Sports
Karunaratne set to retire after second Test at Galle

Dimuth Karunaratne is set to retire from international cricket following the second Test against Australia in Galle. It will also be the former Sri Lanka captain’s 100th Test match. The 36-year-old has decided to step away from the game after a recent run of poor form with the bat at the top of the order. Karunaratne has scored only 182 runs in his last seven Test matches with a solitary half-century in September 2024 against New Zealand.
Karunaratne had made his Test debut on the same ground back in 2012 against New Zealand where he scored a duck and an unbeaten 60 in the same game, as Sri Lanka won by 10 wickets. Karunaratne has scored 7,172 runs across 99 Test matches with 16 Test hundreds so far to his name. He has a highest score of 244 against Bangladesh back in 2021. Despite being a stalwart for Sri Lanka in Test cricket, he also featured in 50 ODIs and 34 T20Is for the island nation with a lone ODI century in 2023 against Ireland.
Karunaratne has been one of the most consistent openers in Test cricket over the last decade. Having scored his maiden century against New Zealand in Christchurch in 2014, it was from 2015 that he started to consistently plunder the runs and become a permanent opener for Sri Lanka in Tests. He had scored 196 against Pakistan in a day-night Test in 2017, and in 2019 became captain of the Sri Lankan side. He captained his team to a Test series victory over South Africa (2-0) that same year, as Sri Lanka became the first Asian team to beat South Africa in a Test series in South Africa.
Due to his stellar performances with the bat, Karunaratne was also named thrice in the ICC Test Cricket Team of the Year in 2018, 2021 and 2023. (cricbuzz)
Sports
Sri Sumangala take day one honours as Mevindu takes five wickets

Sri Sumangala College, Panadura took day one honours as spinner Mevindu Kumarasiri led the the bowling attack with a five wicket haul to restrict Moratu Vidyalaya toa scanty 87 runs in the 73rd Battle of the Golds Big Match at Moratuwa on Friday.
In reply, Sri Sumangala were 51 for three wickets at stumps with Sandeep Wijerathne unbeaten on 17.
Put to bat, the cautious approach of Moratu Vidyalaya made them score at a snail’s pace as their batsmen perished against spin. They lost their first five wickets for 43 runs with Sadew Senanayake and Kumarasiri sharing the spoils between them.
Kumarasiri later mopped up the tail taking two late order wickets to complete a five wicket haul. The left arm spinner’s valuable haul included the prized wicket of skipper Isuru Nidarshana who is among the most productive batsmen of this season.
Bowling to crowded close in fielders Kumarasiri got Nidharshana edge one to first slip to trigger a collapse from which Moratu MV never recovered.
Shehara Fernando who consumed 76 balls for 27 runs and Sithum Silva who faced 101 balls for 20 runs were the top scorers for Moratu MV.
Kumarasiri bowled the bulk of overs for Sri Sumangala. His 26 overs included ten maidnes.
Sadew Senanayake took three wickets in his 15 overs.
For Sri Sumangala, Sandeep Wijerathne was unbeaten on 17 runs for which he consumed 97 balls.
Sanjana Senavirathna took two of the three wickets to fall in the Sri Sumangala innings.
At the end of day one a result looked a possibility as the Big Match is played as a three-day encounter for the first time.
Scores
Moratu Vidyalaya 87
all out in 57 overs (Shehara Fernando 27, Sithum Silva 20; Sadew Senanayake 3/33, Mevindu Kumarasiri 5/28)
Sri Sumangala 51
for 3 in 33 overs (Sanjana Senavirathna 2/19)
by Reemus Fernando
Latest News
IPL 2025: Patidar, bowlers lead Royal Challengers Bengaluru to first win over Chennai Super Kings in Chennai since 2008

Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) ended their Chennai jinx in style, beating Chennai Super Kings (CSK) there got the first time since the first IPL – by a whopping 50 runs, CSK’s biggest defeat at home. The contest was so dead that more than half of CSK’s chase was all about finding out if and when MS Dhoni would bat. He eventually did so at No. 9, only for the second time in his career.
