Sports
Yupun among top 15 as World Championship commences today
by Reemus Fernando
Olympic medallist Susanthika Jayasinghe’s 22.55 seconds feat to win her second World Championship medal, a bronze, in Osaka in 2007 was the 16th fastest performance in the world in the women’s 200 metres that season (2007). No Sri Lankan sprinter, male or female had produced performances that could be ranked among the top 20 in the world since Jayasinghe’s medal winning feat, until Italy-based sprinter Yupun Abeykoon produced a stunning sub 10 seconds feat in the 100 metres early this month. Abeykoon will compete in the men’s 100 metres preliminaries as the 15th fastest sprinter on the globe this season when the World Athletics Championships commences in Oregon, USA today.
Alongside Abeykoon, there are two others who have clocked 9.96 seconds sharing the 15th position. USA’s Kyree King, who is not competing in the individual event and Botswana’s Letsile Tebogo are also ranked 15th with the same performance. The current position the 27-year-old is enjoying matches the target that his coach had set for him.
After joining the sub 10 seconds club in track and field’s glamorous discipline, Abeykoon told his fans that a medal at the Asian Games which was to be held this year and running the semi-finals at the World Championship were among the targets that they had set for this year.
The Asian Games was postponed but Abeykoon has risen above the rest of the sprinters in Asia this season. He is the fastest Asian in the 100 metres this year and also the only Asian to run sub 10 seconds this year.
Like a host of other athletes heading for Oregon, Sri Lanka’s trio of Abeykoon, Gayanthika Abeyratne and Nilani Ratnayake remained uncertain about their participation in the championships until the last moment due to delays in obtaining US visas. That must have had a huge impact on him as he takes to the field two days after landing.
Irrespective of the competitors that he will be meeting in the heats, Abeykoon is expected to advance to the next round and from there on it would be anybody’s game. The World Athletics was yet to publish the start lists of the men’s 100 metres when this edition went to press.
Sports
Gura: The unsung hero
The autobiography of Mr. Ranjit Fernando, launched last month, offers a fascinating peek behind the curtain into how a clutch of Sri Lanka’s finest cricketers were groomed in their formative years. Mr. Fernando was in charge when the Sri Lanka Under-19 side toured Australia in 1984 under the captaincy of Aravinda de Silva, a team that read like a who’s who of future stars, featuring Roshan Mahanama, Asanka Gurusinha and Jerome Jayaratne among others. The Aussies had Mark Taylor, the Waugh brothers and Craig McDermott.
As Mr. Fernando kept a watchful eye on his young charges, there was mischief brewing beneath the surface. At the book launch at the Galle Face Hotel, Aravinda let the cat out of the bag. Gurusinha, it turns out, had masterminded a daring escape plan, players sneaking out through the hotel window, climbing onto the roof and sliding down a pole to freedom to enjoy the night life in Brisbane..
Mr. Fernando, ever the hawk-eyed disciplinarian, caught wind of the escapade. Yet in a twist that raised a few eyebrows, it was Gurusinha who was handed the captaincy for the next Under-19 tour to England. Some insist Fernando had missed the mischief; others, who know him better, reckon he was playing a long game, setting a thief to catch thieves, backing a natural leader who could keep the dressing room in check.
Fast forward to 1996 and Gurusinha found himself cast in a very different role on cricket’s biggest stage. During Sri Lanka’s victorious World Cup campaign, he was often seen as the quiet man at the crease, a grafter in a team of dashers. To the untrained eye, his batting seemed workmanlike, even pedestrian. Fans, spoilt for choice with the pyrotechnics of Sanath Jayasuriya, Romesh Kaluwitharana and Aravinda de Silva, wanted fireworks, not forward defence. In a line-up full of strokemakers, many wondered what Gurusinha brought to the table.
Gura was no mug with the bat. He could clear the ropes and put bowlers to the sword when the situation demanded. But in that 1996 campaign, every cog in the wheel had a purpose. His job was to drop anchor, bat time and allow the strokemakers to play with freedom around him. It was a role that demanded discipline, selflessness and a thick skin, especially when the crowd was baying for boundaries.
