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Sri Lanka facing a mountain in second Test

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Prabath Jayasuriya, the quiet assassin, bagged a five-wicket haul—the tenth of his career but his first away from home

Rex Clementine
in Port Elizabeth

Sri Lanka’s tour of South Africa this year feels like a Shakespearean tragedy – full of promise but undone by self-inflicted wounds. The team’s batting has been about as reliable as a chocolate teapot, and their hopes of reaching the World Test Championship final are slipping through their fingers like sand in an hourglass.

In the second Test, Sri Lanka had South Africa on the ropes. A first-innings lead of over 100 runs seemed all but certain as they headed into the third day. But instead of tightening the screws, they pressed the self-destruct button with a series of reckless shots, the worst offender being Dhananjaya de Silva, who earned the ire of fans and teammates alike.

Sri Lanka’s skipper, the right-handed version of David Gower, often mesmerizes with his elegance at the crease. He makes batting look as effortless as slicing through butter with a hot knife. But, like Gower, he has an uncanny knack for gifting his wicket away when least expected. He did it in Durban, and he repeated the trick in Port Elizabeth on day three.

With the new ball taken, Sri Lanka’s priority was to weather the storm and see off the first hour. But at the end of an over, Dhananjaya signaled for his bat to be taped. Enter the substitutes, bearing three shiny new Stanford blades. Yet, instead of swapping bats, he decided to tape it up, prompting the umpires to hustle him along.

What followed was pure comedy – or tragedy, depending on your allegiance. Off the very next ball, a wide delivery from Dane Paterson, Dhananjaya swung with all the subtlety of a bull in a China shop and was promptly caught in the slips. It was a lapse in concentration. To add insult to injury, his dismissal triggered a domino effect, with two more wickets falling in the same over. Cricket, as they say, is a funny old game.

From dreams of a healthy lead, Sri Lanka found themselves 30 runs adrift at the end of the first innings.

Despite the batting implosion, Sri Lanka’s bowlers deserve a standing ovation. They bowled with heart, running in tirelessly to make life miserable for the Proteas. Prabath Jayasuriya, the quiet assassin, bagged a five-wicket haul—the tenth of his career but his first away from home. His exuberant celebrations seemed to shout, “Who says I can’t do it overseas?”

Meanwhile, Lahiru Kumara was breathing fire. Not only did he add wickets to his tally, but he also rattled South African batters—literally. In one over, he hit both Kagiso Rabada and Dane Paterson on the helmet, serving up a spicy dose of their own medicine.

Chasing 348 runs to win, Sri Lanka reached tea on day four at 60 for two, with veterans Angelo Mathews and Dinesh Chandimal holding the fort. While no team has ever chased such a target in South Africa, cricket is a game of glorious uncertainties. For now, Sri Lanka’s immediate goal will be to drag the contest into the fifth day before daring to dream of an upset.

The team’s resilience on this tour has been admirable – they’ve fought tooth and nail even when backed into corners. Yet, their Achilles’ heel has been batter’s inability to sustain pressure over extended periods.

Dhananjaya’s dismissal in the first innings was symptomatic of Sri Lanka’s woes. Pathum Nissanka, too, is guilty of squandering opportunities. Only five Sri Lankans have ever scored centuries in South Africa – a testament to how tough batting conditions are here. Pathum, having done the hard yards to reach 89, inexplicably charged down the track to Keshav Maharaj and perished, throwing away what could have been a landmark knock.

The openers had shown grit in the first innings, putting on 41 runs for the first wicket while seeing off 16 overs. That effort laid a solid foundation for the middle order. But in the second innings, the script unraveled.

Dimuth Karunaratne’s miserable run continued as Kagiso Rabada dismissed him yet again. In 2024, Dimuth’s willow has been quieter than a library at midnight – 19 Test innings, just five half-centuries and no hundreds. Pathum Nissanka followed suit soon after for a meager 18, leaving the team wobbling.



