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Joes win ‘Battle of the Saints’ quarter-final

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Under 19 Cricket

by Reemus Fernando

Spinner Nushan Perera with a match bag of nine wickets and open batsman Aveesha Samash with back to back half centuries excelled for St. Joseph’s as they beat arch rivals St. Peter’s by nine wickets in the Under 19 Division I Tier ‘A’ cricket tournament quarter-final at Polonnaruwa on Monday.

The Joes restricted their arch rivals to 167 runs in the second innings as Nushan Perera picked up seven wickets for 69 runs. That left them with a target of 137 runs to chase and they reached the target in 23 overs.

Scores

St. Peter’s

214 all out in 85.2 overs (Dilana Damsara 46, Joshua Sebastian 45, Nathan David 31, Jason Fernando 28, Thareen Sanketh 25; Yenula Dewthusa 5/48, Nushan Perera 2/61, Demion de Silva 2/41) and 167 all out in 38.2 overs (Ethan Ransilige 23, Nathan David 64, Lashmika Perera 24; Yenula Dewthusa 2/35, Nushan Perera 7/69)

St. Joseph’s

245 all out in 81.2 overs (Aveesha Samash 92, Senuja Wakunugoda 22, Rishma Amarasinghe 24, Dunick Perera 54; Joshua Sebastian 3/19, Tharin Senvidu 3/69, Thareen Sanketh 3/46) and 140 for no loss in 22.2 overs (Abishek Jayaweera 33, Aveesha Samash 71n.o., Senuja Wakunugoda 29n.o.)



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India seal series after Rohit’s blistering ton

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Rohit's century came off just 76 balls. [BCCI]

Rohit Sharma (119 off 90) produced a blistering century, his 32nd in ODIs, to set up India’s series-clinching four-wicket win in the second ODI against England in Cuttack. Chasing a competitive target of 305, India were led by Rohit’s sparkling innings and his 136-run opening stand with Shubman Gill (60 off 52). Shreyas Iyer (44) and Axar Patel (41*) also chipped in with useful knocks to see the hosts through despite a few wickets falling towards the end.

At the halfway mark, England’s total of 304 did appear to be a tricky one on a slow black-soil surface with the odd ball stopping off the hard length. Spinners and off-pace deliveries didn’t seem easy to get away. However, as is the case with black-soil surfaces, batting under lights tend to be relatively easier. At least, that’s what Rohit made it seem as he got off the blocks in a jiffy. A couple of sixes, one over deep square leg and the other over deep cover showed that the captain was in the zone for the night. His aggression allowed Gill to take his time although the latter also dished out some exquisite strokes.

The first ten overs returned 77 for India with all ten wickets intact, and it set the tone for the chase. Even as the field spread, runs continued to flow from both the openers, Rohit in particular. During his terrific knock, he also overcame Chris Gayle to move to no.2 in the all-time six hitters list in ODIs. There was some turn on offer for Adil Rashid but by the time he came on, Rohit and Gill were so assured that they dealt him with aplomb. The ball also didn’t really hold off the pitch as it had during the afternoon when England batted.

It needed something special to break the openers’ onslaught and Jamie Overton provided it with a scorching yorker. Just a ball before, he had been smashed over mid-wicket with a powerful pull stroke by Gill and the all-rounder then beat the Indian vice-captain for pace with a terrific nut. It brought Virat Kohli to the crease but the veteran no.3 had an off day at the office. He did strike a glorious on-drive for four but looked all at sea against Rashid’s leggies. Eventually, one of them found the edge, with England reviewing successfully for the breakthrough.

It was a minor passage of play where the visitors would have had a bit of self-belief to bounce back in the game. However, so far ahead were India in the chase that it allowed Rohit to mellow down and Shreyas Iyer also could afford to play a safe game in the next few overs. The pair added still added 70 at a brisk pace, off just 61 deliveries with Rohit continuing to be the dominant partner. It seemed like the duo might be able to complete the chase by themselves before the Indian captain gifted his wicket away.

