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Mykolas Alekna shatters discus world record with 75.56m in Ramona

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Lithuania’s Mykolas Alekna improved his own discus world record by more than a metre with a sensational 75.56m [Subject to the usual ratification procedure throw at the Oklahoma Throws Series World Invitational, a World Athletics Continental Tour Bronze meeting, in Ramona on Sunday (13).

Back at the meeting where he set his first world record of 74.35m last year, the Olympic silver medalist twice improved that mark – first setting a world record of 74.89m with his opening throw and then improving to 75.56m in the fourth round.

Australia’s Matt Denny, who threw 74.25m in Ramona on Thursday (10), also surpassed Alekna’s previous world record by launching the discus 74.78m.

In a competition of record depth, five athletes surpassed 70 metres and seven threw beyond 69 metres. USA’s Sam Mattis, who threw 70.08m to finish runner-up to Denny three days earlier, improved to 71.27m to finish third in Sunday’s contest and Germany’s Clemens Prufer threw 71.01m to finish fourth. Great Britain’s Lawrence Okoye finished fifth with 70.76m.

Alekna’s 74.35m in Ramona on 14 April last year had broken the longest standing men’s world record – that 74.08m having been achieved by Jurgen Schult in 1986, some 16 years before Alekna was born.

Now the 22-year-old has become the first athlete to surpass 75 metres.

The Alekna family has two of the top four men’s discus throwers in history, with two-time Olympic champion Virgilijus Alekna – the father of Mykolas – now placed fourth on the world all-time list with his 73.88m from 2000.

Mykolas Alekna’s latest world record came the day after ValerieAllman threw a North American record of 73.52m in Ramona for the farthest women’s discus throw in the world since 1989.

[World Athletics]

 



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Telijjawila to Chelmsford kasun Rajitha’s dream

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Quite a few Sri Lankan fast bowlers are turning out in County Cricket this season. Kasun Rajitha is Essex’s newest signing.

There was a time when Sri Lankan parents drummed into their kids that the only ticket out of the rat race was a university degree. Unless you were born with a silver spoon, it was books over bats. But those equations have been rewritten. These days, if you can land the ball on a sixpence and send stumps cartwheeling, the world’s your oyster.

Just ask Kasun Rajitha — the latest poster boy for how far cricket can take you. Hailing from the sleepy hamlet of Telijjawila, tucked away in the heartland of Matara, Rajitha has swapped village gravel for Chelmsford’s green carpets after being roped in as Essex’s overseas pro.

It’s been quite the journey for the lanky quick. From a backwater that barely knew cricket to the hallowed turf where titans like Graham Gooch, Sir Alastair Cook, John Lever, Keith Boyce and Mark Waugh once strutted their stuff. Rajitha’s rise has been more tortoise than hare, but he’s carved a niche with grit, guile, and gallons of sweat.

One of Sri Lanka’s quiet revolutions in Test cricket has been the way our pacers have punched above their weight abroad. Rajitha may not grab the headlines, but he’s been a key cog in the wheel — doing the donkey work while others grab the glory.

The pecking order, though, is a tough dressing room to crack. Asitha Fernando is usually the first name on the team sheet. Then comes Lahiru Kumara — the firebrand with raw pace. If a third seamer’s needed, the variety of Vishwa Fernando’s left-arm angle often gets the nod. Now, with Milan Ratnayake floating around as a seam-bowling all-rounder, Kasun’s opportunities are few and far between.

In fact, he hasn’t played a Test since March last year. And ironically, in that very game, he picked up a bagful — eight wickets — but still found himself warming the bench. At home, selectors rarely go beyond two seamers. Overseas, they look for contrast. Rajitha, it seems, is often the bridesmaid, never the bride.

What he lacks in express pace or eye-popping variations, he makes up for with discipline and doggedness. He’s the kind of bowler who hits the top of off till the batter blinks first. A workhorse who thrives in the long haul, not the highlight reel.

County cricket, meanwhile, is no walk in the park. It’s a marathon, not a sprint — cricket under cloudy skies with hardly a breather. When you’re not sending down overs by the dozen, you’re on a coach to some other ground. There’s little time for nets or rehab — it’s rinse and repeat. But it’s also the best boot camp to turn you into a thoroughbred pro.

Rajitha’s new-ball buddy Asitha Fernando has also boarded the county train, donning Glamorgan colours in Wales. He’s already hit the ground running, bagging four wickets in his first outing. Meanwhile, Vishwa Fernando, after spells with Yorkshire and Durham, is now at Warwickshire, the same county that Kumar Sangakkara represented in 2007.

The trend is unmistakable. Once upon a time, English counties turned to the Caribbean or South Africa when they wanted fast bowling firepower. Now, they’re looking east — beyond Colombo in fact. In far off places like Matara and Katuneriya.

And let’s not kid ourselves — the pay packet isn’t too shabby either. A full season fetches between 80,000 to 120,000 British Pounds. Multiply that by 400 and that’s good enough to buy an apartment over here.

Of course, those in the IPL are in a different financial stratosphere altogether. Dasun Shanaka, who just inked a deal with Gujarat Titans, might carry drinks all tournament, but he’ll return with a cool $87,000 in his account. That’s how the IPL has turned the cricketing economy on its head — what County cricket offer now feels like peanuts.

Still, for the grinders, the grafters, and the late bloomers, County cricket remains a proving ground. And for Rajitha, it’s a well-earned second wind.

by Rex Clementine

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Power World Gyms Sri Lanka Rugby’s official fitness partner

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Power World Gyms proudly announced its partnership with Sri Lanka Rugby as the official fitness partner, marking a significant milestone in its ongoing mission to support national sports and athletic excellence. This collaboration not only reinforces Power World’s position as a leading fitness brand in Sri Lanka but also reflects its deep commitment to empowering local talent through performance-driven training.

As part of this partnership, Power World will provide dedicated support to enhance the training and performance of Sri Lanka’s national-level rugby players.

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China races robots against humans in Beijing half marathon

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[pic BBC]

Robots ran alongside humans at the Yizhuang half-marathon in Beijing on Saturday.

Twenty-one humanoid robots, designed by Chinese manufacturers, raced alongside thousands of runners over a 21km (13-mile) course that included slopes, turns and uneven surfaces.

Some robots completed the race, while others struggled from the beginning. One robot fell at the starting line and lay flat for several minutes before getting up and taking off.

While robots have made appearances at marathons in China in the past, this is the first time they have raced against humans over the course of a half-marathon.

[BBC]

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