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World Cup 2026: Italy’s football chief resigns after qualifying failure

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Gabriele Gravina, left, and UEFA President Aleksander Ceferin in the stands at the Bosnia and Herzegovina football match against Italy [Aljazeera]

The head of Italy’s football federation (FIGC) has resigned, falling on his sword after the men’s national team failed to qualify for a World Cup for a third consecutive time.

Gabriele Gravina revealed he would step down as the country’s top football official following a meeting held at the FIGC’s headquarters in Rome on Thursday.

His announcement came a day after Sport Minister Andrea Abodi called on him to resign.

Four-time World Cup winners Italy fell at the playoffs again on Tuesday, this time after a penalty shootout against Bosnia and Herzegovina, and will miss this year’s finals in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

The shock waves of the latest humiliation for one of the world’s most successful football nations forced Gravina, 72, to go back on his initial plans to wait until a FIGC board meeting next week to announce a decision on his future.

The FIGC said in a statement that a vote for a new president would be held on June 22.

Giovanni Malago, the former longtime head of the Italian National Olympic Committee who was president of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics organisation committee, is reportedly one of the names in the hat.

Before then, head coach Gennaro Gattuso is expected to also step down, while general manager Gianluigi Buffon, the former Italy goalkeeper, announced his resignation on Thursday.

Italy’s failure to reach the first-ever 48-team World Cup – which will feature the likes of Cape Verde and Curacao – led Abodi to release a statement saying: “It’s clear that Italian football needs to be rebuilt from the ground up and that starts with changes at the top of the FIGC.”

[Aljazeera]

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Arya and Shreyas star as Punjab Kings breach Chennai Super King’s fortress again

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Shreyas Iyer and Nehal Wadhera took Punjab Kings close to home [Cricinfo]

Punjab are the Kings of 200 plus chases in the IPL. They’d done it eight times before Friday night, and they did it again as Priyansh Arya and Shreyas Iyer laid waste to the Chennai Super Kings bowling attack. Arya had 33 off 9 when the PBKS fifty came up in the fourth over of their innings. Shreyas was 4 off 5 before accelerating to a 26-ball fifty.

CSK are now winless after two games and what will worry them is that they were outplayed in conditions that enhance their strength. They have a strong top five. Pitches like this one, which allow them to hit through the line, makes them stronger. But the 209 for 5 they put up didn’t cover for the weakness in their bowling.

PBKS’ win was their fourth in a row against CSK at the MA Chidambaram Stadium.

An 18-year-old who came into a struggling team mid-season last year and emerged as one of their best players might have had reason to believe he had established himself. But with the arrival of Sanju Samson, Ayush Mhatre was bumped down from opener to No. 3. Samson hasn’t been able to get going, falling for two single-digit scores, but the knock-on effect that had on Friday was that Mhatre was out there in the powerplay. And with the field up, he had the liberty to play his shots, and some of them were just so good, including a forehand smash across the line against Vyshak Vijaykumar.

Mhatre was dismissed on the pull shot in the first game of CSK’s season. In the lead-up to this one, Mike Hussey with the whanger kept feeding him short balls and he kept working on the swivel-pull. That work paid off. The third boundary he hit – of three back-to-back – was a confident swivel-pull – and Mhatre deserves more credit for it because the first two were full balls that he had put away over mid-on to engineer that change in length from Xavier Bartlett.

Later, when the field spread and the PBKS bowlers were having success keeping others quiet with wide yorkers – Shivam Dube was 14 off 14 at one point – Mhatre dug one out for a single. That was 10.2. By 10.5, he’d found a solution for a ball the bowler thought was a banker – bringing the bat down as he had done before but this time opening the face to beat short third and backward point to their right and deep point to the left. It was a shot that combined quick thinking with perfect timing.

