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Sri Lanka bank on home advantage for elusive semifinal appearance

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Sri Lanka have more or less named a settled squad for the global event. (Getty)

‎Sri Lanka are co-hosts for the ICC Women’s World Cup but for most of the ICC Women’s ODI Championship cycle from 2022 to 2025 they weren’t. The India-Pakistan standoff has meant that the nation will be hosting a women’s World Cup for the first time, and the dream of an elusive World Cup semi-final beckons larger than ever before for Sri Lanka. Their ODI record in 2025 reads poorly having won only two of the eight ODIs they have played, with one no-result. They endured a no-result in the warm-up leading up to the tournament and fell agonisingly short against Bangladesh by one run in their second warm-up match.

‎Despite the lack of recent results, Sri Lanka have more or less named a settled squad for the global event. Led by veteran Chamari Athapaththu, who is playing her third World Cup – in what could be her last hurrah in the 50-over format, the team has a decent combination of power, flair and a budding crop of youngsters alongside a heavily bolstered spin attack, and a pace attack with enough variety to hold its own.

‎Hasini Perera and Vishmi Gunaratne have given Sri Lanka solid starts but they will need to work on dominating the PowerPlay to get the team up and running. Athapaththu’s power is complemented by Harshitha Samarawickrama’s finesse. The latter is heading into the tournament with four fifties in her last eight outings and her decent average of 48 during this time has made her the glue of the batting order. With the experienced Nilakshika de Silva and Anushka Sanjeewani to follow, the batting department seems to be in good hands.

‎With five of their seven league games to be played at the R Premadasa Stadium in Colombo, Sri Lanka have turned to spin with low and slow tracks expected to be on offer. The spin quartet is led by the experienced Inoka Ranaweera, Sri Lanka’s second highest wicket-taker in ODIs, they also have Sugandika Dasanyake and young Dewmi Vihanga and Kaveesha Dilhari to turn their arm. Despite only having played five ODIs in her career, with six wickets to her name, Malki Madara will lead the pace attack while Udeshika Prabodhani has been recalled to the Sri Lanka ODI squad having not made an appearance this year.

‎Returning to the World Cup after a gap of eight years, having heartbreakingly missed out on the 2022 edition of the Women’s World Cup in New Zealand – primarily due to not having played an ODI in 2020 and 2021, Sri Lanka will fight tooth and nail for a spot in the last four which has they have always yearned for.

‎They might not have won many ODIs this year but they did come up trumps against South Africa and India in the tri-series in April and May at home, and even reached the final before losing out to India. Sri Lanka might not catch the eyeballs like the heavyweights of the women’s game do but they have shown that every now and then, they can shock an opposition.

‎Squad:Chamari Athapaththu (c), Anushka Sanjeewani (wk) (vc), Vishmi Gunaratne, Harshitha Samarawickrama, Sugandika Dasanayaka, Nilakshika de Silva, Imesha Dulani, Hasini Perera, Kavisha Dilhari, Piumi Wathsala Badalge, Dewmi Vihanga, Sugandika Kumari, Inoka Ranweera, Udeshika Prabhodani, Malki Madara, Achini Kulasuriya.



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Madushani breaks two indoor national records

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Madushani Herath

Jumpers Madushani Herath and Pasindu Malshan and distance runner Rasara Wijesuriya took the opportunity at the Asian Indoor Championship to improve the National Indoor Records of their respective disciplines.

‎Nannapurawa athlete Herath was placed seventh in the triple jump final but her performance of 13.10 metres emerged as the best feat so far by a Sri Lankan woman at an Indoor event.

‎She cleared 13.10 metres to improve on the record held by Hashini Prabodha.

‎She also improved on the national indoor long jump record with a feat of 6.11 metres.

‎Malshan was placed fifth with a feat of 15.70 metres in the men’s triple jump. His feat erased the national indoor record held by Manjula Kumara.

‎Wijesuriya took 24 seconds off the record held by the US based athlete Hiruni Wijeratne (9:46.35 secs) with a feat of 9:22.97 seconds in the 3,000 metres.

Sri Lakan athletes rarely compete indoors and could not win podium places at the Asian Indoor Championship took place in Tianjin, China.

by Reemus Fernando

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Kamindu Mendis, Kusal Mendis, spinners script Sri Lanka’s win

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Kusal Mendis was off the blocks quickly (Cricinfo)

Sri Lanka 163 for 6 in 20 overs  (Pathum Nissanka 24, Kamil Mishara

Catches win matches. Ireland dropped seven, of varying difficulty, and that proved to be a major factor in their 20-run loss to Sri Lanka at the R Premadasa Stadium.

Sent in, Sri Lanka started briskly but the Ireland spinners George Dockrell and Gareth Delany,  handcuffed them in the middle overs. After 16 overs, they were on 104 for 4. That they could add another 59 to finish on a competitive 163 for 6 was down to Ireland’s sloppy fielding.

Kamindu Mendis was dropped on 14; he went on to smash 44 off 19 balls. Kusal Mendis  was first put down on 34; he finished on 56 not out off 43. The pair added 67 off 30 balls for the fifth wicket to inject the much-needed momentum.

Ireland made a solid start to their chase, reaching 52 for 1 in seven overs. But Wanidu Hasaranga, who had hurt his hamstring after sending down just two balls, derailed them. Bowling with hardly any follow-through, he picked up 3 for 25 from his four overs. Maheesh Theekshana also took three, hastening the end as Ireland were bowled out for 143 in 19.5 overs.

