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Outstanding achievements of Dasis, Ramiru and Rehan

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Royal-Thomian

After the ‘Mustangs Trophy’ encounter was introduced in 1975 there had been only four instances where Royal College were able to win both the ‘D.S. Senanayake Memorial Trophy’ and the ‘Mustangs Trophy’.

The rare occasions were in 1983, 1990, 2013, and 2023.

The respective captains were Chulaka Amerasinghe, Udaya Wijesena, Devin Pathmanathan, and Dasis Manchanayake.

During the three-day encounter, on the first day, after a shaky start of 63 for four wickets, there was a record partnership of 229 runs between Dasis Manchanayake (137) and Ramiru Perera (128). They were able to erase the earlier unbroken record of 165 runs which was established in 1963 by V.P. Malalasekera (112 n.o.) and C. M. Fernando (47 n.o.).

With this century, Ramiru Perera who was 16 years and one month old became the youngest ever Royalist to score a century at the Battle of the Blues encounter.

Most probably he may be the youngest ever from both schools. Up to this year, the youngest was Pasindu Sooriyabandara who was 16 years four months old when he scored his match-winning debut century of 123 runs in 2016.

Dasis, with his century, became the sixth captain from Royal to score a century at the Big Match. The others were F.C. de Saram (140 in 1931), S.G. Salgado (112 in 1942), M. Wille (121 in 1957), C. J. Fernando (160 n.o. in 1971), and A. Polonowita (165 in 1996). During the second essay, with his 57 runs, Dasis became the first-ever Royalist captain to score a century and a half-century during the Big Match.

Rehan Peiris

During the Mustangs Trophy encounter, the other youngster in the team, fresher Rehan Peiris who was only 14 years and two months when he took part in the three-day encounter, notched up an unbeaten 69 runs to become the Most Promising Fresher and carried away the Man of the Match award.

He also became the youngest player from either side to score a half-century at Mustangs Trophy matches.

M.L. Fernando

(Recorder – Royal College Union)



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Convention Against Doping in Sports Act No. 33 of 2013 to be Amended

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The Cabinet of Ministers granted approval to the resolution submitted by the Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports to direct the Legal Draftsman to prepare a draft bill to amend the Convention Against Doping in Sports Act No. 33 of 2013.

The Sri Lanka Anti Doping Agency (SLADA) is an institution operating based on laws and regulations of the World Anti Doping Agency (WADA), and SLADA has to adhere to its laws and regulations to enable Sri Lankan athletes to take part in international sports events.

The World Anti Doping Agency (WADA), from time to time review the anti doping law of each country and recommend suitable amendments. The international provisions existed in the year 2013 had been considered when the Convention Against Doping in Sports Act No. 33 of 2013 was formulated. The World Anti Doping Agency (WADA) has recommended a number of amendments to be made after reviewing the anti doping law of Sri Lanka for the year 2024.

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Ecclestone’s all-round heroics stun RCB and Chinnaswamy in super over win

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Sophie Ecclestone won it for UP Warriorz almost single-handedly in the end [BCCI]

An extraordinary night of drama delivered a thriller, with UP Warriorz sending a crowd in excess of 28,000 into stunned silence after Royal Challengers Bengalaru failed to knock off the nine runs they needed in the Super Over.

In a game that seemed to be headed RCB’s way until the last two overs in regulation time, Sophie Ecclestone’s incredible final-over hitting against Renuka Singh, which went for 17, forced the game into a Super Over. But the showstopper for the night was a sensational final over Ecclestone delivered to deny Smriti Mandhana and Richa Ghosh as Warriorz sprung their campaign back to life with a second straight win.

Forty-two needed off 18, with two wickets in hand. Ecclestone had pottered to 3 off eight balls, and had no option but to go for broke, especially with Chinelle Henry, seemingly the last hope for Warriorz, gone.

Ecclestone got stuck into Georgia Wareham by muscling two sixes in a 13-run over. But when Saima Thakor was run out a ball after swinging one out of the ground in the 19th over, it was all on Ecclestone to knock off much of the 18 runs they needed off the last six.

