Sports
National selection committee intervene to include 4×100 metres relay team
Asian Athletics Championship
National selection committee have overruled a decision by Sri Lanka Athletics’ selection committee to drop the men’s 4×100 metres relay team from the contingent for next week’s Asian Athletics Championships.
The National Selection Committee headed by Olympian Sriyani Kulawansa have decided to include in the country’s Asian Athletics Championship team, the men’s 4×100 metres quartet who were dropped following their fourth place finish at the Dubai Grand Prix.
The selection committee of Sri Lanka Athletics dropped the men’s 4×100 metres quartet after they finished fourth behind India’s A and B teams and Oman at the Dubai Grand Prix.
Sri Lanka team inclusive of Italy based sprinter Yupun Abeykoon and three-time national champion Chamod Yodasinghe, Merone Wijesinghe and Deneth Weeraratne returned a time of 39.41 seconds in Dubai.
“There was an appeal from the team members who were dropped. We had to heed to the appeal as they had not competed after 2019,” Kulawansa told The Island yesterday.
The track and field governing body announced the Sports Ministry approved team for the Asian Athletics Championship on Tuesday listing all 20 athletes previously selected for the event in Gumi, South Korea.
The Asian Athletics Championship team announced by Sri Lanka Athletics on Tuesday:
Men’s: Yupun Abeykoon (100m, 200m, 4X100m), Y.C.M. Yodasinghe (100m., 4X100m), Kalinga Kumarage (200m, 400m, 4X400m, 4X400m mixed), Aruna Darshana (400m., 4X400m, 4X400m mixed), Lesandu Arthavidu (High Jump), Sumeda Ranasinghe (Javelin), Rumesh Tharanga (Javelin), Meron Wijesinghe (4X100m), Dineth Weeraratne (4X100m), Chamod Dissanayake (4X100m), Sadew Rajakaruna (4X400m, 4X400m mixed), Kalhara Indupa (4X400m, 4X400m mixed), Omel Sasintha Silva (4X400m, 4X400m mixed)
Women’s: Rasara Wijesuriya (5000m, 10000m), Dilhani Lekamge (Javelin), Nishendra de Silva (400m, 4X400m, 4X400m mixed), Nadesha Ramanayake (400m, 4X400m, 4X400m mixed), Sayuri Mendis (4X400m, 4X400m mixed), Jayeshi Uththara (4X400m, 4X400m mixed), Jithma Wijethunga (4X400m, 4X400m mixed)
Team Officials and Coaches: Irangani Rupasinghe (Manager / Lady Chaperone), I.M. Ranasinghe (Coach), Lal Wijewickarama (Coach), Tony Prasanna (Coach), Claudio Licciardello (Coach), Galderisi Matteo (Physiotherapist), Jagath Bandara (Masseur)
by Reemus Fernando
Latest News
Cummins, Kishan, Klaasen power Sunrisers Hyderabad into playoffs; Chennai Super Kings not out yet
Sunrisers Hyderabad (SRH) have qualified for the IPL 2026 playoffs, taking Gujarat Titans with them. Chennai Super Kings (CSK), meanwhile, are on the brink of elimination. MS Dhoni made it to the ground for the first time this season, but his calf injury continued to keep him on the sidelines. His team fought all the way through, trying to defend a total of 180, but a fifty from Ishan Kishan and utter brilliance from Heintich Klassen won out in the end.
Rutraj Gaikwad was 9 off 11 at the end of the powerplay. He became the second batter this season to come through the first six overs with no boundaries after Lucknow Super Giants’ Arshin Kulkarni in the game against Royal Challengers Bengaluru on May 7.
It doesn’t appear as if Gaikwad is out of form. He is CSK’s second-highest run-getter. Just that he seems to be in denial about the way runs are scored in the powerplay in this IPL. With the field up, other openers are thinking boundaries all the time. He wants to get set and then go. It’s old school and that method, on Monday, gave him 15 in 21 balls – the lowest contribution by an opener at the time of his team’s 100.
On a pitch designed to neutralise bowlers of his pace, Pat Cummins picked up 3 for 28 in four overs. He nailed his match-up with Sanju Samson (one wicket for 23 runs in 20 balls in the IPL) and repeatedly went into the pitch with slower balls to add Kartik Sharma and Gaikwad into his back pocket. Led by the SRH captain’s example, Sakib Hussain took pace off for 18 of his 24 deliveries and finished with 2 for 34. These balls were sticking in the pitch and not coming onto the bat. It made setting up to play shots difficult.
