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No half measures for king Kohli

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Virat Kohli

The curtain has finally come down on Virat Kohli’s influential Test career, with the former Indian skipper hanging up his whites this week. Although his tour down under was far from a masterclass, many expected him to soldier on for the five-Test series in England and the busy home season to follow – especially with just 800 runs separating him from the hallowed 10,000-run mark. But perhaps the scars of Australia cut too deep and with the selectors subtly showing him the red light, Kohli may have been nudged toward the exit door.

Test cricket, that unforgiving school of hard knocks, doesn’t grant longevity lightly. No matter how skilled or gritty you are, age starts bowling the tough questions – short of a length, rising awkwardly. In Kohli’s case, the chinks were showing. The man who once drove with arrogance and flicked with disdain was now tentative, caught fishing outside off, a far cry from the front-foot aggressor of old. The writing, as they say, was on the dressing room wall.

When it comes to the Fab Four of modern-day Test batting, Kohli’s name doesn’t quite roll off the tongue with the same weight as Kane Williamson, Steve Smith or Joe Root. His average – sub-50 – tells a tale of a batsman who shone brighter under white lights and white balls. On flat tracks, he was a bully with the bat, feasting on bowlers like a shark in a goldfish tank. But red-ball cricket? That was a different kettle of fish.

Yet, stats alone don’t paint the full picture. Kohli wasn’t just a cricketer; he was a standard-bearer, a trailblazer who dragged Indian cricket into the modern era with bloody-minded intensity. He didn’t just walk the talk – he sprinted it, grunted through it, and demanded others do the same.

From his Under-19 days, it was clear Kohli had the hunger. But few would’ve predicted he’d go on to lead India to the summit of Test cricket, standing tall as both captain and mainstay with the willow. His transformation – from a chubby, butter-chicken-loving Delhi boy to a fitness-obsessed machine – was nothing short of inspirational. Staff at Colombo’s Taj Samudra or Galle’s Jetwing Lighthouse still speak in awe of the Indian skipper hitting the gym at 5 a.m. while his teammates were still chasing dreams under hotel duvets.

In the Kohli era, there were no shortcuts – just sweat, sacrifice, and steel. And when the captain sets the bar that high, the rest of the team either followed suit or were left behind. It wasn’t just fitness. It was attitude, a mindset. You didn’t just represent India; you fought for every inch, every session, every ball.

At times, Kohli did what the Indian board failed to do. Realising India couldn’t win overseas without firepower, he threw his weight behind fast bowling like no other Indian captain had. He made the bold calls – dropping a proven match-winner like R. Ashwin for a pace-heavy attack. Controversial, yes. But in Kohli’s playbook, sentiment never trumped strategy.

At home, he wasn’t afraid to roll out rank turners. Kohli believed his spinners could run through any opposition and that his batters could tame any spin that came their way. Gone were the belters that served up inflated averages. Kohli chose the harder path, knowing full well it might dent his own stats. But personal milestones were never the endgame – winning was.

He didn’t always play pretty. He played ugly when needed. Picked fights with opponents, needled fans, crossed swords with umpires. He wasn’t the darling of overseas crowds, but he couldn’t care less. For Kohli, it was always team first, reputation later. He didn’t believe in drawing matches – he played for the win.

Here in Colombo, how we wish we had a Kohli of our own. A cricketer willing to forgo comfort, push the envelope and leave nothing to chance. But too often, we sit back and admire Kohli as if what he did was beyond reach. Truth be told, he wasn’t born with Tendulkar’s divine touch or Ponting’s brute gift. Kohli’s mantra was simple: grind till you shine.

It’s disheartening to see our boys fold their arms and listen to him with reverence. Respect is fine – but Test cricket isn’t a prayer meeting. Someone has to ruffle feathers, get under the opposition’s skin. Niroshan Dickwella had the potential to be that livewire but we all know how he lost it.

Sri Lanka doesn’t lack talent; it lacks the Kohli mindset – the refusal to take a backward step, the will to outwork fate, the belief that every match is a final and every session a war. Kohli played like every day was Judgement Day. He changed the grammar of Indian cricket. His numbers may not match the pantheon’s best – but his impact? That’s a whole different ball game.

by Rex Clementine



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Record stand puts Bangladesh in command in Galle Test

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Debutant Tharindu Ratnayake, the ambidextrous spinner, struck early claiming two wickets before lunch, in the first Test against Bangladesh in Galle on Tuesday.

