his rhythm. Sooryavanshi wasn’t giving him the time. He got a thick outside edge over slip before whipping a 145.1kph scorcher over deep midwicket and then going straight down the ground for six more. RR crossed 50 in just 19 balls but Arshdeep’s around-the-wicket worked as Sooryavanshi sliced him straight up and Shreyas Iyer ran back from mid-off to take a comfortable catch.

Yashasvi Jaiswal was all this while the silent spectator. As soon as Sooryavanshi departed, he went on the offensive against Arshdeep as RR raced to 66 for 1 after four overs. Harpreet Brar, the Impact Player, bowled a two-run fifth over, but Ferguson was taken for runs again with RR racing to 84 for 1 after six.

With the early punches in, PBKS fought back with the help of their spinners. Brar’s four overs cost just 25 runs, which included just one four and one six. Chahal removed Dhruv Jurel with a juicy full toss that was mistimed only as far as wide long-on. Jaiswal reached his fifty off 26 balls but soon sliced Chahal straight to long-off. Riyan Parag also started well but also holed out off Chahal for 29 off 16.

The required rate was exactly 12 when Parag holed out, with RR needing 72 off 36. But the PBKS spinners were done after conceding just 61 off 48 balls, and Dubey and Ferreira cashed in. After Arshdeep’s opening two overs went for 37, his final two went for 31. Dubey crashed Jansen for a four and six in the 16th, Ferguson was smoked for 16 in the 19th and the game had turned in five overs. Ferreira hit the winning runs with a six over long-on to bring up his second IPL fifty and help RR secure two important points. The PBKS fast bowlers leaked 166 off 68 balls, an issue that has been plaguing them for a while.

Brief scores:
Rajasthan Royals 228 for 4 in 19.2 overs (Yashasvi Jaiswal 51, Vaibhav Sooriyawanshi 43, Dhruv Jurel 16, Riyan Parag 29, Donovan Ferreira 52*,  Shubham Dubey 31*; Arshdeep Singh 1-68, Yuzvendra Chahal 3-36) beat Punjab Kings 222 for 4 in 20 overs (Prabhsimran Singh 59, Priyansh Arya 29, Cooper Conolly 30, Shreyas Iyer 30, Marcus Stoinis 62*; Jofra Archer 1-40, Mandre Burger 1-59, Yash Raj  Punja 2-41) by six wickets

[Cricinfo]

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