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Big Match trophy returns to Sri Devananda after 56 years

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Kanchana de Livera scored an aggressive 98 runs for Sri Devananda.

53rd Battle of the Blues of Ambalangoda

Sri Devananda College tasted the first victory of the Battle of the Blues of Ambalangoda in 56 years after Dharmasoka College principal and the Cricket Committee of that school intervened to award the trophy to them following mayhem that prevented the 53rd Big Match from lasting the full distance at Ambalangoda on Sunday.

Chasing a target of 98 runs to win Sri Devananda lost their seventh wicket when they were just 13 runs behind victory. With the players uprooting the stumps at the fall of the seventh wicket and the fans entering the field, resumption of the decisive stage was not possible immediately. That was when Dharmasoka College Principal Sanuja Jayawickrama and the officials of the Cricket Committee intervened to award the match to Sri Devananda.

The school had not won the Big Match since the team led by N.U. Amaradasa won the match way back in 1966. Dharmasoka won the match last in 2019.

In their chase, the team led by Shehan Wickramasinghe lost six wickets for 49 runs before Irusha Akash and Ranusha de Silva combined to form a decisive stand for the seventh wicket. Akash scored 36 runs inclusive of two sixes and two fours, while De Silva was not out on 19 runs.

When Dharmasoka batted first Wanith de Silva and Hasindu Praboda took four wickets each to contain them to 204 runs.

In their essay, Sri Devananda lost their first wicket for naught before Kanchana de Livera took the bull by the horns to smash 98 runs in 58 balls (12x4s, 5x6s) as he provided a strong stand with Chamod de Silva. Later, half-centuries by Lasindu Lakshan and Kaveesha Kalpana powered them to their eventual total.

In their second essay, Dharmasoka posted 207 runs with Senitha Helambage and Maneesha Rashmika scoring 40s.

Kaveesha Kalpana, who took three wickets in the second innings and scored 64 runs, won the Man of the Match award. The other award winners were Kanchana de Livera (Best Batsman), Wanith de Silva (Best Bowler) and Randul Samaraweera (Best Fielder). (RF)



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Overton, Urvil power Chennai Super Kings to fifth spot with third straight win

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Urvil Patel made an awe-inspiring start to his innings ]Cricinfo]

Urvil Patel played the kind of innings that erased a bit of history and created a bit of history. In 2025, team after team came to Chepauk and breached it and the crowd got used to leaving early. On Sunday evening, 32,825 people – some of whom might have seen the morning show where one of Tamil Nadu’s most popular actors took charge as the chief minister – were given double delight as  Chennai Super Kings (CSK) chased down their first 200-plus target since 2018 and one of their future stars announced himself with the IPL’s joint fastest half century.

Urvil got there in 13 balls. When he walked into the middle, CSK’s chances of winning were 38.13%. When he walked out, to a standing ovation from the crowd and his coaching staff, CSK’s chances of winning were 93.02%. He single-handedly changed the game and powered CSK to fifth spot.

Mitchell Marsh had taken first strike in eight out of 11 Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) matches. Here he gave it up so that Josh Inglis could do his thing. One of the best spin hitters in the world threw the opposition’s bowling plans off when he targeted Akeal Hosein, hitting him for three successive boundaries in the first over. CSK turned to pace, which suited Marsh better and which Inglis harnessed to play some of the coolest ramps ever seen and he went for them over and over.

According to ESPNcricinfo’s ball-by-ball data, nobody has tried more ramps (four) inside the powerplay. Even when he missed one, he created scoring opportunities. Because Anshul Kamboj, having seen what he wanted to do, went fuller instead of camping on a good length area and got smacked through the covers. Inglis’ ease in accessing the ‘V’ behind the wicket opened up easier scoring shots in front of it. He was 77 off 25 after six overs. Only Suresh Raina (87 vs PBKS in 2014), Travis Head (84 vs DC in 2024) and Jake Fraser-McGurk (78 vs MI in 2024) have scored more inside the field restrictions.

