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SL Olympians conduct tree planting programme

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Olympians Sriyani Kulawansa and Nimmi de Zoysa look on during a tree planting programme held at Dambulla. Sri Lanka Olympians conduct a tree planting programme at a selected school every year.

Sri Lanka Olympians, together with the Department of Forest Cotnservation, conducted a tree planting programme at the premises of D. S. Senanayake National School, Dambulla.

Sri Lanka Olympians conduct a tree planting programme every year at a selected school in one province.

Accordingly, this year’s event was successfully held with the participation of Olympians, students and a large number of enthusiasts at Dambulla.

Name plates of 77 living Olympians out of the 107 who have represented Sri Lanka were placed beside each planted sapling.

According to Sri Lanka Olympians the purpose of this tree planting initiative is to “instill in students a sense of respect and pride for Olympians and sports, to emphasize the value of physical well-being, to inspire future champions through sports, to highlight the importance of trees and encourage environmentally conscious behavior, and to contribute as much as possible to controlling global warming through social responsibility.”

The success of this event was made possible through the support and assistance of the Director and officers of the Na-Ulla/Matale Regional Forest Conservation Department, the Director of Education of the Central Province, Athula Jayawardena – Provincial Director of Sports, Lalitha Kumarihami – Principal of D. S. Senanayake National School and the academic staff, Janaka Wijesinghe – Principal of Dambulla Central College along with principals of nearby schools, the Director of the Galewela Zonal Education Office, sports directors, teacher instructors, sports teachers, and the many school children who actively participated.

Representing the Sri Lanka Olympians at this event were the Deputy Minister of Sports and Committee Member Sugath Thilakaratne, President Sriyani Kulawansha, Secretary Ruwini Abeymanna, Treasurer Nimmi de Soysa, and Committee Members Anuruddha Ratnayake, Pushpamali Ramanayake, Thamara Samandipika and K.T. N. Perera.



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Shoaib Bashir seals innings win as Sean Williams stars for spirited Zimbabwe

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Shoaib Bashir claimed 6 for 81 to break Zimbabwe's resistance [Cricinfo]

England began their home international summer with a comprehensive win over Zimbabwe after bowling them out twice inside five sessions and finishing the four-day Test with more than a day to spare. Offspinner Shoaib Bashir, playing in his 16th Test, headlined the final day with his fourth Test five-for – the most by an England player before turning 22 – and second in Nottingham.

The magnitude of the defeat did not wipe the smiles off the faces of the visitors and their boisterous fans, who filled Trent Bridge with noise and colour, and stayed to applaud them in a lap of gratitude afterwards. This was Zimbabwe’s first Test in England in 22 years and a strong expat crowd delighted in brave batting from Sean Williams, Ben Curran, Sikandar Raza and Wesley Madhevere.

Williams fell 12 short of a century and put on 122 for the second wicket while Raza reached a 10th Test half-century and shared a 65-run fifth-wicket stand with Madhevere. Zimbabwe did not disgrace themselves as they came within 45 runs of making England bat again and showed promise ahead of home Tests against South Africa, New Zealand and Afghanistan later this year.

England, meanwhile, have had their first bit of preparation ahead of a massive eight months in Tests which includes a five-match home series against India and the Ashes in Australia. They may have some concerns over their frontline seamers, who lacked some bite. Captain Ben Stokes was the most threatening on his return to bowling after hamstring surgery, and also maintained the highest pace, across his two four-over spells. In total, he bowled 11.2 in the match, while Bashir finished with nine for 143, his best match figures.

Zimbabwe began the day on 30 for 2, 270 runs behind and needing a big batting performance from someone. Williams, an international veteran of 20 years who averages 66.56 in the last five years, delivered. He played a typically energetic knock, laced with boundaries. He hit 16 fours in his innings, nine through the covers and mid-off as England overpitched and occasionally offered width. He also ushered Curran through a cautious knock that spanned 104 balls for 37 runs.

Stokes began the morning’s proceedings and immediately caused problems for Zimbabwe. His third ball was wide and full, Curran drove hard and edged past gully for four. Stokes would have known he’d also planted a seed of doubt and in his next over, he could have reaped the rewards. On 10, Curran drove the ball back to Stokes, who stuck out both hands but could not hold on in his followthrough. That would have stung and more so when Williams smoked Stokes through point and over midwicket later in the over.

Williams reached fifty in the next over with a pinpoint straight drive off Josh Tongue, off the 42nd ball he faced. In the next over, Tongue hit Williams on the bottom forearm, with a delivery that reared up from back of a length and drew blood. Williams was treated on-field and appeared unaffected as he drove a wide Atkinson ball in his favoured region for four more.