Dewald Brevis walking out to bat is a spectacle all on its own, when he takes a knee just before entering the field. It’s clearly got something to do with his faith, but out here, it’s seen as a hero entry. As the main man marking himself out as the main man. Except coming into this game, he had a strike rate of 122.22. It was the sixth-lowest of all batters this season to have faced at least 50 balls.
SRH allowed only two boundaries in the five overs from nine to 13. CSK needed something from their star boy and finally he delivered. Hitting Nitish Reddy for a four and a six in the 14th over set him on his way to make 44 off 27. Confident in his cross-bat shots, he set himself up for the slow short ball and kept cutting and pulling them into the boundary.
At 17.5 overs, when Brevis was dismissed by Eshan Malinga, he, Samson and Kartik had scored 103 off 59, with 10 fours and seven sixes. Gaikwad, Urvil Patel and Shivam Dube had scored 54 off 52 with three fours and three sixes.
A third of CSK’s first seven overs were dot balls. Forty of SRH’s first 53 runs came in boundaries. The start of the chase was all about two teams pushing each other waiting for one of them to break.
Spencer Johnson and Mukesh Choudhary pushed the speed gun up to 140 kph and above, the polar opposite of what SRH’s quicks did, but they kept Travis Head and Abhishek Sharma in check and eventually got one of them out.
In between innings, CSK coach Stephen Fleming was deep in conversation with Akeal Hosein. A little bit of lip-reading suggested they were talking about how a left-arm spinner could succeed against left-hand batters. Hosein seemed to say he wanted to take the ball away from Abhishek and Head and Kishan first, and then bring one back to hit the stumps. It didn’t quite work out that way but he did get rid of Abhishek two balls into the match-up to lift CSK’s hopes.
A straight-bat push nearly resulted in his wicket but the ball dropped short of Hosein. Klaasen responded to that with a reverse sweep for four. Noor saw the change in stance and pulled out at the start of his next over. The next ball, Klaasen could have been dismissed for 18, had Johnson held on to a tough catch at deep square leg.
Once again, shrugging away the near-miss, Klaasen clattered Noor to the boundary. Klaasen dominated spin and finished with 47 off 26. He had a strike rate of 181 and was in control of 81% of the balls he faced. Those numbers should not have been possible on a pitch that was slow and a bit low. The impact he had on the game was apparent when Samson and Urvil had send-offs for Klaasen.
Batting in Klaasen’s slipstream was fun for Kishan. He brought up fifty off 37 balls. It wasn’t a fluent innings and that almost made it more special. He was so determined not to give it away and so alert when the bad ball came. Any time he had the chance to use his fast hands and whip stuff off his pads, he took them. He played the kind of innings that is important in the context of a season; a performance that says he may not be at his best but is still a threat.
Brief scores:
Sunrisers Hyderabad 181 for 5 in 19 overs (Abhishek Sharma 26, Ishan Kishan 70, Heinrich Klaasen 47, Nitish Kumar Reddy 11, Salil Arora 10*; Mukesh Choudhary 2-36,Anshul Kamboj 1-46, Noor Ahmad 1-40, Akeal Hosein 1-21) beat Chennai Super Kings 180 for 7 in 20 overs (Sanju Samson 27, Rutraj Gaikwad 15, Urvil Patel 13, Kartik Sharma 32, Dewald Brevis 44, Sjivam Dube 26. Prashant Veer 11; Praful Hinge 1-37, Pat Cummins 3-28, Eshan Malinga 1-26, Sakib Hussain 2-34) by five wickets
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Mushfiqur ton, Litton and Joy fifties set Pakistan 437
Mushfiqur Rahim’s 14th Test century headlined Bangladesh’s dominance on the third day of the Sylhet Test. His knock and fifties from Litton Das and Mahmudul Hasan Joy helped Bangladesh set a target of 437.
Pakistan batted two overs before the umpires called off play due to bad light. The openers Abdullah Fazal and Azan Awais didn’t open their accounts as both Taskin Ahmed and Shoriful Islam tested them in their respective overs.
The story of the day, however, was Mushfiqur’s 233-ball stay, adding 123 with Litton for the fifth wicket, and 77 runs for the seventh wicket with Taijul Islam. Mushfiqur struck twelve fours and one six during his knock, which was his third century in the second innings of a Test match, coming at a tricky period for Bangladesh when they had to bat well to keep themselves ahead of the game.
He followed his usual formula of getting set by playing the ball close to his body, before finding boundaries around the wicket. Cover drives, square-cuts and slog-sweeps were accompanied by hard hits down the ground and the pulls through midwicket.
Mushfiqur’s innings finally ended with roughly 35 minutes left on the third day; he was the last Bangladesh wicket to fall, in the 103rd over.
