Sports
Four players to compete at Asian Continental Chess Championship 2021
Chess Federation of Sri Lanka will field four players led by National Champion Ranindu Dilshan Liyanage of Ananda College for the Asian Continental Chess Championship which commences today. The major championship which will also select the continent’s top eight players for the FIDE Chess World Cup will be played in Hybrid Format using the Tornelo Platform.
Liyanage, who is in top form after winning the Sri Lanka Chess Grand Prix 2021 has already qualified to compete in the Chess World Cup 2021 to be held in July in Russia.
Minul Sanjula Doluweera, one of the best chess player produced by Royal College in recent years, 15-year-old Nalandian L.M.S.T. de Silva, who is the youngest in the team and Theekshana Denuwan of Ananda College are the other players taking part in the championship.
Doluweera won the silver medal at this year’s National Championship and was also the silver medallist at the Sri Lanka Chess Grand Prix 2021. He was the National Champion in 2017.
De Silva was the bronze medallist at the National Championship and was the winner of the Chess Grand Prix 2020 and the recently held CFSL National Youth Under 18 Championship.
Denuwan was the third runner up at the last National Championship and won a bronze at the Sri Lanka Chess Grand Prix 2021.
An event is categorized ‘Hybrid’ when it is conducted from different venues as an online competition. The event which is conducted by the Asian Chess Federation according to the Swiss System in nine rounds will be monitored from the ACF headquarters in AL Ain, UAE. The players of all participating countries will be monitored by the chief arbiter and supporting arbiters at their respective venues. The Sri Lankan players will log in to the competition at the CFSL Headquarters, Delkanda, Nugegoda.
The Asian Chess Federation is offering US$ 16,000.00 as cash awards to the winners. The top eight players of this event will qualify to compete at the FIDE Chess World Cup in July.
The Asian Continental Chess Championship is the most prestigious individual chess event in Asian and 80 formidable chess players from 16 countries have registered for the competition. Players from Australia, Bangladesh, China, Chinese Taipei, Indonesia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Malaysia, Mongolia, Philippines, Singapore, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan are participating in the event. Unfortunately, India, probably the strongest team of the region is not in a position to field their players due to the pandemic situation there.
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Litton 126 saves Bangladesh’s blushes on opening day
When it finally settled, a day that ebbed and flowed belonged to Litton Das. A majestic hundred from Bangladesh’s wicketkeeper-batter lifted his side from the oblivion of 116 for 6 to 278. Khurram Shahzad and Mohamed Abbas had torn through Bangladesh’s top and middle order, but as it happens so frequently, Pakistan failed to deliver the knockout blow, allowing Bangladesh to wriggle out of trouble once more. By the end of the day, the visitors will have been relieved to see off six overs in the evening without damage after the final session handed Bangladesh momentum that was all Pakistan’s in the first two.
Litton was a man on an ambitious mission from the moment he walked out, and saw two more team-mates fall inside ten runs to leave him batting alongside the tail. He immediately began turning down singles, aware he would have to do much of the work himself. He knew what it would take, having previously wrested control of a game after six early wickets in Rawalpindi, where his hundred set up a Bangladesh win.
After gritting his way alongside Taijul, he slowly began to loosen Pakistan’s control over the innings. He began to trust his partners more as the sting went out of the bowling attack, and then, crucially, the intensity and concentration. A bouncer from Shahzad kissed his glove on the way to Mohammad Rizwan, and though there were muffled appeals from the Pakistanis, no one felt confident enough to review after Pakistan burned two. He was on 52 then and went on to add another 74.
And those runs at the backend came quickly. With Taijul Islam, Taskin Ahmed and particularly Shoriful Islam, with whom he put on 64 for the ninth wicket, offering solidity at the other end, Litton freed his arms and began to show his dazzling strokely. A jabbed six in front of midwicket was the shot of the day, and as Pakistan’s accuracy dipped, runs flowed easily. A creamy drive through the covers brought up his third hundred against Pakistan, and as the day drew to a close, the visitors looked out of ideas beyond awaiting the new ball.
Litton finally holed out off a short delivery on 126, which left Pakistan with a tricky half hour to survive. It was Azan Awais and Abdullah Fazal, each one Test old, who were given that responsibility, one they carried out with impressive composure.
It had all begun so differently for Pakistan, who got off to a dream start after they won the toss and Shan Masood put Bangladesh in again. Off just the second delivery, Abbas drew an edge from Mahmudul Hasan Joy that Salman Agha clung on to sharply in the slips. But debutant Tanzid Hasan and Mominul Haque responded sharply with a positive second-wicket stand that inched its way towards 50 inside the first ten overs. Tanzid, in particular, looked promising, especially driving through the off side, where all three of his boundaries came.
But Abbas found a way to remove him when, in a curious moment of misjudgement, he tried to jab the bowler through the on side, only to find a top edge that the bowler got underneath. Before long, Pakistan were rampant as Shahzad, in for Shaheen Shah Afridi, found a touch of movement to spell the end of Mominul with Bangladesh in trouble at 63 for 3.
Najmul Hossain Shanto and Mushfiqur Rahim dug Bangladesh out of that hole, but Pakistan were irresistible in the hour after lunch thanks to their bowlers’ unerring discipline and relentless accuracy. The first seven overs produced only four runs as Abbas and Sajid Khan kept Shanto and Mushfiqur on a leash, and then all of a sudden, the dam burst. Abbas drew Shanto into a prod, with the ball shaping away as it took Shanto’s edge, with Mohammad Rizwan completing a splendid diving catch to his left.
