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Nilani to fight for Tokyo ticket as team leave for Patiala

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by Reemus Fernando

A ten member athletics contingent inclusive of country’s highest ranked runner Nilani Ratnayake was schedule to leave for India today with the latter aiming to retain her hard earned berth for Tokyo Olympics at the Interstate Athletics Championship in Patiala.

The Athletics Federation of India is hosting the 60th National Inter State Senior Athletics Championships from June 25-29 to provide Indian athletes with a qualification opportunity for the Tokyo Olympic Games. The June 29th is the last date of the qualifying period for the postponed Tokyo Games. India’s top national athletes had been training in a bio secure bubble in Patiala and Sri Lanka’s athletes too will be competing under same conditions.

The Athletics Federation of India invited their Sri Lankan counterparts to send a team inclusive of a women’s 4×100 metres relay team as they look forward to qualify their women’s 4×100 metres team for the Games. South Asian Games medallist Amasha de Silva will anchor the Sri Lankan team.

The other five members of the team are the highest ranked Sri Lankan athletes closest to Olympic qualifying standards in their respective disciplines but it will be a tough ask for them to improve on their world rankings during the last week of the qualifying period as some of them have slipped down in rankings due to lack of competitions.

Ratnayake, who was the first Sri Lankan to secure a top position in the ‘Road to Olympic Rankings’ has slipped to the 39th position during the last couple of weeks. Her participation in the Tokyo Olympics is under threat. While her counterparts in Europe and elsewhere have quality competitions to improve their rankings, Ratnayake has only the competition in Patiala to retain her position. A win in Patiala will not earn her much points. If she falls below the 45th position in the World Ranking she will lose her ticket to Olympics. However it will be a totally different scenario if she clocks sub nine minutes and 30 seconds which only 28 athletes have achieved so far in the race to Olympics.

Rio Olympic participant Sumedha Ranasinghe who is ranked 46th in the Road to Olympics Rankings has a tough target as he has to climb 14 positions up to secure the Olympic berth in men’s javelin throw. A mighty throw of 85 metres is the only other option.

Nimali Liyanarachchi, 55th in the Road to Olympics Rankings in 800 metres, Nadeesha Ramanayake 57th in the 400 metres and Kalinga Kumarage (400m) have to reach the top 48 if they are to brush shoulders against the world’s best in Tokyo. Analysts consider it as a tough ask for them even if they reach their personal best in India.

Sri Lanka Athletics had earlier intended to send a bigger team to provide competition starved athletes a chance to gain exposure as the air tickets and lodgings of a better part of the team had been taken care of by the hosts. But the team had been pruned after the Sports Ministry advice.

However that has disappointed many top ranked athletes as the missed opportunity will affect their chances of improving the world rankings, which is a must for future events.

Local athletes missed vital opportunities to improve their world rankings when the Asian Athletics Championship, Asian Relay Championship and a number of other international events were cancelled due to the Covid 19 pandemic.

Team:

Sumeda Ranasinghe (Javelin), Kalinga Kumarage (400m), Nadeesha Ramanayake (400m), Nimali Liyanarachchi (800m), Nilani Ratnayake (3,000m steeplechase).

4x100metres Relay Team:

Amasha de Silva, Shelinda Jansen, Medhani Jayamanne, Shafiya Yamick, Lakshika Sugandi.

Officials:

Vimukthi Zoysa, Sujith Abeysekara.



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Rajapaksa, Arshdeep deliver winning start for PBKS

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Bhanuka Rajapaksa hit fifty off 32 balls. (pic BCCI)

A power-packed, collective performance with the bat set the platform for Punjab Kings’ winning start as they downed Kolkata Knight Riders by seven runs (DLS method) at the PCA stadium in Mohali on Saturday (April 1). Bhanuka Rajapaksa (50 off 32) registered his maiden IPL fifty while Shikhar Dhawan struck a 29-ball 40, and along with useful contributions from the rest of the batters, PBKS posted a formidable 191/5. Andre Russell top-scored for KKR but they lost wickets at regular intervals and eventually fell short of the DLS par score as they finished with 146/7 in 16 overs when rain forced the players off the field.

Brief scores:

Punjab Kings 191/5 in 20 overs (Bhanuka Rajapaksa 50, Shikhar Dhawan 40; Tim Southee 2-54) beat Kolkata Knight Riders 146/7 in 16 overs (Andre Russell 35; Venkatesh Iyer 34; Arshdeep Singh 3-19) by 7 runs (DLS method).