Pakistan’s best period on the third day was the first 45 minutes. Shahzad troubled captain Najmul Hossain Shanto, before trapping him lbw for 15. Litton, fresh off his first-innings century, was free-flowing even in seaming conditions. He gave Bangladesh a bit of breathing room with a few boundaries in the first session.
Litton was lucky too, surviving an easy run out when Babar Azam couldn’t hit the stumps from short midwicket. On 38 at the time, he was stranded halfway down the crease after a mix-up with Mushfiqur. Offspinner Sajid Khan also dropped Litton when he was on 56, off his own bowling. Litton continued to time the ball quite easily, until his upper-cut reached Saud Shakeel at fly-slip off Hasan Ali. He made 69 with five fours, off 92 balls.
Litton now has three occasions of a hundred and fifty in a Test, the most by a Bangladeshi wicketkeeper-batter. Later, Taijul contributed with 22 off 51 balls, with two fours, both stylishly struck, as he supported Mushfiqur during their seventh-wicket partnership. Mehidy Hasan Miraz fell to a beauty from Shahzad, but otherwise, Bangladesh kept things in their control on the third day.
Brief scores:
Pakistan 232 and 0 for 0 (Abdullah Fazal 0*, AzanAwais 0*) need 437 runs to win vs Bangladesh 278 and 390 (Mahmudul Hassan Joy 52, Mushfiqur Rahim 137, Litton Das 69; Khurram Shahzad 4-86, Sajid Khan 3-126)
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Aravinda’s timeless touch lights up reunion
Sri Lanka’s 1996 World Cup winning team returned home on Monday, although for many of the players Colombo was not the final destination. While most boarded flights to BIA, a few headed off to Melbourne and London, while others decided to extend their stay in the Land of the Malays for a short holiday.
It was a trip soaked in nostalgia as the players rolled back the years and transported fans to that magical March night three decades ago when they pulled off one of the greatest upsets the game has ever seen.
The Malaysians turned on the charm with warm hospitality throughout the celebrations. In a country where badminton and football are followed almost like religions, cricket too got its little window in the spotlight. Malaysia’s national team is currently coached by none other than Dav Whatmore, one of the the architects behind Sri Lanka’s fairy-tale triumph in 1996.
Whatmore and team physiotherapist Alex Kontouris, the two support staff members from that historic campaign, were present for the reunion. Watching a 72-year-old Whatmore fielding at mid-off just to make up the numbers during the exhibition game was one of the enduring images of the weekend.
Whatmore also proved a major attraction during coaching sessions conducted for Malaysian youngsters alongside the Sri Lankan players. He shared finer technical points of the game with the kids while, with the older players, he spoke passionately about the mental side of cricket. Listening to him was a masterclass in itself.
But the star of the show was undoubtedly Aravinda de Silva.
He may not have held a bat seriously for years, but once he walked in at his customary number four position during the exhibition match, time seemed to stand still. Suddenly, memories came flooding back and there was fresh proof that genius never fades.
One cover drive pierced the gap to the left of extra cover and the very next ball sped through the right side of the same fielder, leaving the poor man wondering where exactly he ought to stand. There were trademark cuts and pulls aplenty, but the shot everyone kept talking about was the reverse sweep.
Aravinda never played the reverse sweep during his international career. Yet, with the stroke now a staple of modern T20 cricket, he unfurled one neatly to the boundary as if he had been playing it all his life. It was vintage class mixed with modern innovation, further proof that truly gifted players can adapt to any era.
Everyone present, from Roshan Mahanama to Asanka Gurusinha, went home convinced once again that Aravinda was a once in a generation cricketer. Arjuna Ranatunga perhaps summed it up best when he remarked that a player of Aravinda’s calibre comes along only once in 50 years.
The reunion itself was a wonderful opportunity for the champions to relive the glory days. Sri Lankan fans living in Malaysia turned up in large numbers to catch a glimpse of their heroes, while the locals too embraced the occasion wholeheartedly.
The felicitation ceremony at the historic Royal Selangor Club was packed to capacity with guests eager to rub shoulders with some of the finest cricketers the game has produced.
The organisers smartly ensured that the players were spread across different tables, mingling freely with supporters, creating unforgettable moments for fans who grew up idolising them.
David Cruse, a Sri Lankan-born entrepreneur and cricket enthusiast based in Melbourne, played a pivotal role in putting the event together. He received excellent support from Devindran Ramanadan and Alex de Silva in Kuala Lumpur, who handled much of the logistics. Back in Colombo, Aravinda and Mahanama did much of the heavy lifting alongside Gurusinha, now settled in Melbourne.
Rex Clementine
in Kuala Lumpur
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