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2 gold medals for Sri Lanka in the World Para Grand Prix Championship

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Sri Lankan athletes were able to win 2 gold medals and one silver medal in the events held yesterday at the World Para Grand Prix Indoor Sports Championship. Anil Prasanna Jayalath and Saman Subasinghe won gold medals while Nuvan Indika managed to win a silver medal.

Anil Prasanna Jayalath became the gold medalist in the 100m T42 event while Saman Subasinghe won the gold medal in the 400m T42 event. The young Indian won a silver medal in the 100m T44 event. This tournament will be very important to qualify for the 2024 Paralympic tournament.

ලෝක පැරා ග්‍රෑන්ඩ් ප්‍රික්ස් ශූරතා තරගාවලියේ දී ශ්‍රී ලංකාවට රන් පදක්කම් 2ක්

ලෝක පැරා ග්‍රෑන්ඩ් ප්‍රික්ස් මළල ක්‍රීඩා ශූරතා තරගාවලියේ ඊයේ පැවති ඉසව්වලදී ශ්‍රී ලංකාවට රන් පදක්කම් 2ක් හා එක් රිදී පදක්කමක් හිමිකරදීමට ශ්‍රී ලංකා ක්‍රීඩකයන්ට හැකිවිය. එහිදී අනිල් ප්‍රසන්න ජයලත් හා සමන් සුබසිංහ යන ක්‍රීඩකයන් දෙදෙනා රන් පදක්කම් ජයග්‍රහණය කරද්දී නුවන් ඉන්දික රිදී පදක්කමක් ජයග්‍රහණය කිරීමට සමත් විය.

අනිල් ප්‍රසන්න ජයලත් මීටර් 100 T42 ඉසව්වෙහි රන් පදක්කම් ලාභියා බවට පත් වද්දී මීටර් 400 T42 ඉසව්වෙහි රන් පදක්කම් දිනාගැනීමට සමන් සුබසිංහට හැකිවිය. නුවන් ඉන්දික ක්‍රීඩකයා රිදී පදක්කමක් ජයග්‍රහණය කිරීමට සමත් වූයේ මීටර් 100 T44 ඉසව්වෙනි. 2024 වසරේ පැවැත්වෙන පැරා ඔලිම්පික් තරගාවලිය වෙනුවෙන් සුදුසුකම් ලබා ගැනීම සදහා මෙම තරගාවලිය ඉතා වැදගත් වනු ඇත.

உலக பாரா கிராண்ட் பிரிக்ஸ் சாம்பியன்ஷிப்பில் இலங்கைக்கு 2 தங்கப் பதக்கங்கள்

உலக பாரா கிராண்ட் பிரிக்ஸ் உள்ளக விளையாட்டு சம்பியன்ஷிப் போட்டியில் நேற்று நடைபெற்ற நிகழ்வுகளில் இலங்கை வீராங்கனைகள் 2 தங்கப் பதக்கங்களையும் ஒரு வெள்ளிப் பதக்கத்தையும் வெல்ல முடிந்தது. அனில் பிரசன்ன ஜயலத் மற்றும் சமன் சுபசிங்க ஆகியோர் தங்கப் பதக்கங்களையும், நுவன் இந்திக்க வெள்ளிப் பதக்கத்தையும் வென்றனர்.

அனில் பிரசன்ன ஜயலத் 100 மீற்றர் T42 போட்டியில் தங்கப் பதக்கத்தை வென்றார், சமன் சுபசிங்க 400m T42 போட்டியில் தங்கப் பதக்கத்தை வென்றார். இளம் இந்திய வீரர் 100 மீட்டர் டி44 போட்டியில் வெள்ளிப் பதக்கம் வென்றார். 2024 பாராலிம்பிக் போட்டிக்கு தகுதி பெற இந்த போட்டி மிகவும் முக்கியமானதாக இருக்கும்.

Cricket

Sri Lanka vs New Zealand in T20 World Cup: Head-to-Head Record, Past Results & Winning Trends

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As Sri Lanka prepare to face New Zealand in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup, history shows a competitive rivalry — but one where the Black Caps hold a slight statistical edge.

Here’s a closer look at the Sri Lanka vs New Zealand head-to-head record, their T20 World Cup results, and recent winning momentum.