Earlier, Kamil Mishara barely looked assured during his brief stay. In the third over, he hit one uppishly back towards Barry McCarthy but the bowler had little time to react. In the same over, he was dropped by Ross Adair at short midwicket. But Mishara failed to make it count. In the following over, he was caught at mid-off off a slower delivery from Mark Adair. Kusal started briskly, hitting three fours in his first eight balls to take Sri Lanka to 50 for 1 by the end of the powerplay.

After the powerplay, Ireland deployed spin from both ends. That put the brakes on the scoring rate. Pathum Nissanka went for the cut against Dockrell and was caught at extra cover. Pavan Rathnayake tried to upper-cut the spinner, only for the ball to hit the middle stump. That left Sri Lanka on 68 for 3 in the 11th over.

Such was the stranglehold of the Ireland spinners that Sri Lanka couldn’t hit a boundary for 56 balls after the powerplay. All told, Ireland bowled 13 overs of spin, the most by them in a T20I.

Kamindu ended the boundary drought in the 16th over when he reverse-swept Delany for four over backward point. After that, Ireland made one fielding mistake after another to cede the advantage. In the 17th over, bowled by Matthew Humphreys, Kusal was reprieved twice and Kamindu once. The Kamindu chance at long-off went for six. To rub it in, he hit the next two balls for four, making it a 21-run over.

There was another drop in the following over, with Ross Adair putting down Kusal off Mark Adair at deep square leg. The wheels completely came off in the 19th. McCarthy started with a beamer down the leg side, which Kamindu put away for four. When the free hit arrived after two wides, Kamindu pulled it for a six. McCarthy did send back Kamindu and Dasun Shanaka off successive balls but ended up conceding 19 from the over. Lasting 11 balls, it was the joint longest over in the T20 World Cup history.  Kusal, who largely played second fiddle to Kamindu, brought up his half-century in the final over.

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England survive Nepal scare to clinch last-ball thriller

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Sam Curran defended nine off the final over (Cricinfo)
Nepal came within a single blow of off the biggest win in their sporting history, falling agonisingly short of chasing 185 against England in Mumbai. They needed 13 off the last nine balls after Lokesh Bam’s late assault, but Sam Curran’s nerveless, five-run final over allowed England to breathe a huge sigh of relief as they made a winning start to the T20 World  Cup.

Tasked with chasing a stiff target after half-centuries from Jacob Bethell and Harry Brook, Nepal came out swinging. Kushal Bhurtel set the tone by hitting three boundaries in four balls off Jofra Archer, before Dependra Singh Airee and Rohit Pandel’s  superb stand – worth 82 off 54 balls – left 62 runs required off the final six overs.

When both men fell in the space of eight balls, the game looked as good as done. But nobody told Bam, who hit consecutive streaky boundaries off Curran before launching Archer for two towering sixes. Luke Wood’s 19th over cost 14 runs as he struggled to find his line, slashed away for two more boundaries by Bam, leaving ten required off the last.

But Curran stuck to his yorker plan at the death, leaving Bam needing to clear the ropes off the last ball. He could only toe-end it out to deep extra cover, and England celebrated a nerve-jangling win. It was more heartbreak for Nepal, after their one-run defeat to South Africa in St Vincent in the 2024 edition of this tournament, but they ran England incredibly close.

Will Jacks was named player of the match, dismissing Bhurtel and belting 39 not out from No. 7, including three final-over sixes to end England’s innings on a high note. The contrast with Nepal’s run chase was evident and Paudel must have rued his decision to return to his seamers at the death, leaving the effective Airee’s fourth over unused.

“The whole of Nepal came here to support us,” Paudel said after a heart-breaking defeat. “It’s great to see them here and that motivates us: when we went to the ground, we carry your hopes, we carry your belief. Today, we gave everything, and all of Nepal will be very proud of us.”

England came into this World Cup riding high after a 3-0 series win in Sri Lanka, but looked off the pace with the ball. Liam Dawson, finally playing his first match at an ICC event aged 35, was the exception, taking 2 for 21 from his four overs, but Archer and Adil Rashid – usually England’s bankers – were uncharacteristically expensive as Nepal took them down.

Paudel and Airee built steadily, running hard between the wickets and seizing on any width. Airee was strong on the sweep and reverse, while Paudel hoisted Rashid over midwicket for a slog-swept six. Nepal were slightly behind the required rate for most of the innings, but never let it creep past 12 runs per over.

The pair took 19 runs off Rashid’s third over, the 14th of the innings, as England’s legspinner went wicketless for the first time in 25 T20Is. Paudel clattered a drag-down for six, Airee drilled him through the covers, and then played the shot of the night when reverse-slog-sweeping him over point.

Both men were caught in the deep in quick succession, Airee holing out to cover off Curran and Paudel brilliantly held by a diving Salt at midwicket off Dawson. But Bam was rewarded for his attacking intent, slamming two slower balls for six during Archer’s 22-run final over, and taking the game right down to the wire.

England looked to exploit the fielding restrictions on a pitch that they expected would slow down as the day wore on, but lost three wickets within the first 6.1 overs. On each occasion, a Nepal bowler struck inside the first three balls of their first over, perhaps benefitting from the fact that they had never previously come up against England in any international match.

Neither England opener made it out of the powerplay. Sher Malla, the debutant offspinner, sparked wild celebrations when his first ball was top-edged to short fine leg by Salt, while Jos Buttler fiddled Nandan Khan’s length ball behind for 26, just as he looked like he was about to take the game away from Nepal.

Tom Banton, preferred to Ben Duckett at No. 4 after a strong series in Sri Lanka, was given an early life when Malla put down a caught-and-bowled chance in his follow-through off the final delivery of the powerplay. But he did not make Malla pay for his drop, and was trapped lbw by Sandeep Lamichhane off the very next ball of the innings to leave England 57 for 3.

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