But with the field spreading, CSK unleashed the season’s joint-second-highest wicket-takers (12 each) in the middle overs on LSG. Noor Ahmad aced his match-up with Nicholas Pooran (two runs off nine balls for three dismissals). In his first three games this season, he had 0 for 111 at an economy rate of 11.1. In the next eight, Noor has picked up 12 for 215 at an economy rate of 7.16. In the background, MS Dhoni had suggested that the Afghanistan wrist-spinner focus more on his legbreak than just going googly all the time. That’s had a knock-on effect of Noor targeting the stumps a little more and it’s worked for him.

This was the same pitch where CSK won their first game of the season against DC. Just like that day, Jamie Overton played a big role. Inglis, who had faced 25 of the first 36 balls of the innings and hit nine fours and six sixes, could only get on strike for eight of the 19 balls since the powerplay. Antsy to keep the rate up, he went for a scoop against Overton and got caught behind. Hitting the deck with both pace on and off, Overton delivered 10 dots in his first 18 balls and provided two wickets. LSG were 56 for 5 in 50 balls after the field restrictions. Shahbaz Ahmed helped LSG recover a bit, hitting the last ball of the innings for six, to push the score past 200.

There is a sign of respect that a bowler gives a batter in T20 cricket. Bowling wides. Hiding the ball away from his hitting arc because he keeps walloping everything. Andre Russell has experienced this. Kieron Pollard has experienced this. And for one glorious moment, Urvil experienced this when Digvesh Rathi speared a ball practically down into the next pitch in the sixth over. This was because Urvil had sent the previous four balls he had faced out of the ground.

Urvil came into the game with a balls-per-boundary ratio of 2 in the IPL but his longest innings was 19 balls. He will likely persist with this method, trying to whack everything for six, because India have won a T20 world title with batters playing the exact same way. Also, LSG didn’t really give him a reason to take a backward step. They kept bowling the ball to which he could clear his front leg and swing to midwicket. Seven of his eight sixes went there. He was barely 10 minutes into his innings when had a chance to hit six sixes back to back. Three off Avesh Khan. Two of Rathi. When the sixth ball that he carved over point bounced in front of the boundary, he threw his head back in utter disappointment.

At 41 off 8, Urvil had the chance to break the IPL’s record for the fastest fifty. But he ended up scoring just nine off the next five balls and had to settle for sharing the title with Yashasvi Jaiwal. When he finally fell for 65 off 23, CSK needed 78 runs in 64 balls.

Veer could’ve been dismissed twice off two balls in the 19th over off Avesh but Rathi and Pooran dropped straightforward chances. Veer capitalised by hitting a six to bring the equation down to 10 off the last over. LSG went to Aiden Markram, figuring an offspinner turning the ball away from the two left-hand batters in the middle might work. It didn’t. Dube, on 3 off 5, hit back-to-back sixes to finish the game

Brief scores:
Chennai Super Kings 208 for 5 in 19.2 overs (Sanju Samson 28, Rutraj Gaikwad 42, Urvil Patel 65,  Kartik Sharma 20. Dewald Brevis 10, Shivam Dube 15*, Prashant Veer 17*;   Digvesh Rathi 2-45, Avesh Khan 1-44, Shahbaz Ahmed 2-30) beat Lucknow Super Giants 203 for 8 in 20 overs (Josh Inglis 85, Mitchell Marsh 10, Rishabh Pant 15, Akshat Raghuwanshi 18, Shahbaz Ahmed 43*, Himmat Singh 17; Anshul Kamboj 2-47, Noor Ahmad 1-24, Jamie  Overton 3-36)  by five wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Gill, Rashid lead GT’s demolition of Rajasthan Royals

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Rashid Khan took 4 for 33 - his third four-fer in IPL. (BCCI)

Gujarat Titans rode their red-hot momentum wave to keep the Rajasthan Royals winless in Jaipur with a 77-run win, marking their biggest ever victory in their relatively short IPL history. Shubman Gill and Sai Sudharsan set up a big total with the bat, before the bowlers ran through the batting lineup to catapult the Titans to second position on the points table with only net run-rate separating them from table-toppers Sunrisers Hyderabad.