Having struck the ball cleanly and even dismissing decent deliveries to the fence, Rohit fell to a full toss, miscuing it towards mid-wicket after having stepped out to take it on the full. Liam Livingstone was the beneficiary of the gift but the wicket came just a bit too late in the contest from England’s perspective. Iyer combined with Axar to push India’s charge before the former fell to a silly run out that occurred due to terrible miscommunication. KL Rahul and Hardik Pandya both fell as India neared the target but the result was never in doubt. Axar along with Ravindra Jadeja closed out the game with 33 deliveries to spare.

Earlier in the afternoon, England put on a much improved show with the bat in comparison to their efforts in the opening ODI. Contrasting fifties from Joe Root (69) and Ben Duckett (65) followed by a Liam Livingstone (41) cameo, powered England through after Phil Salt failed to convert another start in the series. The visitors did get off to another rapid start in the first ten overs, like they had in Nagpur, before slowing down against India’s spinners. Varun Chakaravarthy, on ODI debut, was the one who broke the opening stand by dislodging Salt. He then put the brakes on the scoring although it was Jadeja who proved the toughest to get away for England’s batters.

The left-arm spinner hit the right lines, mixed up his pace and lengths, and got the odd ball to hold up with grip and turn to fox the batters. He also won the matchup duel with Duckett whose attempts to tame the spinner resulted in his downfall. It also meant that Jadeja along with fellow left-arm spinner Axar could bowl at the right-handed England middle-order without any worries. Harry Brook struggled for impetus but he did stitch a useful 66-run stand with Root who was the anchor around whom the innings revolved. The spinners choked the run flow so much for India that the rewards were reaped by their quicks.

Harshit Rana did concede a few boundaries to Brook but like in the fourth T20I, had the last laugh with a wily slower ball, taken brilliantly by Gill at mid-off. A while later, it was Buttler’s turn to fall to a pacer, Pandya this time, after being tied down by the spinners. Amidst all this, Root batted with assurance to hold one end up. Livingstone and Root got a handy partnership as England looked with a chance of getting past the 320-run mark and beyond. However, Rohit’s ploy to hold spin back for the final ten overs worked wonders as Jadeja snapped up Root in his penultimate over.

The left-arm spinner then had Jamie Overton off the final ball of his spell to a moment of atrocious shot selection from the all-rounder. This meant that England were in danger of imploding for one more time on this tour. However, Livingstone batted deep and also struck a few big blows at the back end to boost the visitors’ total. Rashid also clobbered three boundaries on the trot against Mohammed Shami to ensure that the work done by Root and Duckett wasn’t wasted entirely. The tourists, though, could have gotten past the 320-330 range if they had batted with a bit more game awareness.

However, given the way India and Rohit handled things in the second half, perhaps that total also may not have been enough. Buttler might reflect on his decision at the toss because the afternoon period was the ideal time for spinners to bowl and for the pacers to take pace off. In the evening, there wasn’t enough bite off the deck although the ball did spin even then.

The final game of the series shall be played in Ahmedabad on February 12. Technically, it is a dead rubber in the context of this series but both sides will be keen to use that as a final opportunity before the Champions Trophy.

Brief scores:
England
304 in 49.5 overs (Joe Root 69, Ben Duckett 65; Ravindra Jadeja 3-35) lost to India 308/6 in 44.3 overs (Rohit Sharma 119, Shubman Gill 60; Jamie Overton 2-27) by four wickets.

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Williamson powers New Zealand home, Breetzke’s record 150 in vain

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Kane Williamson was at his fluent best [Cricinfo]

New Zealand have qualified for the Pakistan Tri-Nation Series final after completing the third-highest successful chase in Lahore to beat an under-strength South Africa by six wickets. The result means the next match, between Pakistan and South Africa in Karachi on Wednesday, is a knockout.

Kane Williamson and Devon Conway,  both back in New Zealand’s ODI squad for the first time since the 2023 World Cup, scored 133 not out and 97 respectively and shared in a record partnership for New Zealand against South Africa (187). Conway’s score was the first time he crossed fifty since the opening match of the 2023 World Cup, 11 innings ago. Williamson’s century was his first in 22 innings, dating back to his 148 against West Indies in Manchester in the 2019 World Cup. It was also Williamson’s second fastest ODI hundred, off 72 balls. Between them, the pair eclipsed a remarkable achievement by Matthew Breetzke,  who became the player with the highest individual score on ODI debut – 150 – and the fourth South African to score a century in his first match.

