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Brian Bennett’s 169 puts Zimbabwe 1-0 up

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Brian Bennett's 169 took Zimbabwe to 299 [Zimbabwe Cricket]

Brian Benett delivered a Valentine Day’s gift to all the cricket lovers at Harare Sports Club with a sublime 169 to set up Zimbabwe’s 49-run win in the first ODI against Ireland on Friday.

Promoted to opener for the first time in ODI cricket, Bennett struck 56.52% of Zimbabwe’s total to give Ireland a target of 300 to chase. Along the way, he also became the fourth-youngest to score 150-plus in a men’s ODI and posted the fifth-highest ODI score by a Zimbabwe men’s batter.

The target, though, on a docile surface, was quite gettable, and Ireland went toe-to-toe for most of the chase. But they ran out of wickets – including four dismissals in their last ten deliveries of their innings – to fold for 250. Blessing Muzarabani (4 for 51) and Richard Ngarava (3 for 56) shared seven wickets, and Zimbabwe arrested their four-match losing streak to take the hosts 1-0 up.

A 9.30am start with rain in the air, and Harare historically favouring chasing sides, Ireland captain Paul Stirling made the logical call of bowling first. But Josh Little, the left-arm swing bowler, had a rough return to the ODI line-up as he conceded 35 runs in his first three overs. Bennett was the chief aggressor, pumping him for six fours in his first three overs, while Ben Curran carved another couple. He would eventually finish on 1 for 75 in nine overs with an economy of 8.33, conceding 11 fours and five wides in all.

The prolific start, and the lack of incision from the Ireland new-ball bowlers, allowed the Zimbabwe opening partnership to grow. They put on 95 for the first wicket before offspinner Andy McBrine (1 for 53) broke the stand.

There was no respite, though, as Bennett and the No. 3 Craig Ervine then added 136 in 134 balls in a second-wicket stand that was constructed masterfully. They were watchful through the middle overs with some turn in the pitch and the pair of Matthew Humphreys and McBrine appeared to strangle the pair.

While Bennett took an affinity towards point, extra cover, deep midwicket and deep square leg with his 20 fours and three sixes, Ervine was more adventurous by moving across and trying to find empty pockets over fine leg. As the stand grew and Zimbabwe’s run-rate got a boost, Bennett too played with the Ireland bowlers by using the width of his crease to create boundary-scoring opportunities.

The pair capitalised on three dropped catches and one missed stumping to bring up Zimbabwe’s 200 in the 38th over, and a big target was very much on before Ervine fell against the run of play to medium-pacer Graham Hume in the 41st over. Sikandar Raza and Wessly Madhevere, though, failed to keep the momentum up, and the big shots came from only Bennett’s end in the final ten. After batting for 216 minutes, Bennett perished in the final over trying to find a big shot, and his effort ensured Zimbabwe finished on 299 for 5.

“I was pushing them for a while to get up [to open], and happy to get that opportunity,” Bennett said after the game. “I just wanted to watch the ball and hit the ball. It’s a very good sign, and I hope to do that again on Sunday. I wanted to take it deep as one of the set batters among the top four.”

The chase began inauspiciously for Ireland as Andrew Balbirnie was caught behind off Ngarava in the first ball but the rest of Ireland’s batting unit showed enough promise that the chase could be pulled off, only to lose their wicket when the tide appeared to turn. Stirling was deceived by a Muzarabani short ball to fall for 32, Curtis Campher edged a wide ball from Raza to the keeper on 44, Harry Tector scooped Madhevere to fine leg on 39 and Lorcan Tucker inside-edged Muzarabani onto his stumps on 31.

At 169 for 6 in 35.2 overs, Ireland’s chase appeared to lose its fizz, but an eighth-wicket stand of 73 in 9.1 overs between George Dockrell (34) and McBrine (36) brought life into the game and started to make the home crowd nervous.

However, Ervine turned to Muzarabani for the 45th over, and he picked off both set batters in the space of four balls, and Ngarava wrapped up the tail in the 46th for a tame finish to a high-octane game.

“We gave Bennett a chance or two and he made us pay,” Stirling said after the defeat. “We were rusty [in the field] when we shouldn’t have been. I felt 50 runs was the difference between the two sides and the result reflects that. [A target of] 300 was chaseable, and at 30 overs we were in the hunt. But we lost our way. We bat pretty deep and hopefully we do well with the bat next game.”

