Sports
Minagi Rupesinghe: Beating the odds
Minagi Rupesinghe of Killer Whale Aquatics set two new national records while also partnering on another relay record, and was crowned the overall Women’s National Champion at the 49th National Long-Course Swimming Championships, which took place at the Sugathadasa Stadium pool from August 6-10.
Her first national record was set on day one of the championships in the women’s 400m freestyle event with a time of 4 minutes 34.34 seconds, breaking the previous record of 4.37.30 set by Machico Raheem in 2014.
On day two, Rupesinghe broke another 11-year-old record in the 400m individual medley with a time of 5:14.58, slashing 7 seconds off the previous record of 5.21.77 held by Sri Lankan swimming legend Kimiko Raheem.
Rupesinghe’s third national record was in the 4×50 medley relay with fellow Killer Whale teammates, Ramudi Samarakone, Hiruki de Silva and Kaitlyn de Zilva with a time of 2:01.63. She also won gold medals in the 800m and 1500m freestyle events and the 200m backstroke event, securing the overall women’s championship title.
At just nineteen years old, Rupesinghe now has a total of eight national records to her name, in seven individual events and one relay.
She came into the national championship immediately after a hectic schedule at the World Aquatics Championships, which was held in Singapore from July 14 to August 3. She was a part of the national team for Swimming and Open Water World Championships, making her the only female Sri Lankan swimmer to represent Sri Lanka at World Championships in both swimming and open water swimming.
Rupesinghe put on an impressive performance in the women’s 5km open water event, competing against the world’s best open water swimmers and completing the event in 1 hour 14 minutes and 03 seconds. She was the fastest South Asian swimmer in the competition, notably finishing ahead of the two Indian swimmers. Rupesinghe’s impressive performance secured her a world ranking among the world’s top 150.
‘The open water event was held under extreme conditions. The races were postponed many times because of poor water quality, and high water temperatures. Many swimmers could not finish the race. I am glad to have been able to complete the race with good timing, and I was ranked 147 in the world open water rankings’, she said.
A week later, Rupesinghe returned to Singapore to compete in the swimming World Championships. She competed in the 200m backstroke and in100m backstroke winning her heat and setting a new personal best time, and once again being the fastest South Asian at the championships in her events.
‘Representing Sri Lanka at the World Championships was my greatest honour and privilege. It was a great experience racing with the world’s best swimmers’ she said.
Rupesinghe, an old girl of St. Bridget’s Convent, Colombo, is not only an elite swimmer but also a lawyer in the making.
‘I follow a LL.B. degree at Oxford Brookes University in England. Managing undergraduate studies and my training schedule is not easy. I train nine times a week and also have gym and land training sessions. I have to manage time very well to be able to balance both my studies and swimming’.
Rupesinghe says that the high cost of her swimming has forced her to work on top of her undergraduate studies and heavy training routine. ‘I have to incur significant costs for swimming. Swimmers have to bear all costs
involved with representing Sri Lanka at international competitions. I work as a lifeguard to cover these costs. It is challenging to work, study and follow an elite-level training routine. Some days I wake up at 4 a.m. for morning training, attend lectures afterwards, and then go to work, and then train again in the evening. There is only one day in the week that I don’t have training, but I work 8 hours on that day to cover the costs. I don’t get the rest and recovery that I need. Unfortunately, swimmers in Sri Lanka don’t receive much support, unlike other athletes. I am very grateful to my family for the support they give me. They had to make many sacrifices for me to come this far and represent my country’.
Despite these obstacles, Rupesinghe is determined to continue her swimming career representing her motherland Sri Lanka internationally.
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Will Jacks stars again as England dismantle Sri Lanka
England have jumped to the top of Group 2 of the Super Eight with a dominant, Net Run Rate-boosting 51-run win over Sri Lanka in Pallekele.
In pursuit of what should have been a manageable target of 147, the hosts were snuffed out for 95 in an error-strewn innings that continued a grim 12-match losing streak to England, who lead Pakistan and New Zealand by a point after their washout on Saturday.
Yet again, Will Jacks came to the fore – only this time with the ball. After England had posted what looked an under-par 146 for 9 PhilSalt’s 62 the lone score of note in response to Dunith Wellalage’s 3 for 26 – Jacks bowled four of the first eight overs of the run chase, pocketing 3 for 22 without breaking a sweat.
Just as Wellalage had done in taking out three big English names – Jos Buttler, Harry Brook and Salt – Jacks’ trio capped Sri Lanka’s ambition. Kusal Mendis’s push back to the off-spinner was quickly followed by Pavan Rathnayake launching high to Jacob Bethell at cover, before Wellalage failed to clear Jamie Overton at mid on.