‎‎Brief Scores:

‎Gujarat Titans 229/4 in 20 overs [Shubman Gill 84, Sai Sudharsan 55, Washington Sundar 37n.o.; Brijesh Sharma 2-47]

‎Rajasthan Royals 152 in 16.3 overs [Ravindra Jadeja 38, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi 36; Rashid Khan 4-22, Jason Holder 3-12, Kagiso Rabada 2-33]

‎‎Who won GT the match?

‎‎It was another day out for the famed Sudharsan-Gill combination. But once again, it was GT’s bowling unit that sealed this contest. On a good batting strip, 230 was certainly not beyond the realms of possibility for RR after yet another blazing Vaibhav Sooryavanshi start. But Kagiso Rabada continued to make hay in the Powerplay, bouncing out Yashasvi Jaiswal and Shimron Hetmyer after Mohammed Siraj dismissed Sooryavanshi off the short ball. The game was still on after the Royals scored 78 in the Powerplay but Rashid Khan cut the middle-order to size to shut the hosts out.

‎A lengthy opening over spells doom for RR

‎‎Perhaps the only thing that went right on the evening for RR was the toss as Yashasvi Jaiswal, standing in for an injured Riyan Parag, elected to field first. The hosts donned an all-pink kit to support a noble cause but their bowling unit, which hadn’t been in the pink of health for a few games, looked far from incisive. And nothing drove home that fact more than an 11-ball opening over from Jofra Archer, who overstepped and bowled multiple wides as he failed to control the swing on offer. Eighteen runs came off the first over and Archer was replaced by Brijesh Sharma in the third over, summing up what was to come for the Royals.

‎‎Gill, Sudharsan make merry

‎‎The bowling was shoddy and for a pair that has mastered the art of percentage batting, Gill and Sudharsan were not going to miss out. Tushar Deshpande speared too many outside leg stump to the left-hander, who was the dominator early on before Gill put on an exhibition of aesthetic power-hitting, launching Archer down the ground with effortless ease. An 82-run Powerplay marked GT’s most productive phase of the season. Both batters eventually brought up their fifties – off 30 balls each.

‎Did RR pull things back?

‎‎Head coach Kumar Sangakkara had an animated chat with his players during the timeout that followed the Powerplay. It seemed to work to some extent as the spin duo of Ravindra Jadeja and Yash Raj Punja tightened the screws, combining for 2/71 off their eight overs. The steady slowdown told on Sudharsan as he miscued a slot delivery off Punja to long on, before Buttler shanked a 107.2 kph Jadeja delivery to long off. On the back of the spinners’ success, Jaiswal turned to an over of part-time spin from Donovan Ferreira but once the pacers returned, they travelled again. Gill found an able ally in Washington Sundar, who kept the momentum going with regular hits to the fence.

‎‎Archer endured an off day so bad that he did not even bowl his fourth over. Gill missed out on a hundred and Brijesh sent down a four-run 19th over, but Sundar and Rahul Tewatia peeled off three sixes off Deshpande’s final over to wrest momentum back in the Titans’ favor as they finished on 229.

‎Sooryavanshi tees off again

‎‎A breezy but entertaining blitz this time. Little surprise that he struck a six off the first ball he faced from Siraj, although he jammed an inswinging yorker onto his right ankle, demanding the physio’s attention. He visibly struggled with his running and there were a couple of streaky shots that followed, but it did not seem to affect him as he smashed a couple of sixes off Rabada. His skill was on full display with a late cut through backward point and a drill straight back past Siraj, but a well-directed bumper at the body got the better of him as Siraj let out a huge roar.