Breetzke accounted for just under a half of South Africa’s total, which is the first indication of where things went wrong for them. They scored too slowly in the middle of the innings, especially given the flat nature of the track. The second issue was a severely uninspired attack, albeit not a first-choice one. Three of the bowlers – Earthan Boxch, Senuran Muthusamy and Mihali Mpongwana were on ODI debut and could be forgiven but lack of punch from Lungi Ngidi and Tabraiz Shamsi, who conceded 116 in 16 overs between them will be a concern ahead of the Champions Trophy.

South Africa have now lost five ODIs in a row, their longest losing streak in 20 years, but have played all their matches without a full strength side. While they’re unlikely to have too many positives to take from this defeat, they may console themselves with the knowledge that, Rachin Ravindra aside, New Zealand were at full strength and played like it.

After choosing to bowl first in the only day game of the series, New Zealand struck early when Will O’Rourke bounced Temba Bavuma out as he edged a pull. Bavuma had looked confident for his 23-ball 20 but New Zealand’s O’Rourke’s consistent and aggressive approach with the short ball paid off.

Breetzke and Jason Smith combined for a second-wicket stand of 93 but their scoring rate of 5.31 runs to the over was testament to New Zealand’s squeeze. South Africa struck only two fours and three sixes in the 17 overs between Bavuma’s dismissal and Smith’s run-out, as they tried to take on Mitchell Santner but were largely kept quiet. In that time, Breetzke brought up fifty off 68 balls.

When Smith was run-out, New Zealand had an opportunity to get into an inexperienced middle order and they took it. Kyle Verreynne tried to reverse-sweep the fourth ball he faced, missed and was bowled by Michael Bracewell. Another quiet period followed, in which South Africa only hit one boundary in 11 overs, as the combination of Ben Sears, Bracewell and Matt Henry stuck to their disciplines.

South Africa were 196 for 3 entering the last 10 overs and 280 looked a distance away. Breetzke took it on himself to get them there. He dispatched O’Rourke through deep third to bring up his century off 128 balls in the 41st over, and then put foot down. His next fifty runs came off 19 balls as he brought out his full range. His 150 came in an over where he hit Sears for 20.

Just as it seemed Breetzke could be eyeing a double, he mis-read a Henry slower ball and was caught at mid-off. Wiaan Mulder, who had largely operated as a spectator to that point, had the responsibility to finish off the innings but was fortunate to have an inside-edge trickle away for four before he established some control. He reached his second ODI fifty with a crunching cover drive off Henry, off the 54th ball he faced, and took South Africa over 300 with a four through short fine in the penultimate over. South Africa got only four runs off their final eight balls.

It was not enough. New Zealand built slowly but got ahead of the required run rate just after the halfway stage of their innings and were in full control from there. They had only lost Will Young at that point, for 19, though he should have been out for 6 in the third over. Smith dropped Young at backward point off Ngidi but the miss did not prove too costly.

His dismissal brought Conway and Williamson together and there was one nervy moment, when Williamson inside-edged Junior Dala past Verreynne but he soon settled into a rhythm and put on a masterful display of run-scoring, all around the wicket. His wagon wheel was almost entirely symmetrical, with 67 runs on the off side and 66 on the leg side and the highlights included four strong cut shots and a creative ramp over Verreynne as he leaned back to an Ngidi delivery.

Equally, Williamson’s pacing of his innings was perfect. He gave himself time to get in, all while scoring at a run-a-ball, and then took over the more dominant role from Conway, who got to fifty first. Conway’s half-century came off 64 balls, before Williamson’s reached his, off 44 balls, with a massive six over mid-on off Shamsi. It was also Williamson’s fourth successive fifty-plus ODI score in Pakistan. He took a liking to Mpongwana and Ngidi’s short-balls while Conway took on Shamsi and South Africa had no answers.

Williamson got to his century in the 34th over with a single off Dala. Conway was not far behind and eager to get there but, when he was on 97, he tried to cut Dala past point and found Muthusamy, who moved to his left and took the catch.

Muthusamy was the pick of South Africa’s bowlers and dismissed Daryl Mitchell, thanks to a stunning catch from Mulder at long-on, and Tim Latham off successive balls but Glenn Philipps partnered Williamson to the end. Williamson hit the winning runs in the 49th over, to give New Zealand victory with eight balls to spare.