A record-breaking fourth-wicket partnership between skipper Najmul Hossain Shanto and seasoned campaigner Mushfiqur Rahim put Bangladesh firmly in the box seat at stumps on day one of the opening Test against Sri Lanka at the Galle International Stadium on Tuesday.

The pair stitched together 247 runs – now the highest fourth-wicket stand for Bangladesh in Tests against Sri Lanka – steering the tourists to a commanding 292 for three at close after a wobbly start.

Having elected to bat first, Bangladesh were reeling at 45 for three when the duo came together. What followed was a gritty rescue act – a partnership built on sound temperament, clever shot selection and an unflinching resolve as they dug their team out of early trouble.

Mushfiqur, the most capped Test player in Bangladesh history with 97 appearances, silenced his critics with a timely ton. The veteran, under the pump after a lean patch spanning 13 innings without a half-century, rolled back the years with a knock of poise and purpose.

The 38-year-old has fond memories of Galle, having struck a monumental double hundred here in 2013 and once again turned tormentor-in-chief for the Sri Lankan bowlers. He did enjoy a slice of luck – a tough chance spilled by debutant Tharindu Ratnayake on 25 – but made it count, navigating a nervy passage in the 90s before scampering a quick single to notch up his 12th Test hundred.

Shanto, positive from the outset, kept the scoreboard ticking with deft footwork and a keen eye for the loose ball. He brought up his sixth Test century – and second against Sri Lanka – with a cheeky paddle sweep off Prabath Jayasuriya, marking his first ton since November 2023.

Earlier, Sri Lanka made early inroads with right-arm quick Asitha Fernando drawing first blood, removing opener Anamul Haque for a duck. Off-spinner Ratnayake, handed his Test cap on the back of a prolific domestic season, struck twice in quick succession – but once the Shanto-Mushfiqur duo got their eye in, it was one-way traffic.

Sri Lanka also handed a debut to opening batter Lahiru Udara, another domestic heavyweight, while the hosts paused before the start of play to felicitate retiring stalwart Angelo Mathews. The 38-year-old Mathews, playing his 119th and final Test, will hang up his boots with over 8,000 runs – behind only Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene in Sri Lanka’s all-time charts.

This Galle encounter marks the curtain-raiser of the new World Test Championship cycle – and by stumps on day one, Bangladesh have already made a strong statement of intent.

Rex Clementine in Galle

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Akesha, Dinara get Sri Lanka off to winning start

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Dinara de Silva (Pix by Kamal Wanniarachchi)

Sri Lanka commenced the Billie Jean King Cup Asia Oceania Group 3 campaign with a 3-0 victory over Qatar as Akesha Silva and Dinara de Silva won their singles and doubles encounters at the Sri Lanka Tennis Association clay courts on Tuesday.

In the first singles match, Akesha Silva beat Hind Ai Mudahka (Qatar) 6-3, 3-0 (Hind Al Mudahka retired) before Dinara de Silva beat Mubaraka Ai Naimi (Qatar) 6-3, 6-0 in the second singles match.

Akesha Silva

Dinara and Akesha then joined to beat Mubaraka Ai Naimi and Dana Khalifa 6-0, 7-5 in the doubles match.

Sri Lanka are set to meet Nepal today.

 

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Action from Junior National Athletics Championship

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Under 18 girls' 100m final in progress. Dhananjana Fernando (2129) who has clocked the fastest time in any age category this year won the Under 18 girls' 100m.

The four-day Junior National Athletics Championship concluded at Diyagama on Sunday. Here are some action pictures from the final day.

Chathushka Imesh (713), Pasindu Sandaruwan (697), and Shihan Nadeeshana (973) won the first, second and third places respectively in the Under 18 boys’ 100m final.
(Pix by Kamal Wanniarachchi)

 

Rumesh Tharanga established a new meet
record in the Under 23 men’s javelin throw.

 

Mihisara Gunarathna (1232) won the Under 20 boys’ 1,500m.

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