She hit 17 in an extraordinary sequence of 6, 6, 4, 1, taking Renuka to the cleaners as she repeatedly missed her lengths. But Ecclestone’s single off the fifth ball that left Warriorz needing one off the last ball, brought rookie Kranti Goud on strike.

When Goud missed and the batters ran, Richa Ghosh did an MS Dhoni, choosing to sprint to the stumps and knock the bails off rather than risk an underarm throw. And just like that, the WPL had its first Super Over.

When Kim Garth bowled Henry, who had muscled an incredible eight sixes in her 23-ball 62 against Delhi Capitals, with a slower delivery with Warriorz needing 47 off 22, she wouldn’t have envisaged having to bowl the Super Over.

Yet, when she did, and conceded just 8 while dismissing Henry again, she wouldn’t have imagined finishing on the wrong side of the result. But, five minutes later, she watched in agony as Mandhana and Ghosh failed to find their hitting range on the face of some nerveless bowling from Ecclestone.

It was a performance straight out of fantasy for the world’s No. 1 T20I and ODI bowler, who had also quite extraordinarily just conceded six runs off the final over in RCB’s innings. Three of those deliveries were pinpoint yorkers that denied Ellyse Perry a final charge towards what would have been an extraordinary century.

Perry offset Mandhana’s early loss – against offspin for the 11th time in the WPL – by welcoming Ecclestone with back-to-back fours, her step-out to bisect cover and mid-off being the standout. Perry’s intent-laden approach brought her a first six when she launched Thakor down the ground. At 42 for 1 at the end of the powerplay, RCB had a base.

All through her innings, Perry was bubbling with flair. She became the first player to hit the 200-run mark in each of the first three WPLs. She also overtook Meg Lanning to become the highest run-getter in the tournament’s short history, during the course of a 94-run second-wicket stand with Danni Wyatt-Hodge.

The five-over period between seven and 11 brought RCB just 33, but the pair was able to flick the switch. Goud, who hustled Wyatt-Hodge with an excellent bumper early on, was picked away for three back-to-back fours in the 13th.

In doing so, Wyatt-Hodge exhibited her range of shots – a cut when offered width, a swat back past the bowler when it was dug in short, and a pummel over extra cover when the bowler went full. Wyatt-Hodge brought up her maiden WPL half-century off 36 balls against the side that had traded her out. But her dismissal brought Warriorz two more wickets – of Ghosh and Kanika Ahuja.

But Perry didn’t pass up an opportunity to go all out in the death overs. She took a liking for Deepti Sharma’s predictable lengths and bowling into the surface by picking her for a sequence of 4, 6, 4, 2 in the penultimate over – hitting the ball to different areas, from deep cover to long-on to deep midwicket.

Perry’s use of angles to try and get inside the line and sweep the bowlers off their lengths was particularly noteworthy. She finished unbeaten on 90 off 56, with RCB hitting 105 off the last nine overs.

With Chamari Athapaththu again on the bench, Warriorz needed some firepower up top, and when Kiran Navgire smashed a 27-ball 51 four nights ago against Capitals, it seemed like they had found an answer.

Navgire tantalised yet again, her uncomplicated stand-and-deliver mantra bringing her 24 off just 12 balls, as she swung at anything remotely in her zone before she was bowled attempting to hoick Renuka. Vrinda Dinesh’s run of low scores stretched into a fourth game as she picked out mid-off for 14 as Warriorz lost two early.

An injury to Shreyanka Patil opened up a spot for Sneh Rana as a replacement, and she inflicted more agony for Warriorz when she struck twice in two overs. This put Warriorz in freefall mode, even though Shweta Sehrawat sparked life into the innings with a sprightly 31. But at 125 for 7 in 15, only a freak Henry innings would have silenced the crowd. But when she chopped on to Garth in the 17th, Warriorz needed a miracle, and Ecclestone scripted one.

