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David Pieris Group sponsors MCA ‘E’ Division Cricket for the 19th consecutive year 

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MCA President Nalin Wickremasinghe receives the sponsorship cheque for the DPGC Challenge Trophy from Naalaka Madugalle, Director and COO, David Pieris Motor Company (Private) Limited. Rohan Somawansa, Chairman, Sponsorship Committee, MCA, Mahesh de Alwis, Senior Vice President and Chairman – Tournament Committee, MCA, Romany Parakrama, Director, David Pieris Motor Company (Private) Limited, Ajantha Premasiri, Chief Marketing Officer, Assetline Leasing Company Limited, Nadi B. Dharmasiri, Group Chief Marketing Communication Officer, David Pieris Holdings (Private) Limited are also present.

Reaffirming their commitment to promote sports in the country, David Pieris Group of Companies (DPGC) extended its sponsorship of the Mercantile ‘E’ Division Cricket Tournament for the 19th consecutive year. This is the second longest sponsorship in the Mercantile Cricket Association (MCA) tournament history.

The official handing over of the sponsorship took place on Wednesday at MCA with the participation of David Pieris Motor Company (Private) Limited Director and Chief Operating Officer Naalaka Madugalle, Director, Romany Parakrama, Chief Marketing Communications Officer Nadi B. Dharmasiri, Chief Marketing Officer of Assetline Leasing Company Limited Ajantha Premasiri, MCA President Nalin Wickremasinghe, MCA Executive Committee Member and Secretary of the Tournament Committee Lakmal de Silva, media and guests.

The tournament which commenced recently witnessed LOLC, Fairfirst Insurance, Brandix Essentials, Ceylinco Insurance, Expolanka Holdings, John Keells ‘B’, Virtusa and Stafford Motors recording victories during the last weekend.

Commercial Credit, Amana Takaful, Janashakthi Insurance, Commercial Leasing & Finance, Trelleborg Lanka, Softlogic Finance, MBSL Insurance and Union Assurance are the other teams vying for success in this tourney.

David Pieris Group has always been a strong proponent of sports, encouraging not only its employees to participate but supporting sports among the mercantile sector as well. They greatly appreciate skills and values that sports, and particularly, team sports inculcate in employees. A sense of competition, the importance of team work, leveraging individual skills for collective success, the ability to think on your feet, strategic and tactical play, falling in with the captain’s plan and delivering what is required – all of which are critical for success in today’s corporate world.

The MCA and its league tournaments continue to create and deliver great value. It provides a platform and opportunity for men and women who love the sport to continue to play the game even after they leave school and enter the corporate world

Currently David Pieris Group’s teams participate in mercantile cricket, athletics, volleyball, hockey, basketball, netball and badminton. David Pieris Group ‘A’ team played in the Mercantile ‘D’ Division semi-finals last year and the ‘B’ team is playing in the ‘F’ Division.

Embracing a history that dates back four decades, today, David Pieris Group is one of Sri Lanka’s largest and financially stable conglomerates and to date has provided direct and indirect job opportunities to over four million Sri Lankans.

The Group comprises eighteen companies in diversified industries including automotive products and services, financial services, logistics, information technology (IT), investment properties, racing, leisure and organic agri export.



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Ghulam’s debut century carries Pakistan as England stay in touch

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Kamran Ghulam made a hundred on debut [Cricinfo]

There has been precious little for Pakistan cricket to cheer in recent months, but on the opening day of the second Test in Multan, Kamran Ghulam provided a moment of unbridled joy as he brought up a gutsy century in his maiden Test innings, to carry the fight for his embattled team.

Though he fell late in the day for 118, bowled by Shoaib Bashir as he looked to stay proactive with the close of play looming, Ghulam’s debut efforts helped to lift Pakistan to 259 for 5 – scarcely riches by the standards that England were dishing up on this very same surface last week, but the beginnings of a score nonetheless.

Despite Pakistan’s experience in the first Test, when their first-innings 556 ended up on the wrong side of an innings defeat, Ghulam’s resolute efforts – allied to a career-best 77 from Saim Ayub and an atypically entrenched 37 not out from Mohammad Rizwan – kept Pakistan on course for the sort of 300-plus score that could yet be competitive if their spin-heavy attack can take advantage of a pitch that had been heavily watered and dried with industrial fans in the four-day turnaround between Tests.

The danger for Pakistan, however, may yet come from the weapons that they won’t be able to deploy. Despite two early wickets for Jack Leach,  who has now claimed nine in three innings on this surface to reassert his status as England’s senior spinner, their most pronounced threat came through a mid-afternoon spell of reverse-swing, excellently harnessed by a three-pronged seam attack. Uniquely, all three hail from Durham, among them Ben Stokes, who was back to lead the team for the first time since his hamstring tear in August. In opting to ditch both Shaheen Shah Afridi and Naseem Shah for this contest, much will be resting on their lone quick, Aamer Jamal, if Pakistan hope to utilise similar skills.

All such considerations can wait for now, thanks to the efforts of Ghulam, who – at the age of 29 – was the second oldest Pakistani to record a debut century. He achieved the feat with a gleeful swing through the leg-side off Joe Root, after an anxious wait in the 90s that had encompassed the evening drinks break. A few more moments of delay could not perturb him, however, after more than a decade of service in Pakistan’s Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, in which time he might have assumed that his haul of more than 4500 runs at 49 would forever be overlooked.

