Kusal Mendis, Avishka Fernando help Sri Lanka beat New Zealand in first ODI

Kusal Mendis and Avishka Fernando both slammed centuries to set up a convincing 45-run victory for Sri Lanka in the rain-interrupted first ODI against New Zealand on Wednesday.

Kusal, 29, struck a career-best 143 and Avishka hit 100 as Sri Lanka posted a commanding 324-5 in 49.2 overs before rain stopped play.

New Zealand, chasing a revised target of 221 off 27 overs, were restricted to 175-9 in the day-night game played at Dambulla.

The Kiwis started off confidently but then lost five wickets in less than five overs for the addition of just 22 runs.

It was Maheesh Theekshana who triggered the collapse with the wickets of openers Will Young and Tim Robinson, who shared an 88-run stand in just 79 balls.

Robinson fell to a sharp stumping by Kusal, and four balls later, Theekshana bowled Young to swing the momentum towards Sri Lanka.

From there on, it was downhill all the way for the visitors as the rest of the batsmen failed to live up to the task.

“When you lose two set guys, it can be difficult on these wickets,” said Kiwi skipper Mitchell Santner. “We tried to keep firing shots, but if you lose wickets in clumps, it’s a challenge.”

Earlier, Kusal Mendis and Avishka Fernando stitched together a 206-run partnership from 215 balls for the highest second-wicket partnership in ODIs for Sri Lanka against New Zealand.

Their effort eclipsed a 21-year-old record held by Sanath Jayasuriya and Hashan Tillakaratne, who added 170 against the Black Caps in the 2003 World Cup in Bloemfontein.

The stand was also the highest partnership for any wicket at Dambulla in ODIs.

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“I thought it would be tough for us (with the wet ball) and it also didn’t turn too much,” said Sri Lankan captain Charith Asalanka. “Avishka [Fernando] and Kusal [Mendis] batted really well and the best thing was that both of them scored hundreds.”

For Avishka, it was his first century since 2021, breaking a dry spell after a string of low scores.

Avishka’s 115-ball knock, including nine fours and two sixes, came to an end when he was caught while attempting a sweep shot off Ish Sodhi. It was his fourth ODI hundred.

Kusal’s century was also his fourth in ODIs and first this year. His knock was the highest individual score at Dambulla, surpassing India’s Shikhar Dhawan’s 132 in 2017.

A cameo 40-run knock by Asalanka off just 28 balls capped a fine day with the bat for the islanders.

It was New Zealand paceman Jacob Duffy who dismissed Kusal, caught at extra cover by Henry Nicholls. Kusal’s brisk 128-ball knock was studded with 17 fours and two sixes.

Sri Lanka’s batters seized control after Asalanka won the toss and opted to bat first.

Opener Pathum Nissanka was dismissed early for 12, but Kusal and Avishka made the most of the conditions.

The New Zealand spinners struggled to rein in the Sri Lankan batsmen, who kept the scoreboard ticking at over 6.5 runs per over.

Rain halted play just one ball into Sri Lanka’s innings, causing a 39-minute delay. Downpours returned with four balls left in the Sri Lankan innings.

The ODI action will next move to Pallekele where the remaining two games of the series will be played on Sunday and Tuesday.

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Sri Lanka announce squads for white-ball series against New Zealand

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) on Wednesday named their squads for the upcoming white-ball series at home against New Zealand, with all-rounder Charith Asalanka leading the team in both formats.

Sri Lanka and New Zealand will square off in two T20Is at Dambulla on 9 and 10 November respectively, followed by three ODI matches.

The first ODI will also be played at Dambulla, on November 13, with the next two shifting to Pallekele on November 17 and 19.

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Sri Lanka has recalled veteran batter Kusal Perera to their ODI squad against New Zealand. Perera’s last appearance in ODIs was during the ICC ODI World Cup 2023 held in India against the same opponents.

In contrast, for the upcoming T20I series, Sri Lanka has opted to maintain continuity by retaining the exact squad that triumphed against the West Indies, winning the series 2-1.

Sri Lanka Squads for Series Against New Zealand

ODI squad: Charith Asalanka (c), Avishka Fernando, Pathum Nissanka, Kusal Perera, Kusal Mendis, Kamindu Mendis, Janith Liyanage, Sadeera Samarawickrama, Nishan Madushka, Dunith Wellalage, Wanindu Hasaranga, Maheesh Theekshana, Jeffrey Vandersay, Chamindu Wickramasinghe, Asitha Fernando, Dilshan Madushanka, Mohamed Shiraz.

