Sports
Chinthaka heads Sri Lanka Cricket Scorers

Chinthaka Munasinghe was re-elected as President of Sri Lanka Cricket Scorers at the Annual General Meeting of the association held at the National Institute of Sports Sciences auditorium last week.
Munasinghe, Chamara de Silva (Secretary), Lalin Premarathna (Treasurer) and Ranga Samantha (Assignment Secretary for 2025/ 2026) were selected to their respective posts uncontested.
The newly appointed Executive Committee of Sri Lanka Scores for 2025/26:
President – Chinthaka Munasinghe
General Secretary – Chamara de Silva
Treasurer – Lalin Premarathne
Assignment Secretary – Ranga Samantha Vice Presidents – Fazal Mohomed and Saman Peiris
Assistant Secretary –Ishendra de Silva
Assistant Treasurer – Chamara Perera and Nilantha Herath
Assistant Assignment Secretary – Ishanka Udayanga and Dimuthu Asanka
Chief Organizer – Dinesh Kumara
Committee Members – Nishantha Jayasinghe, Tharaka Nanayakkara, Chamara Thilakarathne
Sports
Seven cueists to compete for Sri Lanka at Asian 6 Red & Team Snooker Championship

Sri Lanka will field seven cueists including champions Irshath Thaha and Susantha Boteju when the country hosts the Asian 6 Red and Team Snooker Championship 2025 at the Moors Sports Club billiards table in Colombo from June 22.
The seven-day championship is hosted by Billiard and Snooker Association of Sri Lanka (BSASL) under the auspices of the Asian Confederations of Billiard Sports (ACBS).
Irshath Thaha and Susantha Boteju are joined by Mohamed Rikaz, Dhanushka Puwakgolla, Mohamed Musharaff, Mohamed Mubeen, and Thiyagarajah Thanji to vie for honours
The seven day championship due to end on June 28 will see the participation of 17 countries namely Kuwait, Hong Kong China, China, Malaysia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, India, Oman, UAE, Bahrain, Jordan, Cambodia, Macau, Qatar, Singapore, Iraq and host Sri Lanka.
The regional event will see the participation of over 50 cueists and will showcase the action of past and present world champions giving the snooker fans a rare opportunity to witness the top notch players in action. The championship will be played over six tables and action will begin for the day from 10.00 a.m. each day with five sessions planned to be conducted.
The players will clash for two titles the Asian 6 Red which is an individual event and the Team championship that will be contested between two players from each country.
At the last edition of the tournament which was held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia last year, Awais Muneer of Pakistan clinched the men’s singles 6 Red event and Team Thailand emerged the team champions. They will be looking to retain the titles.
The tournament will give the emerging and established players the much needed exposure and gain valuable international experience and an opportunity to showcase their talent.
Sports
Sri Lanka book final berth against Turkmenistan

Sri Lanka did well to reach the finals of the Billie Jean King Cup Asia Oceania Group III tournament as the hosts recorded a 3-0 win over Nepal at the Sri Lanka Tennis Association clay courts on Thursday.
Sri Lanka are set to meet Turkmenistan in the final today, after the latter beat Pakistan in their encounter.
In the first singels match Akeesha Silva beat Shivali Gurung 7-7, 7-6 before Dinara de Silva beat Abhllasha Bista 6-4, 6-2.
Inuki Jayaweera and Tuwini de Alwis made it three wins in a row by beating Shivali Gurung and Abhilasha Bista 6-4, 1-6, 10-5.
The winners of today’s final will be promoted to Group II.
- Inuki Jayaweera and Tuwini de Alwis
- Akeesha Silva (Pix by Kamal Wanniarachchi)
Sports
South Africa receive heroes’ welcome home