Joe Root was used for an over for Tongue to change ends and England went double-spin with the introduction of Bashir. Williams reverse-swept his first ball for four to enter the seventies. At the other end Tongue began a short-ball assault on Curran that almost paid off. Curran, having hauled his way to 29, pulled Tongue to Stokes at midwicket but the England captain could only get fingertips to it.

Curran survived again when Umpire Kumar Dharmasena gave him out lbw after he missed a sweep against Bashir but Curran reviewed. Hawkeye showed the ball was bouncing over the top of the stumps. Williams was not quite as lucky. On 88, he was hit on the pads, given out and reviewed. Replays showed the ball was clipping the top of the leg stump. Having faced 82 balls, he had been on course to reclaim the national record for fastest century that Brian Bennett’s 97-ball effort had taken on the previous day.

Post-lunch, Curran adopted a more aggressive approach and drove Bashir aerially but only as far as Stokes at short cover, for whom the third time was a charm. He had no trouble holding on. That brought Raza and Madhevere together and they took on the spin and the short ball from Sam Cook with confidence. They had a couple of nervy moments: when Bashir induced Raza’s edge once and the ball ricocheted off Jamie Smith and onto the peak of Harry Brook’s cap at first slip, which saved him from being hit on the forehead. Then, Cook got a full ball to jag back into Madhevere and hit his front pad and convinced Stokes to review. Ball-tracking showed it was missing leg stump.

In the end it took a moment of magic, and the return of Stokes, to separate the pair. He went short to Madhevere and found extra bounce, Madhevere attempted a cut but found an outside-edge and the ball seemed to be heading over second slip. Brook jumped, stuck his right hand up and plucked the ball out of the air, to everyone’s surprise. Madhevere looked back, astonished that he had to go while Stokes placed his hand over his mouth a la Stuart Broad, who celebrated in the same way when Stokes himself pulled off a blinder in the Ashes a decade ago on the same ground.

With Madhevere went Zimbabwe’s last real hope of making England bat again and the result was only a matter of time. Tafadzwa Tsiga was bowled by Bashir when he came down the track to a ball that turned in and through the bat-pad gap. Zimbabwean emotions see-sawed as Raza reached fifty in the next over when he creamed Stokes through the covers for his eighth four but in the over after that Blessing Muzarabani slog-swept Bashir straight to Root at deep midwicket. Bashir bagged his fifth when Raza, who had added two more fours to his count, tried to heave him over the leg side and managed a leading edge which Brook pouched.

Fittingly, Bashir finished things off when he struck Chivanga on the back pad as he played inside the line and was hit in front of middle and off. Richard Ngarava, Zimbabwe’s No.11, did not bat in either innings after leaving the field on the first day with a back injury.

Brief scores:
England 565 for 6 dec in 96.3 overs (Ollie Pope 171, Ben Duckett 140, Zak Crawley 124, Harry Brook 58; Blessing Muzarabani 3-141) beat Zimbabwe 265 in 63.2 overs (Brian Bennett 139, Craig Ervine 42, Sean Williams 25, Tafadzwa Tsiga 22; Gus Atkinson 2-58, Shoaib Bashir 3-62, Ben Stokes 2-11) and [f/o] 255 in 59 overs (Sean Williams 88, Ben Curran 37, Sikandar Raza 60, Wesley Madhevere 31;  Shoaib Basheer 6-81)    by an innings and 45 runs

[Cricinfo]

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Em Arlott makes up for lost time as England women romp to nine-wicket rout

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Em Arlott claimed three wickets to set up victory [Cricinfo]

Three wickets from Em Arlott, playing just her second international match, decimated West Indies as England ran away with victory in the second T20I at Hove and an unassailable 2-0 lead in their three-match series.

Arlott’s impressive spell accounted for key batters Hayley Matthews,  who had scored 100 of her side’s 146 runs in the first game at Canterbury, and Stefanie Taylor, who had returned from injury to bolster the tourists’ line-up. She also removed Zaida James, courtesy of one of two strong catches by Sophia Dunkley, and took a catch of her own to dismiss Shermaine Campbelle,  the West Indies’ highest scorer for the match with just 26.

That was off Charlie Dean, who took back-to-back wickets to finish with 2 for 12 from her four overs, while Lauren Bell took 3 for 28, including one in the opening over to set the tone for the match. Issy Wong was also economical with 1 for 10 in four overs.

Player of the match Arlott had waited a long time to make her debut in Canterbury, having been called up to the England squad during India’s visit in 2021 without playing. She missed out again the following year when she left England’s camp before the home series against South Africa began, because she was suffering the after-effects of Covid. At that point she feared her chances of playing for her country were gone. But she made up for lost time as West Indies were restricted to 81 for 9.