Brief scores:
Zimbabwe 299 for 5 in 50 overs (Brian Bennett 169, Craig Ervine 66,Ben Curran 28; Mark  Adair 2-55) beat Ireland 250 in 46 overs (Paul Stirling 32, Curtis Campher 44, Harry Tector 39, Lorcan Tucker 31, George Dockeel34, Andy McBrine 32; Blessing  Muzarabani 4-51, Richard Ngarava 3-56, Wesley Madherve 2-12) by 49 runs

[Cricinfo]



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A good Samaritan

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Ruchira Palliyaguruge

by Rex Clementine

Last week, the scorebooks of school cricket needed a fresh rewrite as Kingswood College, Kandy broke a 68-year hoodoo to clinch their Big Match against Dharmaraja College in the hill capital. Almost in tandem, down south, another long wait ended when St. Servatius’ College, Matara turned the tables on arch-rivals St. Thomas’ College, Matara, sealing a famous win after 55 years.

St. Servatius’ rise has not been a flash in the pan. For the better part of 15 years, they have been punching well above their weight, taking guard in Division 1 and holding their own against the heavyweights. The production line has not dried either, with a steady stream of Sri Lanka Under-19 cricketers making their mark on bigger stages. In many ways, they have helped put outstation cricket back on the front foot.

Behind the sightscreen, however, stands a quiet architect. Ruchira Palliyaguruge, a name that may not grab headlines but one that has been doing the hard yards. A former teammate of Sanath Jayasuriya at St. Servatius’, Ruchira was no mug with the bat or ball, enjoying a prolific domestic career after narrowly missing the national cap.

Post-retirement, he swapped spikes for the white coat, rising through the ranks to officiate on the ICC panel, standing in matches across the globe. But his most telling contribution has come away from the glare of international arenas.

In the aftermath of the Big Match triumph, it emerged that for two decades Ruchira had been quietly footing the bill for the school’s cricket coaches, no drum roll, no fanfare, just a man playing a straight bat for a cause close to his heart.

This has not been merely about opening his wallet. He has invested time, energy and know-how, ensuring the game at St. Servatius’ keeps moving in the right direction. Even after the boys hang up their school caps, he has remained in their corner, helping them find employment and navigate life beyond the boundary.

Good Samaritans like Ruchira are the need of the hour if outstation cricket is to stay in the game. While Colombo schools enjoy the luxury of deep pockets and old boys’ networks, many rural schools are forced to play on a sticky wicket. It is through the generosity and vision of individuals like him that the game continues to tick over smoothly beyond the city limits.

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Wins for Inqube Global , WSO2, Star Garments, MAS Active Kreeda, CDB ‘B’ and Wiley Global Technology on Sunday [22]

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15TH STAFFORD MOTORS – MCA G DIVISION T20 LEAGUE CRICKET TOURNAMENT

Inqube Global, WSO2, Star Garments, MAS Active Kreeda , CDB ‘B’ and Wiley Global Technology emerged victorious in the league stage matches of the Stafford Motors sponsored, MCA G division T20 League Cricket Tournament played on Sunday 22nd March.

At the SLC Ground in Banadaragama, Kanishka Eshan grabbed four wickets and Hiranga Jayasinghe and Suresh Madusanka chipped in with 40 runs and 30 runs respectively to help Inqube Global beat Swisstek Ceylon by four wickets to lead group F of the tournament. Daminda Wijekoon contributed 58 runs off 38 balls for the losers. In the afternoon game at the same venue Dimutu Madushan captured four wickets to help WSO2 defeated Hayleys Group by five wickets .

At the Royal College Grounds, Star Garments registered their fourth win in four outings defeating Pyramid Wilmar by one wicket in the penultimate ball of their innings. In a group B game played in the afternoon, MAS Active Kreeda consigned group leaders Emar Pharma to their second defeat in the tournament.

At de Mazenod College Grounds in Kandana, Chathuranga Dikkumbura and Isuru Jayaranga scored 39 runs each to help CDB ‘B’ registered a net run rate boosting ten wicket win over Sysco Labs. In the afternoon match Panitha Dangalla and Sayuru Wanasinghe guided Wiley Global Technology to a five wicket win over 99X.

At SLC Grounds Bandaragama:

Inqube Global won by 4 wickets

Swisstek Ceylon 174/8 in 20 overs

[Lasith Karunathilake 10, Danidu Wijekoon 58, Tihan Senanayake 17, Dushmantha Dias 33, Lahiru Piyumal 25, Nadeera Liyanage 16; Isuru Lakshan 1-21, Lahiru Subashana 1-35, Kanishka Eshan 4-25]

Inqube Global 175/6 in 19.5 overs

[Hiranga Jayasinghe 40, Isuru Lakshan 18, Suresh Madusanka 30, Sanindu Deshan 23*, Upul Chandra 23; Dushmantha Dias 1-16, Tihan Senanayake 1-25, Saranga Lakshan 1-18, Lahiru Piyumal 1-18, Gamini Wanasinghe 2-35]

WSO2 won by five wickets

Hayleys Group 127/8 in 20 overs

[Adeesha Jayarathna 50, Dilan Suraweera 13, Lasantha Prabath 31*; Dimuthu Madushan 4-19, Osanda Herath 1-25, Oshanda Yomal 2-24, Dev Wijewarden 1-14]