Overall T20 Head-to-Head Record

  • Total Matches: 28
  • New Zealand Wins: 16
  • Sri Lanka Wins: 11
  • No Result: 1

New Zealand have won 57% of the encounters, giving them the overall advantage. However, Sri Lanka have delivered key performances on the World Cup stage.

Sri Lanka vs New Zealand – T20 World Cup History

2007 – Sri Lanka’s Dominant Chase

Johannesburg
New Zealand: 164/7
Sri Lanka: 168/3 (18.5 overs)
Result: Sri Lanka won by 7 wickets

Sanath Jayasuriya’s 61 guided Sri Lanka to a comfortable chase. It remains one of Sri Lanka’s strongest T20 World Cup wins over New Zealand.

2010 – Last-Ball Drama

Providence
Sri Lanka: 135/6
New Zealand: 139/8 (19.5 overs)
Result: New Zealand won by 2 wickets

Sri Lanka defended hard, but New Zealand held their nerve to win with one ball remaining.

2012 – Thriller in Pallekele

Pallekele
New Zealand: 174/7
Sri Lanka: 174/6
Match tied – Sri Lanka won Super Over

One of the most dramatic T20 World Cup games between the two sides. Sri Lanka held their composure in the Super Over on home soil.

2022 – New Zealand’s Big Win

Sydney
New Zealand: 167/7
Sri Lanka: 102 all out
Result: New Zealand won by 65 runs

A heavy defeat for Sri Lanka, marked by a batting collapse while chasing 168.

Recent Form Comparison

New Zealand – Last 5 Matches

W, W, L, W, Abandoned
Strong consistency
Clinical in pressure situations

Sri Lanka – Last 5 Matches

W, W, W, L, L
Positive run earlier
Slight dip in recent matches

New Zealand appear slightly more consistent heading into recent contests, while Sri Lanka’s form has fluctuated.

Key Trends from Past Meetings

Sri Lanka Succeed When Chasing Well

Both their World Cup successes (2007 and 2012 Super Over) came when they handled pressure calmly.

New Zealand Dominate with Bowling Discipline

In 2010 and 2022, New Zealand’s structured bowling attacks made the difference.

Big Margins Favour New Zealand

Sri Lanka’s wins tend to be controlled or tight.
New Zealand’s wins often come through dominant bowling or strong finishing.

Winning Edge: Who Holds It

  • New Zealand Advantage: Overall record, recent dominant World Cup win (2022), balanced bowling attack.
  • Sri Lanka Advantage: Ability to thrive in pressure moments, strong spin resources, better familiarity with subcontinental conditions.

Final Analysis

New Zealand hold the statistical upper hand in T20 internationals and recent World Cup meetings. However, Sri Lanka have proven they can rise in high-pressure tournament moments — particularly when chasing or playing at home.

For Sri Lanka to shift the balance, they must:

  • Avoid middle-order collapses
  • Strike early in the Powerplay
  • Control New Zealand’s middle overs
  • Execute death bowling with precision

With history showing close contests and dramatic finishes, the Sri Lanka vs New Zealand rivalry remains one of the more balanced matchups in T20 World Cup cricket.

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England Begin Super Eights with Statement Win as Sri Lanka Falter in Chase

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Sri Lanka’s Super Eight campaign at the T20 World Cup 2026 suffered a major blow in Kandy on Sunday, as co-hosts fell to a comprehensive 51-run defeat against England cricket team, leaving their semi-final prospects under pressure.

Electing to field first on a slow pitch at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium, Sri Lanka’s bowlers made early inroads and restricted England to 146/9, defending a modest total with a disciplined effort that saw several tight overs in the middle phase.

Phil Salt was the standout performer with the bat for England, anchoring their innings with a crucial 62 off 36 balls, while other batters struggled to accelerate.

However, it was England’s bowling and fielding — led by an impressive all-round showing from Will Jacks — that ultimately decided the contest. Jacks’ left-arm spin delivered a match-turning spell of 3/22 in four overs, and he also chipped in with vital lower-order runs that helped tilt the momentum fully in England’s favour.

“I thought we executed our plans really well with the ball,” Jacks said after being named Player of the Match. “We knew the conditions would be tough, and credit to our bowlers for sticking to their lengths and building pressure.”