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Ruturaj 92 in vain as Titans win opening game

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Shubman Gill set the platform for a terrific run-chase in the season opener

A brilliant 92 from Ruturaj Gaikwad went in vain as defending champions Gujarat Titans beat Chennai Super Kings in Ahmedabad on Friday (March 31) in the tournament opener. Gaikwad’s innings was nullified to an extent initially by Shubman Gill before a few vital blows towards the end of the game from the Titans middle order got the job done for them with four balls to spare.

Brief scores:

Chennai Super Kings 178/7 in 20 overs (Ruturaj Gaikwad 92; Rashid Khan 2/26, Mohammed Shami 2/29) lost to Gujarat Titans182/5 in 19.2 overs (Shubman Gill 63; Rajvardhan Hangargekar 3/36) by 5 wickets

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Bowlers, Stirling lead Ireland to their first win in Bangladesh in any format

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Paul Stirling was as free-flowing as ever as he guided Ireland’s chase

Ireland finally notched a win on their tour of Bangladesh by scoring a seven-wicket win in the final T20I in Chattogram on Friday. Mark Adair led the bowling charge with three wickets as Bangladesh were bowled out for 124, and Paul Stirling, later named Player of the Match, was at his inventive best as he struck a 41-ball 77 to headline the chase. It was Ireland’s first T20I win over Bangladesh since 2009 and their first win in any format in the country.

Bangladesh had already taken the series after winning the first two games earlier in the week, and made two changes, perhaps to try out alternatives. Mehidy Hasan Miraz and Mustafizur Rahman went out; Rishad Hossain was handed a debut and Shoriful Islam made a comeback. It was the batting that came unstuck, though.

After opting to bat, Bangladesh were 61 for 7 in nine-and-a-half overs. Shamim Hossain, however, scored his first international half-century, making 51 off 42 balls with five fours and two sixes to give them a competitive 124. One of those sixes was a particularly eye-catching shot, when he reverse-whipped Curtis Campher hit over backward point for six.

But with Stirling in blistering form, and playing a few inventive shots of his own, the chase was done and dusted in 14 overs.Bangladesh’s slide started in the second over. Litton Das’ slash towards deep point against a wide Adair delivery landed in George Dockrell’s lap. It was the first time Bangladesh had lost a wicket in the powerplay after three matches.

Najmul Hossain Shanto was next to go, hitting a slog-sweep off Harry Tector straight to deep midwicket. Campher juggled the catch but clung on. In the next over, Campher himself got a wicket, when Rony Talukdar holed out at deep midwicket.

Towhid Hridoy and Shakib Al Hasan, however, went for their shots in keeping with Bangladesh’s new approach, and hit a couple of big ones, but both were gone in the space of three balls. Shakib was caught at short midwicket mistiming a pull off Adair, while Hridoy holed out off Ben White in the seventh over

Matthew Humphreys had two wicketless ODIs in Sylhet, but the left-arm spinner had a better start to his T20I career. He took a wicket off his first ball when he yorked Rishad for 8.

That made him the first Ireland bowler to take a wicket with his first ball in T20Is. This was, however, not the first time a debutant had done this against Bangladesh. Previously, Rory Kleinveldt, Pragyan Ojha, Lockie Ferguson and Cole McConchie have all achieved the feat.

Humphreys added his second off his third ball, when Taskin Ahmed was caught at deep midwicket for a duck.Shamim and Nasum Ahmed added 33 runs for the eighth wicket before Nasum was caught in the covers off Gareth Delany’s legspin. Adair took his third when he removed Shoriful, before Fionn Hand took Shamim’s wicket in the final over.

Stirling didn’t get going at the start, as there were two early wickets, of Ross Adair and Lorcan Tucker, but once he was set, there was no stopping him. He cut and swept Shakib for fours to kickstart the chase, and then deposited Hasan Mahmud’s half-tracker for his first six next over. No bowler escaped his wrath, or his inventiveness, as he hit ten fours and four sixes in his 41-ball innings.

Many of those came in one Shoriful over, the 11th of the innings, when he pulled a six and hit three fours to take 20 runs. Rishad put an end to the mayhem when he had Stirling caught at long-on in the 13th over – it was Stirling’s 22nd half-century in T20Is and Rishad’s first international wicket – but Campher closed out the chase with a four and a six off Taskin.

Brief scores:

Ireland 126 for 3 (Stirling 77, Campher 16*, Tector 14*, Rishad 1-19) beat Bangladesh 124 (Shamim 51, Adair 3-25, Humphreys 2-10) by seven wickets

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