While others were flaying attacks and ending the careers of bowlers like Manoj Prabhakar and Richard Illingworth, Gura was content to rotate the strike, even if it meant playing second fiddle. The fans, unaware of the team’s blueprint, were not always appreciative. Their impatience did not go unnoticed.
At one point, a frustrated Gurusinha had had enough. He approached captain Arjuna Ranatunga and Manager Duleep Mendis, keen to throw off the shackles and play his natural game. But the think tank stood firm, urging him to see the bigger picture, to play for the team, not the gallery. Gurusinha bought in, rolled up his sleeves and stuck to the script. The rest, as they say, is history.
As Sri Lanka marked the 30th anniversary of that famous triumph this week, Gurusinha reflected on the campaign in an interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, offering fresh insight into the tactical nous that underpinned their success.
Sri Lanka’s batting line-up featured four left-handers in the top seven, no accident, but a calculated move. The plan was clear: take on Shane Warne, Australia’s trump card and knock him off his rhythm.
The Australians had a well-worn blueprint, build pressure through dot balls, squeeze the scoring and force batters into mistakes. Sri Lanka were determined not to fall into that trap. At that stage of his career, Warne was still developing his armoury and did not possess a reliable wrong’un to trouble left-handers.
When Jayasuriya fell early in the final, the baton passed to Gurusinha. True to plan, he stepped up, using his feet, unsettling Warne and disrupting Australia’s chokehold. It was a knock that didn’t grab headlines but played a crucial hand in tilting the contest Sri Lanka’s way.
For many, the World Cup win was life-changing; lucrative contracts for players, solid match fees and financial security followed. But Gurusinha’s story took a different turn. He walked away from the game the very same year, at just 29, missing out on the financial rewards that came in the aftermath.
Cricket, however, remembers more than just numbers and pay cheques. It remembers moments, roles played under pressure and men who put the team before self.In that sense, Asanka Gurusinha remains what every great side needs but few celebrate, the glue that held it all together. An unsung hero, in every sense of the word.
by Rex Clementine
Sports
British School out to retain Sohail Memorial Trophy
The British School in Colombo will look to retain the Hasan Sohail Memorial Trophy when they take on traditional rivals Colombo International School (CIS) in their annual limited overs cricket encounter on Sunday at the Sri Lanka Land Development Corporation Grounds in Nawala.
The British School in Colombo are the current holders of the Hasan Sohail Memorial Trophy after they edged out CIS by one run in a thrilling match played last year at the same venue.
On that occasion the British School in Colombo piled up 183 for three in 25 overs after they were invited to bat first and then restricted their opponents to 182 for four in 25 overs.
This rivalry between the British School in Colombo and CIS began in 2023 with a Twenty20 match, where CIS claimed victory at the same venue. However, the 2024 encounter was washed out due to bad weather.
Lesith Semika will lead the CIS team while Thisath Ganegoda will captain the British School in Colombo.
Sports
Mabarana, Pehesara steady Mahinda after Rajapakshe five-for
Mahinda College fought back strongly to reach 90 for two wickets at stumps in reply to Richmond College’s 315 on day two of the Lovers’ Quarrel Big Match at the Galle International Stadium on Friday.
In a similar pattern to their arch rivals’ start, Mahinda suffered an early setback, losing two quick wickets in the opening phase of their innings. However, the third-wicket pair of Randula Mabarana and Dineth Pehesara restored stability with a composed stand, ensuring the team closed the day without further damage.
Earlier in the day, spinner Manitha Rajapakshe delivered a standout performance, claiming a five-wicket haul to bring an end to Richmond’s marathon first innings, which extended from day one into the post-lunch session on the second day.
Richmond had recovered impressively from early trouble after slipping to 11 for two on the opening morning. A patient and resilient 173-run partnership for the third wicket between Ravinu Randinu and Ameesha Rasanjana laid the foundation for their competitive total. The duo batted through the bulk of day one and looked set for bigger scores before both were dismissed in the 80s by Sadew Nethmina and Kaveesha Githmal.
Further contributions from Nethusha Nimsara, Nethuja Basitha and Punal Hansajith helped Richmond consolidate, particularly as they faced a sustained and threatening spell from Rajapakshe, who bowled tirelessly to keep Mahinda in the contest.With Mahinda still trailing but having wickets in hand, the match remains finely poised heading into the third day.
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