After losing opener Danni Wyatt-Hodge on the first ball of the reply, captain Nat Sciver Brunt and Dunkley reeled in the target with 64 balls to spare.

Matthews needed someone to go with her this time following her gallant century in a losing cause on Wednesday. But fellow opener Qiana Joseph fell cheaply once more, spooning a return catch to Bell on the third ball of the game. A double-wicket over from Arlott left West Indies reeling at 18 for 3 in the fourth over with their inspirational captain, Matthews, back in the dugout with just six runs to her name. Matthews had tried to play across the line of a length ball from Arlott which shaped in and moved off the seam and clattered into the stumps. Four balls later, Dunkley held a stunning catch, leaping to her left and tumbling at short midwicket to dismiss James.

England’s fielding demons from the T20 World Cup match between these two teams looked to be exorcised. Arlott was on a roll when she had the experienced Taylor well caught at short extra cover by Dean for a second-ball duck. That gave Arlott 3 for 7 in 14 balls. She finished her allocation with 3 for 14, including 18 dot balls.

Campbelle was also back from injury and she made some semblance of a start in trying to drag West Indies out of their predicament, reaching 26 off 36 balls. But hers was the first of two wickets to fall in as many balls to Dean with Arlott in the action again, taking a comfortable catch at long-on. Mandy Mangru followed, bowled attempting to paddle sweep and West Indies were 63 for 6. Shabika Gajnabi survived the hat-trick ball but, in the over between, Bell had Aaliyah Alleyne caught behind.

Gajnabi fell when Dunkley took another catch at backward point off Wong and Bell had her third wicket when Afy Fletcher holed out to Sciver-Brunt. England conceded just six more runs from that point but they were unable to bowl out West Indies, who set a paltry target of 82.

If failing to take 10 wickets was a hiccup in the display of ruthlessness that new England head coach Charlotte Edwards had called for on the eve of the series, her side were able to make up for it with a rapid run-chase. Wyatt-Hodge’s dismissal, bowled by James with the first ball of the innings, didn’t augur well. But Sciver-Brunt, England’s new captain, batted with authority, marshalling a powerplay of 49 for 1 and bringing up the team fifty with the first of back-to-back fours off Matthews, driven through the covers then reverse-swept.

She brought up her half-century when she was dropped by Cherry-Ann Fraser moving to her right from deep midwicket and ran two for her 17th fifty in T20Is. She then struck the winning runs with a leg-side four off Afy Fletcher. Meanwhile Dunkley, who had top-scored for England with an unbeaten 81 in the previous game, played the supporting role with an unbeaten 24 off 25 balls as England cruised to 82 for 1 in 9.2 overs.

Brief scores:

England Women 82 for 1 in 9.2 overs  (Nat Sciver-Brunt 55*, Sophia Dunkley 24*; Zaida James 1-12) beat West Indies Women 81 for 9 in 20 overs (Shemaine Campbelle 28, Shabika Gajnabi 22; Em Arlott 3-14, Lauren Bell 3-28, Charlie Dean 2-12, Issy Wong 1-10)by nine wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Brian Bennett blazes century but England scent three-day win after follow-on

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Brian Bennett recorded the fastest Test hundred by a Zimbabwean [Cricinfo]

The inequality between England and Zimbabwe as Test nations has been reflected on the field over the first half of this one-off Test match at Trent Bridge. Thursday’s flow of runs for the former was followed by a cascade of wickets from the latter, as Zimbabwe finished day two following on, 30 for 2, after being dismissed for 265 in their first innings, still 270 shy of England’s mammoth 565 for 6 declared.

And yet, the story on Friday was not of the dominating team, but of the dominated, as a lone hand by opening batter Brian Bennett to the tune of 139 made this one-way traffic watchable. Bennett’s second century in the format now ranks as Zimbabwe’s fastest, clocking in at 97 deliveries, and only their third against England.

The 21-year-old, playing in his seventh Test, now has four fifty-plus score in 12 innings. He did not take a backward step, with 104 of his runs from fours, most of them sweetly struck, including three in a row off Gus Atkinson that took him to three figures. Boundary numbers 18 (a square drive) and 19 (a punch down the ground) moved him to 99, before Atkinson offered enough width for a back-cut that was steered expertly through deep third.

An impassioned celebration was matched in the stands, as pockets of Zimbabwe supporters erupted with glee, in amongst a strong ovation from locals. And he kept all enterained with further crisp strikes, particularly down the ground, before England finally decided to test him with short deliveries.

