Sports
Kumara fires as rain halts Sri Lanka’s charge
Rex Clementine in Durban
Spin has always been Sri Lanka’s bread and butter. Over the years, even in the three Tests they’ve won on South African soil, it was their spinners who turned the tide. But the current Sri Lankan outfit is a whole different kettle of fish. This team isn’t shy about putting their faith in the quicks, and yesterday, that faith paid off in spades as the pacers reduced South Africa to 80 for four before rain played spoilsport.
It could have been a case of South Africa staring down the barrel, but Temba Bavuma managed to dodge bullets like a cat with nine lives. He survived a dropped catch in the slip cordon and then, as if Lady Luck herself intervened, was caught off a no-ball.
By stumps, Sri Lanka would have happily pocketed 80 for four after choosing to bowl first. Back in South Africa’s glory days, their openers would have seen off the new ball with aplomb. Not anymore. This Sri Lankan side has shown they can run with the hare and hunt with the hounds. They’ve got the spinners to choke teams at home and the pacers to make opponents dance to their tune on seaming and bouncy pitches. Under the astute guidance of Sanath Jayasuriya, they’re fast becoming a formidable force, as evidenced by three Test wins this year away from home.
Sri Lanka toyed with the idea of unleashing a four-pronged pace battery, leaving skipper Dhananjaya de Silva to roll his arm over as a part-time spinner. However, with Durban having a recent reputation to assist spinners, they opted to bench Milan Ratnayake, banking on Angelo Mathews’ gentle medium pace if needed.
The decision seemed to work like a charm early on. Both South African openers were back in the hut with the total on just 14, dismissed in near-identical fashion. Vishwa Fernando squared up Tony de Zorzi, drawing an outside edge, while his namesake, Asitha Fernando, got one to nip away, luring Aiden Markram into a similar mistake.
The overcast skies were a fast bowler’s dream, and Lahiru Kumara didn’t miss his cue. Tristan Stubbs nicked one, and the slip cordon made no mistake, breaking a 32-run partnership with Bavuma. Kumara saved his best for South Africa’s man in form, David Bedingham. A searing delivery jagged back in, sneaking through the gate to send the stumps cartwheeling. Clocked at 143 kmph, it was a peach of a delivery that left the Durban crowd in awe.
With just five minutes to go before lunch, the heavens opened. While the rain briefly relented, allowing the ground staff to get to work, a heavier downpour post-tea left the umpires with no choice but to call it a day.
Kumara, visibly livid after overstepping to dismiss Bavuma, was seen fine-tuning his run-up during the break. He’s got pace to burn but needs to iron out the wrinkles in his rhythm, having bowled three no-balls. Once he hits his stride, he’ll be a handful for any batting line-up and is undoubtedly the player to watch on this tour.
The pacer’s remarkable turnaround after conceding 17 runs in his first over speaks volumes about his character. Now just two wickets shy of the 100-mark milestone, Kumara is inching closer to a major feather in his cap.
Fittingly, his best bowling figures came on South African soil. As a raw 19-year-old, he announced himself with a six-wicket haul in the Cape Town Test in 2017. If yesterday’s fiery spell is anything to go by, history might just repeat itself.
Sports
Pretoria Capitals recover from 7/5 to beat Joburg Super Kings
Durban’s Super Giants kept their playoff hopes alive with a bonus-point 58-run win in their final home game, powered by a commanding century from Aiden Markram. His 108 off 58 balls lifted DSG to 189 for 7 on a surface that became increasingly difficult to bat on as the match progressed.
Durban’s Super Giants 189 for 7 (Markram 108; Viljoen 4-21) beat Paarl Royals 131 for 9 (Fortuin 35*; Narine 2-18) by 58 runs
Joburg Super Kings vs Pretoria Capitals
Pretoria Capitals 143 for 6 (Rutherford 74*, Brevis 53; Worrall 2-12) beat Joburg Super Kings 122 for 8 (Forrester 44*; Maharaj 3-15, Williams 3-25) by 21 runs
Sports
World Cup countdown begins as Sri Lanka host England
England will touch down in Colombo shortly for a six-match white-ball series, with the ODI leg staged in Colombo and the T20Is unfolding in Pallekele. But make no mistake, it is the T20 chapter that carries the weight of expectation. With the World Cup just around the corner, this series doubles as the final dress rehearsal before Sri Lanka co-host the sport’s showpiece alongside India.
Sri Lanka learned a few hard truths during the recently concluded Pakistan series, identifying areas that still need sanding down. The England tour offers a last chance to tighten the screws, apply the final coat of polish and crucially, nail down the remaining seats on the World Cup bus.
A bit of rotation is expected during the ODI leg. Speedster Dushmantha Chameera sat out the final game against Pakistan with a groin niggle and the think-tank may opt to wrap him in cotton wool, using their spearhead sparingly and unleashing him primarily in the T20Is.
While most World Cup berths are already pencilled in ink, a couple remain in erasable pencil. With the squad deadline looming before the end of the month, selectors will effectively have just the first T20I to make their calls, with the second and third matches slated for February 1 and 3. It does raise the question whether the T20Is should have been played first, or whether the England series might have been better slotted immediately after the Pakistan games, keeping momentum rolling.