His innings had begun at 19 for 2 in the tenth over, after Leach – thrown the ball early after Stokes’ quick assessment of the surface – had become the first England spinner to strike twice so early in a Test match since Johnny Briggs in 1889. His impact threatened another meltdown to match Pakistan’s fourth-evening collapse in the first Test, but Ghulam proved his mettle from the outset, showcasing his familiarity with the arid conditions and his faith in the methods that had finally got him noticed.

His first boundary was a composed launch for six back over Leach’s head, and in easing through to his first half-century from 104 balls, he recorded a milestone that had eluded his more illustrious compatriot, Babar Azam, in the 18 out-of-form innings that had resulted in his omission.

Ghulam had faced just two deliveries of fast bowling in his first 120, however, when Stokes brought himself into the attack midway through the afternoon, and the challenge instantly went up a notch. In his first over, Stokes found a fat edge that flew at a catchable height through the vacant slip cordon, and when a second edge fell short soon afterwards, Root found himself donning a helmet four yards from the bat in a bid to make any further chance count.

The breakthrough, however, arrived at the other end. Ayub’s reputation had suffered in this series, largely as a consequence of his hopelessly misfiring opening partnership with Abdullah Shafique, which at least reached double-figures for the first time in nine innings. It didn’t get much further, however, as Leach bowled Shafique for 7 to reduce Pakistan to 15 for 1, before Shan Masood clipped on the up to Zak Crawley at midwicket for 3.

In isolation, however, Ayub has been a qualified success at the top of Pakistan’s order, and this was his third half-century in four first innings, following his twin fifties against Bangladesh last month. But, with tea approaching, and England beginning to make the ball talk, Matthew Potts threatened his outside edge with a diet of hooping outswingers from over the wicket, before Stokes pouched a firm push through the line at a very straight silly mid-off (168 for 3).

After tea, Brydon Carse, energetic as ever, roughed up Saud Shakeel with an excellent short ball, then found his edge for 4 with an even better 140kph/87mph delivery that fizzed through to Jamie Smith behind the stumps. And England’s position could have been stronger still had Ben Duckett clung on to a loose slap from Ghulam, on 79, as he chose to take the attack to the returning Leach and almost paid the price at mid-on.

The value of Stokes’ economy with his seamers throughout a morning session was brought to bear in the evening, with Carse helping to keep Rizwan under the cosh for 19 deliveries without scoring before Potts took over and so nearly landed an innings-altering blow. His first delivery to Rizwan, on 6 at the time, zipped past the outside edge and into Smith’s gloves, but England declined to use a review – even though replays showed that the ball had grazed the splice of his bat.

England’s endeavours were worthy of another breakthrough before the close, and though he had once again been the weaker link in the attack, Bashir obliged with a critical strike late in the day. Armed with the second new ball, he skidded a good-length delivery past Ghulam’s tired charge, and clipped the top of leg to prise a critical opening that could yet make the difference in Pakistan’s quest for a serviceable first innings.

Brief scores:
Pakistan 259 for 5 in  overs (Kamran Ghulam 118, Saim Ayub 77, Mohammad Rizwan 37; Jack Leach 2-92 ) vs England

[Cricinfo]

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Sri Lanka elect to bat first in 2nd T20I

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Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat first in the second T20I against the West Indies at Dambulla

Sri Lanka:
Pathum Nissanka,  Kusal Mendis (wk), Kusal Perera,  Kamindu Mendis,  Charith Asalanka (capt.),  Bhanuka Rajapaksa,  Wanindu Hasaranga,  Dunith Wellalage,  Maheesh Theekshana,  Matheesha Pathirana,  Nuwan Thushara

West Indies:
Evin Lewis, Brandon King,  Andre Fletcher(wk),  Roston Chase, Sherfane Rutherford, Rovman Powell (capt.),  Romario Shepherd,  Shamar Springer, Alzarri Joseph,  Gudakesh Motie,  Shamar Joseph

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Bangladesh head coach Hathurusinghe suspended on disciplinary grounds

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Bangladesh head coach Chandika Hathurusinghe  has been suspended by the BCB on disciplinary grounds. He has been suspended for 48 hours and is to be “terminated immediately” after that period and has also been served a show-cause notice by the board. Phil Simmons  will take over as head coach in an interim capacity till the 2025 Champions Trophy.
“Hathurusinghe has two counts of misconduct,” BCB president Faruque Ahmed said. “First is about an assault on a player. Secondly, he took too many leaves, more than what was in his contract.”
Hathurusinghe returned for his second stint as Bangladesh coach in February last year. In August this year, shortly after Ahmed was appointed as board president, he had said that Hathurusinghe should no longer continue  as Bangladesh’s head coach.

Under Hathurusinghe, Bangladesh put up underwhelming performances during last year’s ODI World Cup and T20 World Cup campaign this year. His best achievement during this term was Bangladesh’s 2-0 Test series win  against Pakistan this year. It was their maiden win in Pakistan, and first overseas Test series win in 15 years. However, in the India tour  that followed, they lost 2-0 in the Tests and 3-0 in the T20Is which included a record loss in the third match,

(Cricinfo)

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