The build-up was all about how RCB would tackle 12 overs of spin, but the conditions rolled out inverted the spotlight: how would CSK handle eight overs of traditional seam and swing from Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Josh Hazelwood? Not very well, as their combined figures of 7-0-41-4 demonstrated.
And that after RCB’s batters dominated the CSK attack on what was not a straightforward pitch. Like Hazlewood and Bhuvneshwar, Khaleel Ahmed drew seam movement and extra bounce, but CSK didn’t have any more such bowlers. Rajat Patidar led RCB’s innings, full of intent, capitalising on a dropped catch when he was on 17, and finishing with 51 off 32 balls. Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja were allowed to bowl only five overs, which were taken for 59 runs.
Khaleel drew some seam movement and uneven bounce in the first over, but CSK hadn’t planned for such conditions. They don’t have quick bowlers who can hit the good length and just short. They were going to open with Ashwin, and they did. Only for the first ball to not come out right and for Phil Salt to pull him for a six. The over went for 16, forcing the early introduction of Noor.
On his way to the Purple Cap, Noor and Dhoni recreated a lightning stumping to get rid of Salt for 32 off 16 balls, but Devdutt Padikkal denied them any relief. The left-hand batter took down Jadeja in ways Jadeja is not accustomed to: a sweep and a charge down the wicket to consign him to a 15-run first over.
When Ashwin got Padikkal out for 27 off 14 deliveries, CSK would have hoped to re-establish control. But the presence of Patidar meant they were not able to bowl spin at Virat Kohli, who struggled to achieve even a run a ball. Patidar took a six off Noor the moment he overpitched. Kohli, playing Matheesha Pathirana for the first time, took 16 runs off his second over, and RCB were 109 for 2 in 11 overs.
Like Ashwin earlier, Jadeja nearly had his own back when he drew a mis-hit from the enterprising Patidar, but Deepak Hooda dropped a sitter at long-off. In the next two overs, Patidar offered three half-chances, but none of them was taken. Kohli’s offering was taken, though, and the pressure on Liam Livingstone, and eventually his wicket, reduced RCB to 145 for 4 in the 16th over.
RCB kept the intent up, though, and Jitesh Sharma hit the second ball he played for the shot of the match, an inside-out drive off a Noor wrong’un over extra cover for six. Patidar played a delectable pick-up shot off a Pathirana slower ball in the next over. This 27-run stand in 13 balls gave RCB the impetus they needed before the death overs.
In the death overs, though, both fell, even resulting in just one run off the 19th over, bowled by Pathirana. However, Tim David took them 20 past what CSK believed to be par with three sixes in the last over, bowled by Sam Curran, who has now bowled four overs for 47 runs in two matches.
Hazlewood got Rahul Tripathi and Ruturaj Gaikwad in his first over with steep bounce, and Bhvuneshwar took his 73rd powerplay wicket when he nicked off Hooda.
Dhoni kept teasing his fans by batting after Jadeja and Ashwin. Yet there were 4.4 overs left when he walked out to bat at No. 9. Only in the last two overs did he get some hits in, but couldn’t avoid a record home defeat.
Brief scores:
Royal Challengers Bengaluru 196 for 7 in 20 overs (Rajat Patidar 51, Phil Salt 32, Virat Kohli 31, Devdutt Padikkal 27, Liam Livingstone 10, Jitesh Sharma 12, Tim David 22*; Khaleel Ahmed 1-28, Ravichandran Ashwin 1-22, Noor Ahmad 3-36, Maheesha Pathirana 2-36) beat Chennai Super Kings 146 for 8 in 20 overs (Rachin Ravindra 41, Shivam Dube 19, Ravindra Jadeja 25, Ravichandran Ashwin 11, MS Dhoni 30*; Bhuvneshwar Kumar 1-20, Josh Hazlewood 3-21, Yash Dayal 2-18, Liam Livingstone 2-28) by 50 runs
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Tamil Union pads up for 125-year celebrations

In a country where cricket runs through the veins like curry through rice, one club has stood tall like a seasoned umpire through rain, shine, and political no-balls. Yesterday, at their hallowed turf in Borella, Tamil Union Cricket and Athletic Club — one of the elder statesmen of Sri Lankan cricket — officially bowled off celebrations to mark a magnificent 125 not out.