Coupled with Jofra Archer’s 2 for 20, which included star man Pathum Nissanka flicking to Overton at deep midwicket, Sri Lanka exited the powerplay on 34 for 5 and devoid of any real hope.
It made England’s 37 for 2 in their first six overs look far more measured, when in fact it was a patchy start typified by a labored 7 off 14 from Buttler, before he was trapped lbw to Wellalage.
Sri Lanka’s decision to bowl first after winning the toss – predicated on their comprehensive take down of Australia at this venue in the Group Stages – looked vindicated, even as Salt battled humid conditions to reach his first half-century of this World Cup – and second in all T20I editions – from 36 deliveries. That Jacks’ 21 was England’s second-highest score spoke to the awkwardness of the innings.
Dasun Shanaka marshaled his attack well, helped by the consistent threat of Dilshan Madushanka (2 for 25) and Maheesh Theekshana (2 for 21). But Sri Lanka’s captain was brought back down to earth when he found himself in the middle with a ball left of the sixth over.
Having thumped two sixes on his way to 30, an attempt at a third was brilliantly relayed on the midwicket fence to leave Sri Lanka 82 for 8, with all their full-time batters now back in the hutch. Naturally, Jacks was a key figure in that dismissal, taking the catch before casually lobbing it back into play, straight to Tom Banton.
Dushan Hemantha had already trimmed his own bails with his bat in comical fashion, before Dushmantha Chameera and Madushanka, the final two batters, were both bowled slogging, in keeping with a cavalier approach when sensible heads were required. Even with the all out attack, Sri Lanka could only muster 95 in 100 legal deliveries.
You should never travel without insurance, and in Jacks England have the ideal safety blanket for a subcontinental T20 World Cup. And like insurance – in principle at least – Jacks has saved the team when they’ve least expected it.
For all the admiration for Jacks’ talents, as evidenced by his selection for the Ashes at the start of this winter, few would have predicted this emergence as a talismanic figure for England’s World Cup hopes.
You could argue the opportunities Jacks has taken should not have presented themselves in the first place. Nevertheless, the team have leaned on him against Nepal (39*), Scotland (16*) and Italy (53*), all unbeaten knocks from the defacto No.7 that pulled them out of sticky situations.
Now an established threat, he loomed in the background as England’s top order stumbled to 68 for 4 after 10 overs, before Sam Curran’s dismissal brought Jacks to the crease at 94 for 5 at the start of the 14th.
His 21 off 17 was the slowest of his four double-figure scores at this tournament, and Sri Lanka did well to cap his work, removing him with seven balls to go. Unfortunately for them, Jacks took that personally.
“He always tells me he bowls better when he’s angry,” said Brook after the match. Jacks channelled that rage into a good length from around the wicket, both to right- and left-handers. A leading edge from Mendis and a horrid hack from Rathnayake got him back-to-back rewards, before Wellalage’s gifted him a third in his final over.
That he bowled the first four from one end speaks to the amount of trust now placed on Jacks and how well he is responding to it. He now has three player-of-the-match awards at this World Cup.
Buttler said he would not curb his attacking intent in search for better form at this T20 World Cup, and he was true to his word. A length delivery from Wellalage was met with an attempted reverse sweep, Buttler upright looking to access behind point, where there was empty (patchy) green to exploit.
Unfortunately, Buttler’s bat could not have been further from the ball as it clattered into his knee, in front of middle stump. That he even had the conversation with Salt about reviewing was galling; surely he knew he was plumb? The desperation for reassurance from his opening partner was misguided, and Salt had little to offer. Buttler turned on his heels and marched off as quickly as he could.
That, arguably, was the soundest judgement he showed on Sunday. Taking a review back to the dressing room would have made the innings worse.
The four dot balls in the previous over off Madushanka were painful to watch. England’s greatest white-ball batter is clearly out of sync with his movements, even his trigger, turned inside out by the left-arm quick’s movement across him, which almost cost him his off stump.
Buttler is now averaging 12 in this World Cup. This innings – his third single-figure score in succession – is his 12th without a half-century. How far off are England from having a conversation about the former captain?
A long way given how much credit Buttler has in the bank and Brendon McCullum’s ethos of backing your headline acts to the hilt. “He’s a powerhouse of world cricket,” said Brook defiantly. “He’s arguably the greatest white-ball player to ever play the game”
But 35-year-old Buttler is struggling badly. Badly enough that his dismissal was, ultimately, a good thing for the team.
At the halfway stage, Wellalage was probably sitting back, admiring the part he had played in another Sri Lanka win. Until he was rudely jolted out of his chair by the start of a terminal top-order collapse.