Brief scores:
Royal Challengers Bengaluru Women 180 for 6 in 20 overs (Elysse Perry 90*, Danni Wyatt-Hodge 57; Chinell Henry 1-24, Deepti Sharma 1-42, Tahlia McGarth 1-30 ) tied with UP Warriorz Women 180 in 20 overs (Sophie Ecclestone 33, Kiran Navgire 24, Dinesh Vrinda 14, Deepti Sharma 25, Shweta Sehrawat 31, Uma Chetry 14, Saima Thakur 14; Sneh Rana 3-27, Renuka  Singh 2-38, Kim Garth 2-40, Ellyse Perry 1-10)
Super Over UP Warriorz 8/1  beat RCB 4/0

[Cricinfo]

 

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New Zealand knock out Bangladesh to reach semis; India qualify too

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Rachin Ravindra got to make his Champions Trophy debut courtesy an illness to Daryl Mitchell and he made sure that it was a match to remember with a ton that sealed New Zealand’s qualification to yet another ICC tournament semifinal. Alongside New Zealand, India too qualified from Group A, with defending champions and hosts Pakistan getting knocked out along with Bangladesh. Ravindra’s 105-ball 112 was the pivot for New Zealand’s largely fuss-free chase of Bangladesh’s 236 which they completed with five wickets and 23 balls to spare.

Bangladesh had managed to dent New Zealand early with Taskin Ahmed gettting Will Young bowled with an incoming delivery and Nahid Rana having Kane Williamson nicking behind. At 15/2, Bangladesh’s hopes remained alive but it was quickly flattened thanks to Ravindra.

He first put on a steadying 57-run stand with Devon Conway before Mustafizur got the better of the opener. But Ravindra continued with the confidence he had shown from the outset, flicking the second delivery he faced off Rana for a boundary. He proceeded to punish Taskin through covers for two boundaries in an over that helped reverse the pressure that Bangladesh had managed to exert in the initial overs.

Conway joined him with three boundaries off Rana in the following over that put the chase on track. He brought up his fifty with an imperious straight drive as he settled into a decisive 129-run stand with Tom Latham. The latter, fresh off a ton in the previous game, played a crucial hand once again while Ravindra teed off.

A patient Latham hit only three boundaries over the course of his 55 but the risk-free approach complemented Ravindra’s belligerence perfectly. On either side of getting to his ton, Ravindra was put down by Bangladesh but he had all but ended Bangladesh’s hopes by then. He is now ahead of Williamson on the top of the list of centurions for New Zealand in ICC ODI tournaments and made sure that there were no further hiccups even as both fell after New Zealand crossed 200.

In the must-win encounter, Bangladesh went up and down in a roller-coaster of an innings to finish with a total of just 236 which proved to be below-par. After being put in to bat first, Bangladesh’s openers had started purposefully, adding a brisk 45-run stand. The Rawalpindi pitch had tradition of being high-scoring but New Zealand were able to put the brakes on Bangladesh’s intent with regular strikes. Leading the way on that front and setting the tone was offspinner Michael Bracewell who finished with figures of 4-26 in an unchanged 10-over spell. It was Bracewell who broke the opening stand, getting Tanzid Hasan to miscue to midwicket.

The middle overs proved to be the scourge of Bangladesh as they struggled to up the ante as well as keep a check on the wicket-flow. Only skipper Najmul Hossain Shanto managed to marry intent with the runs. Shanto’s 77 stood out through that period where Bangladesh’s experienced campaigners fell trying to get the run-rate up. Once Mehidy Hasan chipped Will O’Rourke to mid-on, Bracewell broke through the spine of the middle-order. Towhid Hridoy, Mushfiqur Rahim and Mahmudullah all fell attempting and failing at big hits. Bracwell smiled his way to career-best figures in the process as Bangladesh lost half their side for just 118.

Meanwhile Shanto waged a lone hand before he fell against the short ball of O’Rourke for 77. The lower-order fightback was led by Jaker Ali once again and Bangladesh managed a better finish, scoring at more than 6-an-over in the last 10. Ali and Rishad Hossain were instrumental in helping Bangladesh over 200 and to a total that would still not be enough against the brilliance of Ravindra and Co.

Brief Scores:
Bangladesh 236/9 in 50 overs (Najmul Hossain Shanto 77, Jaker Ali 45; Michael Bracwell 4-26) lost to New Zealand 240/5 in 46.1 overs (Rachin Ravindra 112, Tom Latham 55) by 5 wickets

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