Everyone loves a winner, as was clear at Johannesburg’s Tambo International Airport where South Africa returned as World Test Champions on Wednesday morning.
The squad were received by the country’s sports minister, Gayton McKenzie, and swathes of people from across South African society. In attendance were groups of children from the KFC’s Mini Cricket programme – the largest grassroots development initiative in the country – students from some of the players’ former schools, such as Aiden Markram’s Pretoria Boys High School, and family members like Wiaan Mulder’s brother.
The players signed autographs, received flowers and hugs and strutted around in custom made “champions” t-shirts before making their way to Cricket South Africa’s offices in the north of the city where they were welcomed with a brass band and a red carpet. Almost 96 hours after their five-wicket triumph over Australia in the WTC final, the magnitude of what they have achieved is starting to sink in.
“It is quite overwhelming. We haven’t seen people like that at the airport before,” Temba Bavuma , South Africa’s captain said at a press conference afterwards. “As players, you don’t really realise what you’ve done but when you start to interact with people and see the emotion, it gives you a proper insight into what we’ve done. We are proud as a team but we are even more happy and proud that we’ve made our people proud. If you look at this team and the guys at the helm, we have done it the proper South African way. That’s unique to this group. We have embraced everything that it means to be South African.”
With a home grown coach in Shukri Conrad and a largely unheralded group of players, Bavuma’s words spoke to the way the South African team pulled together throughout the cycle and in the final. They had nine different Players of the Match in 2023-25 and 15 different players either scored a century or took a five-for in what has been hailed as a true team effort and a unified showing after years of underperformance. For Bavuma, it showed that there is always a way, not just for sportspeople but for everyone.
“What we’ve achieved speaks to all budding cricketers out there, and individuals within South Africa,” he said. “As a team, we’ve got a story. It hasn’t been a simple or easy one. We’ve come through a lot but we managed to get to where we are. So similarly for them (ordinary people) on their quest and journey, for what they want to achieve: as long as they keep having that passion and keep pushing they can also achieve what people think is unachievable.”
For 27 years, South Africa have been without an ICC trophy and in that time regularly slipped at the semi-final hurdle. The 1999 ODI World Cup, where South Africa tied the game but could not advance to the final because Australia finished higher on the Super Six points table, has long been a sore point but the 2015 and 2023 ODI World Cup semis and 2024 T20 World Cup final also stung. It’s because of those failures that the WTC win is magnified, as one of South Africa’s greatest sporting achievements. “This is huge for South African cricket,” Enoch Nkwe, Director of National Teams and High Performance said. “This is huge for South African cricket and the impact it will have for generations to come. We’ve taken a lot of punches but we’ve never bent our backs. We stayed strong.”
Nkwe, who was appointed in July 2022, put in place the coaching structure which included Conrad, who in turn appointed Bavuma as captain. Conrad will now also take over the white-ball sides until the end of the ODI World Cup in 2027. There is particular expectation around that tournament, not least because of the history documented above, but also because the event will be hosted in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia. Bavuma is also South Africa’s ODI captain and has already spoken of his hope for the event to come.
“We want to carry on with the momentum we’ve gained,” he said. “We are quietly optimistic as to what can happen in the white-ball space. We see no reason as to why we can’t emulate what we’ve done here. We are more optimistic than anything. We had a little conversation about it. Shukri’s mind is always ticking. He lets you know that there’s always some sort of work you need to do.”
That tournament is more than two years away, in which time there will be an entire WTC cycle and a T20 World Cup. Eyes will be on South Africa for all of them, especially as their next Tests include matches in Pakistan and India and home series against England and Australia in 2026. They believe they’ve laid the foundation to be successful in these contests but no-one can begrudge them celebrating the first world title for a little bit longer, as Bavuma suggested they would.
“For now, it’s for us to embrace what we’ve done, to take it all in, understand what led us to this point and live in that moment for a little bit longer,” Bavuma said. “Then, I think the beauty of international cricket is that there’s always something else waiting. Once we get over our emotions, it will be what is the next thing? There’s the Zimbabwe tour, and the start of the new Test cycle. We will be setting our eyes on what we want to achieve over there. There is always something we are working towards. It’s a legacy we want to put together as a team. It’s not done now, but for now it’s for us to enjoy what the moment has brought us.”
South Africa will have several fan engagements in the next few days before a two-Test series against Zimbabwe in Bulawayo, which starts on June 28. The series is not part of the WTC.
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