The left-arm spinner found himself back out there 3.4 overs into the second innings, the pressure he had put on England now being shoved right back at him, his exceptional 3 for 26 split across three phases of the game on its way to being deemed obsolete.
Despite the result, Wellagage’s ability to knit together not just his own overs, but those of the bowlers around him, was a silver lining. And a reminder of the maturity he possesses at the age of just 23.
The injuries Sri Lanka have suffered in their bowling stocks means he has been tasked with being that much more consistent. And he did right by his captain, first showing immense control during his two powerplay overs (1 for 16) before bravery in overs 10 and 15 brought him the wickets of Brook and Salt.
With the limits of the outfield sodden after heavy overnight rains, the sponge was brought in, reducing the size of the boundaries. With an enticing hit back over his head, Wellagage was unperturbed when slowing the pace down, which allowed him to sneak one into the pad of Brook. A bit of loop then did for Salt, whose tired thump down the ground fell into the hands of Dushan Hemantha at long off.
Wellagage’s spell would have been the jumping off point for a celebration of a well-rounded attack. In the end, it is nothing more than a footnote in a catastrophic defeat that already has Sri Lanka up against it to qualify for the semi-finals.
Brief scores:
England 146 for 9 in 20 overs (Phil Salt 62, Harry Brook 14, Sam Curran 11, Will Jacks 21, Jamie Overton 10*; Dilshan Madushanka 2-25, Dunith Wellalage 3-26, Maheesh Theekshana 2-21, Dushmantha Chameera 1-34) beat Sri Lanka 95 in 16.4 overs (Dunith Wellalage 10, Kamindu Mendis 13, Dasun Shanaka 30, Maheesh Theekshana 10*; Jofra Archer 2-20, Will Jacks 3-22, Liam Dawson 2-27, Adil Rashid 2-13, Jamie Overton 1-13 ) by 51 runs
[Cricinfo]
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England limp to 146-9 against Sri Lanka
England stagger to 146‑9 at the end of their 20 overs as they failed to build any sustained partnerships.
This might just be well short of a truly competitive total but they will hope the pitch does them some favours when they come out to bowl.
Brief score:
England 146/9 in 2o overs [Phil Salt 62, Harry Brook 14, Sam Curran 11,Will Jacks 21, Jamie Overton 10*; Dilshan Madushanka 2-25, Dunith Wellalage 3-26, Maheesh Theekshana 2-21, Dushmantha Chameera 1-34] vs England

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Sri Lanka opt to chase against England in Pallekele
Sri Lanka have opted to chase against England at Pallekele, hoping to replicate their dominance victory over Australia here to kickstart their Super Eight campaign.
It was six days ago that Pathum Nissanka’s unbeaten 100 saw the hosts chase down Australia’s total of 181 with eight wickets and two overs to spare. And with home skipper Dasun Shanaka is looking to utilise that confidence in this Group 2 encounter.
“We’ve been chasing well in the past few occasions and happy to chase again,” said Shanaka at the toss. “The boys are very confident playing here.”
England skipper Harry Brook – on his 27th birthday – again called for bravery after his side stumbled into the second stage of this tournament. The two-time champions have gone in with an unchanged team for the fourth match in a row, with Jamie Overton retaining his place as the allrounder. Brook’s only slight worry is a cut to Jacob Bethell’s bowling hand (sustained during the match against West Indies), which is likely to prevent him from bowling due to the strapping on his finger.
Sri Lanka meanwhile make two changes to their XI, with Dushmantha Chameera returning in place of Pramod Madushan, having been rested for the defeat to Zimbabwe. Kamil Mishra comes back in for the man who replaced him, Kusal Perrera, as the hosts shuffle once more in an attempt to find a functional opening partnership.
These two squads know each other very well, having only concluded a three-match T20I series against one another at the start of the month, which took place entirely in Pallekele. England secured a 3-0 scoreline, capping things off with a professional 12run win in a low scoring encounter.
As for the outfield, both sides are primed for a different evening of ground-fielding on patchy grass. Heavy rains have punctuated the five das leading into this clash. Overnight precipitation has sodden the edges of the field, though the middle parts of the ground had been well-covered.
Sri Lanka: Pathum Nissanka, Kamil Mishara, Kusal Mendis (wk), Pavan Rathnayake, Kamindu Mendis, Dasun Shanaka (capt), Dunith Wellelage, Dushan Hemantha, Maheesh Theekshana, Dilshan Madushanka, Dushmantha Chameera
England: Phil Salt, Jos Buttler (wk), Jacob Bethell, Tom Banton, Harry Brook (capt), Sam Curran, Will Jacks, Liam Dawson, Jamie Overton, Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid
[Cricinfo]
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