Look across the Palk Strait and India appear to have their ducks in a row. They are hosting New Zealand in an eight-match white-ball series that wraps up on January 31, five T20Is and three ODIs, an almost tailor-made build-up for a global tournament. India and New Zealand are, incidentally, locking horns in five T20Is, prompting the inevitable thought: would Sri Lanka have been better served going down the same route?
Sri Lanka’s bowling cupboard is well stocked and capable of putting the brakes on even the most belligerent line-ups at the World Cup. The lingering concern remains the batting. If the chronic collapses can be curbed and partnerships stitched together, there is no reason why Sri Lanka cannot push deep into the business end of this 20-nation competition.
A heavy load rests on opener Pathum Nissanka’s shoulders, but if Kusal Mendis finds his groove and bats with freedom, Sri Lanka could yet savour this World Cup. The batting unit appears largely settled, and Dhananjaya de Silva edging out Kusal Janith Perera looks a no-brainer. Kamindu Mendis, with the all-round package he brings, is not only a long-term investment but also a calming influence in the middle order here and now. Whether the selectors read the game from the same page, however, remains to be seen.
by Rex Clementine
Sports
Susantha leaves a legend
Whether it is the number of medals or the number of productive citizens it produced since its inception as s sports school, the achievements of A. Ratnayake Central Walala will remain unmatched among sports schools of the country. Behind every successful sports school stands a coach. For Ratnayake central it was Susantha Fernando—a man whose contribution to Sri Lankan athletics extends far beyond podium finishes and into the very foundations of sports education and athlete development.
For more than three decades, Fernando has been the driving force behind the track and field sucess at A. Rathnayake Central College, Walala, transforming a little kown school into one of the most dominant track and field institutions in Sri Lankan school sports history. Under his guidance, Walala achieved unprecedented sucess, winning titles at the All Island School Games, Sir John Tarbat Senior Championships and National Schools Relay Championships more than any other school in the country.
Walala’s success was not accidental. It was built on discipline, long-term planning, and a coaching philosophy that valued development over quick results. Fernando believed that talent, when nurtured patiently and systematically, could rival any advantage offered by superior facilities or urban exposure. Walala became living proof of that belief.
Renowned for his expertise in middle- and long-distance running, Susantha has been instrumental in shaping some of Sri Lanka’s finest athletes. His eye for potential and his understanding of physical and mental growth allowed young runners to mature into elite competitors on the international stage.
Among those who rose under his mentorship are Tharushi Karunaratne, Asian Games gold medalist and national 800m record holder; Dilshi Kumarasinghe, triple gold medalist at the South Asian Games and former national record holder; Manoj Pushpakumara, a multiple medalist at the Asian Junior Championships; and Indunil Herath, a national 800m record holder whose early development took place at Walala.
Collectively, athletes coached by Fernando have secured over 70 international medals, including achievements at the Asian Games, Youth Olympics, and South Asian Games. These results reflect not just individual brilliance, but a coaching system capable of producing excellence across generations.
Yet, those who know Susantha Fernando well insist his greatest strength lies beyond training schedules and race strategies. He viewed coaching as a form of education and character building. Discipline, humility, responsibility, and respect were central to his program. Winning mattered, but never at the expense of values.
This philosophy resonates strongly with long-standing discussions in Sri Lankan sports circles—often highlighted in The Island and The Sunday Island—about the need for structure, continuity, and ethics in sports development. Fernando’s career stands as a practical demonstration of those ideals.
His influence expanded when he was entrusted with duties as Assistant Director of Education (Sports and Physical Education) at the Wattegama Zonal Education Office. In this role, he has emerged as a strong advocate for reforming how physical education is treated within the school system.
Fernando proposed several progressive measures, including the introduction of mandatory termly fitness assessments for secondary students, compulsory participation in at least one sport, and the inclusion of physical fitness grades on GCE O/L and A/L result sheets. His vision was clear: physical education must be an integral part of national development, not a secondary concern.
Recognition for his work has come as Best Coach awards at Sports Awards ceremonies. More meaningful, however, was the tributes paid by former Walala athletes, his fellow officials and a distinguished gathering including former Director of Education Sunil Jayaweera at a felicitation ceremony organized by Tharanga Gunaratne, Director of Education at Wattegama Zone on the occation of his retirement from government service and at the launch of his autobiography ‘Dekumkalu Kalunika’ recently.
Both events reflected the gratitude not only for medals won, but for lives shaped.
Like many coaches working within limited systems, Fernando’s journey was marked by challenges—restricted resources, long hours, and personal sacrifice. Yet his quiet resilience ensured that standards were never compromised.
Susantha Fernando’s legacy is not confined to record books. It lives in the systems he built, the athletes he guided, and the values he instilled. As Sri Lanka continues to search for sustainable sporting success, his career offers a powerful lesson: ‘true excellence is built patiently, ethically, and with unwavering belief in people’.
In Susantha Fernando, Sri Lanka has not only produced champions—but a model of coaching worth preserving. He leaves a huge vacuum hard to fill.
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