Sri Lanka’s Chase Falls Apart

Chasing a target of 147, Sri Lanka never recovered from a top-order collapse. After losing early wickets in the Powerplay, the home side slumped to 34/5, leaving the middle and lower order with an uphill task.

Captain Dasun Shanaka was among the few who offered resistance, scoring a gritty 30, but there was little support around him as the innings deteriorated rapidly. Sri Lanka were eventually bundled out for 95 in 16.4 overs, failing to adapt to England’s bowling pressure on a slow surface.

“It’s disappointing,” Shanaka said post-match. “We knew runs wouldn’t come easy, but we didn’t build partnerships. We let ourselves down in crucial moments.”

What It Means for Sri Lanka

England’s victory gives them a valuable boost in Super Eight Group 2, strengthening their bid for a semi-final spot. For Sri Lanka, the loss raises questions about their batting depth and ability to chase under pressure, especially after entering the Super Eights with solid momentum from the group stage.

With their next match looming, Sri Lanka must regroup quickly if they are to keep their World Cup ambitions alive on home soil.

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Sri Lanka Stunned by Zimbabwe Despite 178 as Bowling Falters in Colombo

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Sri Lanka’s T20 World Cup campaign suffered a major setback as they went down to Zimbabwe by six wickets at the R. Premadasa Stadium — a result few predicted before the first ball was bowled.

After winning the toss and opting to bat, Sri Lanka posted what appeared to be a competitive 178/7. But defensive bowling and a lack of control in key moments allowed Zimbabwe to chase down 179 with three balls to spare, finishing on 182/4 in 19.3 overs.

Where Sri Lanka Lost the Game

Strong Start, Poor Finish with the Bat

Sri Lanka flew out of the blocks, scoring 61 runs in the Powerplay.

  • Pathum Nissanka led the charge with a fluent 62 off 41 balls.
  • The opening stand raced to 54 inside five overs.

However, momentum dipped sharply in the middle overs:

  • Kusal Mendis struggled (14 off 20).
  • The run rate slowed between overs 7–14.
  • Despite a late push from Pavan Rathnayake (44 off 25), Sri Lanka managed only 28 runs in the final three overs.

From a position of dominance at 108/2, they could not push beyond the 185–190 mark — a total that, in hindsight, proved costly.

Failure to Strike Early with the Ball

Zimbabwe’s chase was built on a solid foundation:

  • 55 runs in the Powerplay without losing a wicket.
  • 69-run opening stand removed early pressure.

Sri Lanka never truly regained control.

The Raza–Bennett Counterattack

The turning point came when captain Sikandar Raza launched a brutal counterattack:

  • 45 off 26 balls
  • 4 sixes
  • 50-run partnership in just 27 balls

Brian Bennett anchored the chase superbly with an unbeaten 63 off 48.

Raza’s assault in overs 15–18 shifted the momentum completely, taking the game away from Sri Lanka just when it seemed evenly poised.

Bowling Concerns Under Lights

Sri Lanka’s bowling lacked penetration:

  • Maheesh Theekshana conceded 47 in 3.3 overs (13.42 economy).
  • No early breakthroughs from the seamers.
  • Only one Powerplay wicket across both innings combined.

On a Colombo surface that slowed slightly, Zimbabwe adapted better, rotating strike efficiently before accelerating at the death.

Key Numbers That Hurt Sri Lanka

  • Zimbabwe Powerplay: 55/0
  • Sri Lanka Powerplay wickets: 0
  • Zimbabwe scored 150 in just 16.1 overs
  • Sri Lanka conceded 9.33 runs per over in the chase

What This Means

Sri Lanka entered as favourites, especially batting first at home. But tactical lapses, middle-over stagnation, and expensive spells under pressure proved decisive.

Zimbabwe, disciplined with the ball and fearless in the chase, fully deserved their two points.

For Sri Lanka, questions now emerge:

  • Is the bowling attack lacking bite?
  • Are middle overs becoming a recurring concern?
  • Was 178 ever going to be enough on this surface?

With tougher fixtures ahead in the T20 World Cup, Sri Lanka must regroup quickly — because performances like this could derail their campaign early.

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