WSO2 132/5 in 18.5 overs

[Devin Jayasinghe 42, Isuru Ruhunage 31, Kaveesha Rajapaksha 19, Osanda Herath 13, Dev Wijewardena 15*; Mahesh Deepal 1-15, Lasantha Prabath 1-45, Pasindu Adithya 2-14, Sumudu Marasinghe 1-39]

At Royal College Grounds:

Star Garments won by 1 wicket

Pyramid Wilmar 140/10 in 20 overs

[Lasith Fernando 54, Shanaka Fernando 24, Sahas Vihanga 21; Randu Fernando 2-25, Dunik Perer 1-29, Dhanuka Dulanjana 1-21, Yohan Aloka 2-25, Rishantha Anushka 2-19]

Star Garments 141/9 in 19.5 overs

[Nadeesha Rajakaruna 12, Chathuranga Dilshan 13, Yohan Aloka 25, Shakila de Silva 22, Randu Fernando 20, Dhanuka Dulanjana 17*; Budhdhika Herath 2-22, Udesh Nishan 3-23, Umeda Madusha 2-23, Upeksha Lakshan 2-31]

MAS Active Kreeda won by 5 wickets

Emar Pharma 101/10 in 20 overs [Janith Jayasinghe 23, Devinda Ayesh 26, Dishan Hettiarachchi 30; Suventhiran Subikaran 2-28, Adeesha Miyusara 1-18, Sivakumar Partheepan 3-12, Kanesh Piratheepan 2-23]

MAS Active Kreeda 103/4 in 12.1 overs

[Jineetha Malith 14, Adeesha Miyusara 28, Suventhiran Subikaran 29*; Deshan Fernado 3-34, Rajendran Sagitharan 1-21]

At De Mazenod College Grounds

CDB ‘B’ won by 10 wickets

Sysco Labs 79/9 in 13 overs

[Bhagya Dissanayake 20, Chathura Hennanayake 10; Vishwa Dhananjaya 2-14, Chamod Madushan 2-17, Dhanushka Dharmasiri 1-08, Dasun Senevirathne 1-09]

CDB ‘B’ 82/0 in 20 overs

[Chathuranga Dikkumbura 39*, Isuru Jayaranga 39*]

Panitha and Sayuru power Wiley Gliobal to a 5 wicket win

99X 122/7 in 20 overs

[Sachith Jayasinghe 14, Ishrath Raji 35, Sameera Piyasundera 18, Saranga Liyanage 19; Sayuru Wanasinghe 1-13, Lilan Karunarathne 1-14, Omal Bhagya 2-25]

Wiley Global Technology 125/5 in 15.4 overs

[Thushara Peiris 19, Lilan Karunarathne 15, Panitha Dangalla 40*, Sayuru Wanasinghe 25*; Sachith Jayasinghe 1-31, Kushan Rathnayake 2-21, Ishrath Raji 1-21, Saranga Liyanage 1-19]

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Deneth ton, Mevindu five-for highlight Dharmaloka–Sumangala quarter-final battle

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Kaveen Deneth / Mevindu Kumarasiri

An impressive century by opener Kaveen Deneth and a five-wicket haul from Mevindu Kumarasiri highlighted an absorbing first day in the Under 19 Division I Tier B quarter-final between Sri Dharmaloka College, Kelaniya and Sri Sumangala College, Panadura played at Kuruvita on Wednesday.

‎After winning the toss and electing to bowl first, Sri Sumangala kept the pressure on by striking at regular intervals. However, Deneth produced a determined innings to anchor the Sri Dharmaloka batting line-up and keep his team in the contest.

‎Sri Sumangala made the early breakthrough in only the second over when paceman Sihas Nethdinu dismissed Mewan Randeepana without scoring. Deneth then shared a brief partnership with Tharusha Mihiranga, whose 24-ball stay produced just seven runs.

‎With Sri Dharmaloka struggling at 30 for 2 in the 10th over, Deneth steadied the innings and received useful support from the middle order. Senuka Pehesara contributed 29 runs, while Chanul Nethsitha (17) and Koshitha Adithya (19) also chipped in with valuable runs.

‎Deneth’s patient knock of 106 off 161 balls, which included 12 fours and two sixes, proved crucial in holding the innings together as Sri Dharmaloka were eventually bowled out for 211 in 76.3 overs.

‎Sri Sumangala’s bowling honours went to Mevindu Kumarasiri, who delivered a tireless spell and finished with impressive figures of 5 for 82 in 32.3 overs, emerging as the standout bowler of the day.

‎In reply, Sri Sumangala encountered early trouble as spinner Sathindu Prabodha struck in successive overs to put the Panadura side under pressure.

‎At stumps on day one, Sri Sumangala were struggling at 11 for 2, setting up an intriguing second day in this closely contested quarter-final encounter.

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