Brief scores:
New Zealand 308 for 4 in 4.4 overs (Kane Williamson 133*, Devon Conway 97, Glenn Phillips 28; Senuran Muthusamy 2-50) beat  South Africa 304 for 6 in 50 overs (Matthew Breetzke 150, Temba Bavuma 20, Jason Smith 41, Wiaan Mulder 64, Matt Henry 2-59, Will O’Rourke 2-72)  by six wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Sri Lanka’s no-show: A series to forget

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by Rex Clementine

This has got to be one of the most spineless Test series Sri Lanka have played in their storied history stretching over four and a half decades. The Warne-Murali Trophy wasn’t just handed over – it was gift-wrapped, express-delivered, and presented with a bow to the Aussies. If you thought a lack of fight was only in politics, think again. Chamara Sampath is putting up more resistance in Parliament while Ravi Karunanayake showed more imagination in securing a National List seat for himself.

It was an utterly baffling performance. Just two months ago, Sri Lanka were in contention for the World Test Championship final. Now, they’ve slid to a sorry sixth place, courtesy of four consecutive defeats to South Africa and Australia.

What’s even more perplexing is the venue choice—Galle, the fortress where Sri Lanka have historically spun visiting teams into a web of misery. This time, however, they weren’t fit to hold a candle to the Aussies, let alone outplay them.

Credit where it’s due – the Australians did their homework. They knew exactly what was coming. Normally, when they tour, we roll out raging turners on match days while letting them practice on decent batting tracks. Not this time. The Aussies didn’t fall for the bait. Instead, they flew to Dubai a week early, fine-tuned their game on pitches turning square, and arrived in Sri Lanka with all the answers. When the series began, they were battle-ready. Sri Lanka? Clueless.

This was the fourth straight Test where Sri Lanka’s batting unit collapsed like a Jenga tower. Three failures in a row should have been enough to trigger a shake-up – new faces, fresh thinking. Against South Africa, you could argue they were still in the WTC race. But against Australia, they had no excuse. At least one, if not two, misfiring batters should have been benched.

Yet, the same old suspects kept walking back for single-digit scores. Across four innings, Dhananjaya de Silva, Kamindu Mendis, and Dimuth Karunaratne failed to register a single half-century. Oshada Fernando and Pathum Nissanka fared no better, between them failing to cross fifty even once.

Angelo Mathews did notch up a half-century, but it was a case of too little, too late. Given his experience, you expect more than just a token fifty to cement his place for the next series. He should be pulling off a Steve Smith – big hundreds, match-defining knocks. That’s what senior statesmen do.

The most embarrassing part? Watching Sri Lankan batters fumble their sweeps and reverse sweeps like schoolboys playing with tennis balls, while Usman Khawaja, Josh Inglis, and Alex Carey made the stroke their bread and butter.

Serious questions need to be asked about Dhananjaya de Silva’s leadership. Laid-back, lethargic, and far too casual – his captaincy was a recipe for disaster. His review decisions alone cost the team dearly. With a bit more thought, the story could have been very different.

His batting wasn’t any better. Casual dismissals have become his trademark, but when you’re captain, you’re expected to lead from the front – not giggle in the corner like a teenage girl in a classroom. The problem for the selectors is that there’s no clear heir apparent. Kusal Mendis with the captaincy? Surely not. Charith Asalanka? Maybe, but he’s hardly shown any interest for First Class cricket in recent years. .

Ramesh Mendis was dropped last year with a clear message – fix your control. When he was recalled, you’d expect he had ironed out his flaws. But if anything, his performances suggested nothing had changed. So why bring him back? Either the selectors misread his improvements, or they had no better options. Neither is a good look.

Then there’s the ultimate insult – Matthew Kuhnemann, a guy with just three Test caps before this series, walked into Galle and made Sri Lanka’s batters look like amateurs. A left-arm spinner with barely any international experience finished as the highest wicket-taker of the series, exposing just how dire the situation is.

This was more than just a bad series. It was a wake-up call. Sri Lanka didn’t just get their tactics wrong—they’ve got a batting unit that’s past its expiry date. If they don’t hit the reset button soon, the slide will only continue.

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