They were vindicated when Josh Tongue, playing his first Test since the 2023 Ashes encounter at Lord’s, dug the penultimate legal delivery of the 53rd over into the armpit of Bennett, who fended to Ollie Pope at short leg. An acrobatic take was soon for nothing as replays showed Tongue had overstepped.

Bennett’s reprieve, on 139, was the fourth he had been given. But he could not make it count this time as the same duo combined legally to remove the right-hander in similar fashion, albeit with a far simpler take for Pope. Just 13 overs of play later, Bennett was making a second walk back, trapped LBW by Atkinson as the first to go in the follow-on innings for just one from nine deliveries.

As frustrating as England found Bennett’s enterprise, they were never really up against it, barring a period when his 65- and 60-run stands with Craig Ervine and Sean Williams respectively had the visitors sitting relatively pretty on 156 for 2. By the end, the hosts were able to tick off a few nuggets that may come to benefit them when India arrive next month.

Harry Brook’s morning cameo – eventually the last man to fall, for 58 – was a broadly useful hit out against a weary attack who were still a man down with left armer Richard Ngarava unable to take the field after his back spasm on day one. Five overs into Zimbabwe’s first innings, Sam Cook  having become the first England debutant to bowl the first ball in his maiden innings since Martin McCague did so here in 1993 against Australia, registered his maiden Test wicket when Ben Curran edged to Brook at second slip.

That would be Cook’s lot from his opening 17 overs in the format, 1 for 72 and a fair few narrow misses, including Bennett edging through the cordon and past his own stumps on 16 and 32 respectively. But there was better luck for Shoaib Bashir,   who became the youngest English bowler to take 50 Test wickets with the first of his 3 for 62 that has now more than doubled his first-class haul this summer. His first two across three matches for Glamorgan had come at a grim average of 152.00.

There was also encouragement for Ben Stokes,  who bagged two wickets in 11 deliveries in his first appearance of the year after replacing Bashir in the attack following a botched caught-and-bowled attempt that split the off-spinners left ring finger.

Brought on first change at the Radcliffe Road End after 12 overs, Bashir started with a full toss that was guided through extra cover by Ervine, before producing a beauty to take the left-hander’s edge, low to Brook at first slip. A bit of bounce then did for Williams, who played onto his stumps.

It looked like Bashir was done for the day when Sikandar Raza, on three, danced down the wicket and smashed back at the bowler, who put in a valiant effort to his right to claim the return catch. Bloodied, and with two balls remaining in his 13th over, Bashir had to leave the field, with Stokes using the opportunity to bowl for the first time since his hamstring operation at the start of the year.

Having teased an over here or there to taper into form, citing bowling as the hardest thing to get right following an extended period out, Stokes almost made an immediate impact. His first legal delivery – having started with a front-foot no ball – squared up Bennett on 89 but was shelled inexplicably by Root at first slip.

The error meant Stokes had to make do with a remarkable spell of two dismissals in 11 balls rather than three in 14. He was finally on the board with a devilish delivery that turned Raza inside-out – this time an edge flying through to Jamie Smith behind the stumps – before Wessly Madhevere was unpicked by the surprise inswinger after a diet of outswingers, handing the No.6 batter a 10-ball duck.

Bashir eventually returned in the evening session, and made up for lost time with an immediate pearler when reintroduced to the attack for the 57th over, bowling Tafadzwa Tsiga through the gate with a classic off-break. An aborted caught-and-bowled chance off Blessing Murzarabani was a wilfully missed opportunity for a fourth, his injured finger clearly a factor, but the end came quickly when Atkinson found the tall quick backing away for the ninth and final dismissal.

Atkinson soon had his third of the day when Bennett was undone by a lack of bounce, and Ervine’s tame bunt to short leg – another for the Tongue-Pope combo – was followed by a slow trudge off from the Zimbabwe captain.

Even allowing for Bennett’s brilliance, it has been a tough couple of days for otherwise willing opponents. Day three promises to be tougher still.

Brief scores:
Zimbabwe 265 in 63.2 overs (Brian Bennett 139, Craig Ervine 42, Sean Williams 25, Tafadzwa Tsiga 22; Gus Atkinson 2-58, Shoaib Bashir 3-62, Ben Stokes 2-11) and [f/o] 30 for 2 in 10 overs (Sean Williams 22*, Ben Curran 4*; Gus Atkinson 1-01)trail  England 565 for 6 dec in 96.3 overs (Ollie Pope 171, Ben Duckett 140, Zak Crawley 124, Harry Brook 58; Blessing Muzarabani 3-141)  by 270 runs

[Cricinfo]

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