Mhatre was dropped on 59 and 67 and eventually fell for 73 off 43. At the time, the other end had contributed 38 off 32. The extras chipped in with 12.

Mhatre fell during a period where PBKS picked up three wickets for 20 runs in three overs. In that time, CSK’s projected score slipped from 200 to 185.

CSK’s middle order is a problem with Dewald Brevis recovering from a side injury. But it didn’t feel like a problem while Sarfaraz Khan was at the crease. As a domestic stalwart, he has seen it all and done it all. As one of the IPL’s first teenage stars, when he was sharing a dressing room with Virat Kohli and Chris Gayle, he has always got T20 cricket. Some of his shots were so cool. There was one where it seemed like he’d left a bouncer, the ball going past him before he pushed his bat up at it and sent it for six over the keeper. There were several that he nonchalantly deflected to the deep third boundary and these were off deliveries that the bowler thought he had done well, either going yorker or going into the wicket without giving any room. Sarfaraz’s 32 off 12 balls carried CSK to 209 for 5. It was the first 200-plus score at Chepauk in the IPL since April 2024.

This was a day for breathtaking cameos. Arya topped Sarfaraz’s efforts with 39 off 11 balls. PBKS assistant coach Brad Haddin recalled how Arya had wowed the whole coaching staff when he started batting in the camp ahead of IPL 2025. The bat speed in particular was unbelievable. But what really impressed Haddin was that when Arya joined the team ahead of this season, he had improved on his strengths. He had downed CSK with a century last year. He needed just 11 balls to down them this year. The shots were pure too. There was an on-the-up cover drive for four with zero follow-through that told CSK what they were giving him just wasn’t good enough. PBKS brought up their fifty in the fourth over. They downed more than 30% of the target inside the powerplay.

CSK’s bowlers created a little bit of pressure between the ninth and 12th overs when they were gifted Prabhsimran Singh’s wicket through a run-out and Cooper Connolly’s off a full-toss. At the start of the 13th over, PBKS’ chances of victory, according to the ESPNcricinfo forecaster, was 45%. CSK brought on Rahul Chahar to see if they could push their advantage. Shreyas whacked him for two sixes, moved from 4 off 5 to 19 off 10. PBKS’ chances of winning after those six balls was up at 65%. It didn’t take long for that figure to hit 100. Shreyas helped himself to a 26-ball fifty.

Brief scores:
Punjab Kings 210 for 5 in 18.4 overs  (Priyansh Arya 39, Prabhsimran Singh  43, Cooper Connolly 36, Shreyas Iyer 50, Nehal Wadhera 10, Shashnak Singh 14*;   Anshul Kamboj 2-43, Matt Henry 2-54) beat Chennai Super Kings 209 for 5 in 20 overs (Rutraj Gaikwad 28, Ayush Mhatre 73, Shivam Dube 45, Sarfaraz Khan 32; Xavier Bartlett 1-48, Marco Jansen 1-43, Vijayakumar  Vyshak 2-38, Yuzvendfa Chahal 1-21)  by five wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Chamodi Prabodha to lead Sri Lanka women’s U19 National Team for the tour of Australia

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Chamodi Praboda

The Sri Lanka Cricket Selection Panel has named a 15-member squad for the upcoming Tri- Series tour of Australia, which will also feature England.

During the tour, the team will play a total of six matches, comprising two One Day and four T20 games, scheduled for the 7th, 8th, 12th, 13th, 17th, and 18th of April.

The squad departed for Australia on Friday.

Sri Lanka women’s U19 National Team for the tour of Australia:

Chamodi Praboda [c], VimokshaBalasuriya, Sanjana Kavindi, Umayangana Peiris, Nethagi Isuranjali, Shashini Gimhani, PramudiMethsara, Limansa Thilakeratne, Nethumi Upeksha, Aseni Thalagune, Chamodi Herath, Danodya Sewmini, Yeshali Jithara, Daria Dissanayake, Shayani Thennakoon

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