‎Rashid Khan closes out the game

‎‎Dhruv Jurel attacked the pacers in the Powerplay, underlined by a 22-run over off Siraj. But once Rashid was introduced, Jurel’s recent woes against spin surfaced again. He was cleaned up by a googly before Donovan Ferreira was bamboozled by the leg-break a couple of deliveries later. Rashid was impeccable with his lengths and would go on to nab two more including Ravindra Jadeja, who showed positive intent early on with a six and a four off his first two balls but eventually had too much on his plate. Closing it out – fittingly with a bunch of short-pitched deliveries – was Jason Holder, who continued his rich vein of form with the ball as RR were bundled out inside the 17th over.

‎‎Where do the teams go next?

‎‎GT fly back home to face SRH on Tuesday (May 12) in a contest that could hand the winner a foot in the playoffs. RR are set for another long break and do not play for the next week, taking the field against Delhi Capitals in Delhi on Sunday (May 17).

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Mehidy five-for hands Bangladesh slim lead despite Awais’ debut ton

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Azan Awais is all smiles after bringing up his century [Cricinfo]

Debutant Azan Awais’  century was the centrepiece of Pakistan’s spirited reply on the third day, before bad light forced early stumps. The umpires called off play at 5.30pm, although it was initially announced that play could go up to 6.15pm after a lengthy rain delay in the afternoon. Mehidy Hasan Miraz’z five-for had handed Bangladesh a 27-run first-innings lead, before they batted for 1.5 overs in the second innings, with openers Mahmudul Hasan Joy and Shadman Islam adding seven.

It was Mehidy’s 14th five-for, and he finished with 5 for 102. Taskin Ahmed and Taijul Islam took two wickets each, while Nahid Rana picked up one, as Pakistan were bowled out for 386 in reply to Bangladesh’s 413.

The day, however, belonged to Pakistan’s batters – especially Awais, who scored 103. The 21-year-old made a telling contribution with his bat that consisted of some excellent shots through the off side. But he was equally fluent on the on side. The left-hand opener had two big partnerships: 106 with Imam-ul-Haq, and another 104 with fellow debutant Abdullah Fazal. They became only the third debutant pair from Pakistan to put together a century stand.

Awais’ dismissal also sparked Pakistan’s batting collapse on the third morning. Taskin had him caught at first slip, making him his 50th Test wicket. He also got Pakistan captain Shan Masood caught at point for 9, before Mehidy got into the act. He had Saud Shakeel lbw for a duck, before sucking Fazal into an uppish shot, which Taijul took gleefully at mid-on.

Fazal played second fiddle to Awais, striking seven fours and a six in his 120-ball stay. But when he fell, Pakistan went from 210 for 1 to 230 for 5 just before lunch.

Salman Agha and MonammadRizwan then went into recovery mode, and ensured Pakistan chipped away at Bangladesh’s first-innings total. They struck 15 boundaries between them, but Rizwan fell soon after reaching his half-century. He couldn’t clear Mahmudul at mid-off when he tried to charge at Taijul just before tea.

Rizwan must have rued his shot further when he saw covers coming on seconds after he was dismissed. There was heavy rain for nearly an hour, after which play began at 4.15pm, about half an hour after the rain had fully stopped.

Agha fell shortly after play restarted, as he was caught at first slip, before Mehidy removed both Noman Ali and Shaheen Afridi in quick succession. The innings ended when Taijul bowled Hasan, roughly an hour before the scheduled end of play.

Brief scores:
Bangladesh 413 in 117.1 overs and 7 for 0 in 1.5 overs  (Mahmudul Hasan Joy 02*) lead  Pakistan 386 in 100.3 overs (Azan Awais 103, Imam-ul-Haq 45, Abdullah Fazal 60, Salman Agha 58, Mohammad Rizwan 59; Taskin Ahmed 2-70, Mehidy Hasan Miraz  5-102, Taijul Islam 2-46) by 34 runs

[Cricinfo]

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