When Abbas was given a break, Shahzad picked up the baton seamlessly. The fourth ball of his spell wobbled and held its line to beat Mushfiqur’s bat on the inside before pinging him on the pads in front of the stumps. Shahzad surprised Mehidy Hasan Miraz with a bouncer the following over, an unconvincing hook finding Hasan Ali at fine leg, who completed a sharp catch to leave the hosts reeling at 116 for 6.
At that point, Pakistan may have fancied taking near-unassailable control of this Test. However, time and again, Pakistan’s Test side has shown it is rarely ever as straightforward for them, and time and again, Bangladesh, and Litton Das, have found ways to exploit that.
Brief scores: [Day one stumps]
Pakistan 21 for 0 in 6 overs (Azan Awais 13*, Abdullah Fazal 8*) trail Bangladesh 278 in 77 overs (Najmul Hossain Shanto 29, Litton Das 126, Tanzid Hassan 26; Kurram Shahzad 4-81, Mohammed Abbas 3-45, Hassan Ali 2-45) by 257 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Brooke Halliday steers New Zealand to series-levelling win
New Zealand’s middle order defied an early Lauren Bell onslaught and turned ghastly conditions to their advantage to draw the rain-hit ODI series against England 1-1 with a 17-run victory on the DLS method in the third and final game in Cardiff.
Key partnerships between Maddy Green and Nrooke Halliday, then Halliday and Izzy Gaze put the White Ferns ahead of the required rate when the rain which had hampered play all day long set in.
The hosts posted an unremarkable 181 for 7 from 33 overs in a rain-affected inning, with Alice Capsey’s run-a-ball 45 and Amy Jones’s 27 off 21 the only highlights.
But with New Zealand initially chasing an adjusted requirement of 184 from 33 overs, Bell ran through their top order in an extraordinary start, taking three wickets for one run in the space of eight balls to leave the tourists 40 for 3 inside seven overs.
Worryingly for Bell and England with a home T20 World Cup less than a month away, she was struck hard on her left, non-bowling hand, which was already strapped, in her follow through by a sharp drive from Green. Bell did, however, manage to complete the over before being taken out of the attack and she remained in the field throughout the New Zealand innings, returning to bowl shortly before play was called off for good.
Suzie Bates was put down on 12 by Heather Knight at slip off Bell but there was to be no fairy tale in Bates’ 184th and final ODI as Bell pinned her low on the front pad with the next ball.
Bell struck again in her following over to snare the big wicket of New Zealand captain Melie Kerr, lbw once more with one that swung on middle and leg.
In trouble at 27 for 2, New Zealand turned to Green, their leading run-scorer in the first match in Durham with 88, and 22-year-old Georgia Plimmer, who carries their hopes for a future beyond Bates, joining fellow great Sophie Devine in retirement after next month’s T20 World Cup.
But Plimmer’s chance to step up would have to wait after she played across the line of yet another pinpoint accurate Bell delivery and was hit on the front pad in line with leg stump to give Bell her third lbw dismissal and put England firmly in control.
Green shared a 57-run partnership with Halliday but, with rain on the way, she was bowled middle stump by a Dani Gibson nip-backer for 37.
With rain falling and New Zealand still in control, Halliday and Gaze combined for an unbroken stand of 44 off 43 balls for the fifth wicket.
Capsey’s innings was her first for England since the 50-over World Cup last October as she missed the first match of this series through illness and had her intended return in the second game Northampton last Wednesday ruined by rain.
Her knock in challenging conditions lifted her side from a precarious position at 66 for 3 but her inability to convert to a more significant contribution underscored a problem throughout the England batting innings.
Jones’s cameo gave them late momentum and Charlie Dean was still standing at the end with 16 off as many balls but, as in the first match in Durham, the opening partnership of Emma Lamb and Jodi Grewcock failed to fire, while Heather Knight was England’s next-best after Capsey with 28 off 42.
After rain pushed the start time back by an hour and New Zealand skipper Melie Kerr put the home side in to bat, Bree Illing – the pick of their bowlers – struck with her third ball, the ninth of the match.
Illing had Lamb caught behind off a thick outside edge to continue a lean run in an England shirt going back to her half-century against India in Durham last July. In seven innings since, Lamb has failed to pass the 15 she scored in the first match of this series, despite two half-centuries for Lancashire from three games in the domestic One-Day Cup.
Grewcock was yet to score when she survived a feathered edge to wicketkeeper Gaze off Jess Kerr shortly after and no one in the White Ferns’ camp appealed. She only managed 10, however, before her attempted drive off Rosemary Mair was keenly taken by a diving Gaze.
Knight had been building nicely with five boundaries but when she was caught behind off Illing in the midst of a significant rain shower, it fell to Capsey and Freya Kemp to take up England’s task with the umpires steadfast in their determination to stay on the field.
With the conditions overhead and underfoot worsening, Kemp slid over while turning for a second run as Capsey swung Melie Kerr to the fine leg boundary. They persisted for four more balls and a drinks break out in the downpour before play was finally halted for more than two hours with the hosts 77 for 3.
Kemp hadn’t looked settled throughout a boundary-less 20 off 28 balls, but she played her part in a 57-run stand off 58 balls for the fourth wicket before sending a Melie Kerr legbreak high into the air towards long-on, where Mair ran in to take a well-timed catch.
Just four balls later, Mair removed Capsey, chipping tamely to cover. Gibson fell cheaply backing away to Nensi Patel, who hit the top of middle stump and Jones miscued a slog-sweep to backward square leg to end her knock.
Brief scores:
New Zealand Women 141 for 4 in 24.4 overs (Maddy Green 37, Brooke Halliday 42*, Issabella Gaze 22*; Lauren Bell 3-29) beat England Women 181 for 7 in 33 overs (Alice Capsey 45; Bree Illing 2-29, Rosemary Mair 2-41) by 17 runs (DLS method Target: 125 runs from 24.4 overs)
[Cricinfo]
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