Founded way back in 1899, when Queen Victoria still ruled the roost and gentlemen played in flannels, Tamil Union has rubbed shoulders with the heavyweights of Sri Lankan cricket — SSC, NCC, CCC, Colts, and Malay CC — forming the old guard of the domestic game.
Over the years, the club has unearthed some priceless gems. None shinier than Muttiah Muralitharan, the world’s highest wicket-taker, whose doosras and off-breaks left batters groping like blindfolded men in a maze. Long before Murali, the baton was carried by Mahadevan Sathasivam, widely considered the finest Sri Lankan batsman of the pre-Test era — a man whose cover drive could melt glaciers.
The club’s fortress, the P. Sara Oval, is etched in cricketing folklore. It was here that Sri Lanka played their maiden Test in 1982 — a baby’s first steps on the world stage. Three years later, the venue saw the island nation notch their first Test win, a moment that made grown men cry into their Lion Lagers. In 2002, the Oval hosted the world’s first ever neutral Test, a rare event, when Pakistan locked horns with Australia.
And how’s this for a trivia teaser? It remains the only Asian ground to have hosted the one and only Sir Donald Bradman, during a whistle-stop tour in 1948. That’s right — the Don himself, strode onto this sacred strip. The ghosts of legends past still haunt the pavilion.
Wesley Hall steaming in like a freight train, Rohan Kanhai falling over to play those sweeps, Keith Miller with his golden arm and Colin Cowdrey wielding his willow with aristocratic grace.
Back in the day, when ocean liners were the norm and air travel a luxury, English and Australian sides would dock at the Colombo port and stretch their legs — and arms — at P. Sara. Those matches weren’t just exhibitions; they were a taste of the world game, served on Ceylonese turf.
“Tamil Union has a proud history of spotting diamonds in the rough,” said Rev. Ramesh Schaffter, the club’s President, who addressed the press. “We brought promising 18-year-olds to Colombo, giving them a platform to chase their cricketing dreams. Muttiah Muralitharan, Suranga Lakmal, Upul Chandana — they all started here, still in school uniform, dreaming of bigger stages.”
When quizzed about the possibility of the ground hosting a Test in this milestone year, Schaffter played it with a straight bat. “It’s true we haven’t hosted a Test since 2019, but post-COVID, the game changed. With bio-bubbles and logistical curveballs, matches were restricted to fewer venues. Galle became the go-to ground, riding the tourism wave in the south. And frankly, with Sri Lanka playing fewer Tests these days, the opportunities have been few and far between. We were offered a Test a couple of years ago but had to decline due to drainage issues. Thankfully, SLC came through with a generous Rs. 35 million grant to upgrade our system. We’re in a better place now.”
Dr. Rajan Saravanamuttu, Vice President of the club, lifted the lid on ambitious plans for the future — including upgrading facilities to seat 18,000 spectators. “Currently, we host only Tests and a fair bit of women’s cricket — especially after our 10-year partnership with SLC. But we’re gearing up for a second wind,” he said, eyes set on the horizon.
As part of the festivities, the club plans a grand gala dinner, the release of a coffee table book chronicling its storied past and an exhibition match that promises to bring back the golden oldies — names that still echo through the annals of local cricket.
Also in attendance at the briefing was the club’s Patron, Mr. Chandra Schaffter — a towering figure who spoke with heartfelt emotion about the club’s journey through thick and thin. “There have been challenging times,” he admitted, “but like a good batsman weathering a storm, we dug in, played with a straight bat, and never threw in the towel.”
by Rex Clementine
(Telecom Asia Sport )
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