T20I squad: Charith Asalanka (c), Pathum Nissanka, Kusal Mendis, Kusal Perera, Kamindu Mendis, Dinesh Chandimal, Avishka Fernando, Bhanuka Rajapaksa, Wanindu Hasaranga, Maheesh Theekshana, Dunith Wellalage, Jeffrey Vandersay, Chamindu Wickramasinghe, Nuwan Thushara, Matheesha Pathirana, Binura Fernando and Asitha Fernando.

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Plimmer’s half-century aids New Zealand to thump Sri Lanka

SHARJAH: Georgia Plimmer’s anchoring half-century powered New Zealand to a thumping eight-wicket victory over Sri Lanka in the 15th match of the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 here at Sharjah Cricket Stadium on Saturday.

Opting to bat first, Sri Lanka only managed 115/5 in the allotted 20 overs despite Chamari Athapaththu’s sensible knock up the order.

The Asian champions got off to a briefly flying start to their innings with Athapaththu dominating the Proteas bowlers.

The brisk opening stand ended in the fourth over when Vishmi Gunaratne perished after a scratchy eight-run knock.

Gunaratne’s dismissal pushed Sri Lanka to the backfoot, and Athapathu then put together a cautious partnership with Harshitha Samarawickrama that lasted for 10 overs and only yielded 48 runs.

Sri Lanka then suffered a massive blow to their batting expedition as both Athapththu and Samarawickrama perished in quick succession, leaving their side reeling at 76/3 in 14.2 overs.

Athapaththu remained the top-scorer for Sri Lanka with a 41-ball 35 while Samarawickrama made 18 off 29 balls.

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Sri Lanka soon lost two more wickets as Kavisha Dilhari and Anushka Sanjeewani walked back after modest contributions before an unbeaten 18-run partnership between Nilakshika Silva and Ama Kachana gave a late push to their total.

Leigh Kasperek and Amelia Kerr claimed two wickets each for New Zealand, followed by Eden Carson with one.

In response, New Zealand comfortably chased down the modest target for the loss of just two wickets and 15 balls to spare.

Openers Suzie Bates and Georgia Plimmer laid a solid foundation for the pursuit with a 49-run partnership, which culminated with the former’s dismissal in the eighth over.

Bates scored 17 off 22 balls, hitting one boundary.

Plimmer then partnered with Amelia Kerr and added 46 runs for the second wicket before falling victim to Athapaththu, briefly after amassing her half-century.

She remained the top-scorer for New Zealand with a well-crafted 53 off 44 deliveries, laced up with four boundaries.

Skipper Sophie Devine then joined Kerr in the middle and made sure there were no further hiccups for New Zealand in the modest pursuit with an unbeaten 23-run partnership.

Kerr smashed three boundaries on her way to a 31-ball 34, while Devine made 13 not out.

For Sri Lanka, Athapaththu and Sachini Nisansala could pick up a wicket apiece.

The eight-wicket victory lifted New Zealand to third in Group A standings of the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2024 with four points in three matches while Sri Lanka concluded their campaign winless.

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Spinners shine as Sri Lanka complete clean sweep over New Zealand

Debutant off-spinner Nishan Peiris took six wickets on Sunday to steer Sri Lanka to a 2-0 series win over New Zealand in 15 years with a crushing victory by an innings and 154 runs in the second Test in Galle.

New Zealand were all out for 360 in their second innings before tea on day four after being asked to follow on.

Peiris, 27, and fellow spinner Prabath Jayasuriya shared 18 wickets in the match, the latter taking 6-42 in the first innings to bundle out the tourists for just 88 after the hosts had amassed a mammoth 602-5 declared.

“Amazing how the batting unit rose to the occasion,” Sri Lanka captain Dhananjaya de Silva told reporters.

“Then the spinners were too good… Once we bowled them out for less than 100 runs in the first innings, it was very difficult for them to come back into the game.”

New Zealand’s lower order did put up some fight after resuming at 199-5 on Sunday, with Tom Blundell, Glenn Phillips and Mitchell Santner all making half-centuries.

Peiris, who had taken three second-innings wickets on Saturday, trapped Blundell lbw for 60 early in the first session, ending a 95-run stand with Phillips.

Santner helped craft a 64-run partnership for the seventh wicket before the gutsy Phillips fell on 78 when he mistimed a shot to long-on, giving Peiris his maiden five-wicket haul.

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Santner put together a stubborn ninth-wicket stand of 53 with Ajaz Patel before the latter was sent back, bowled by Jayasuriya, on 22.

Sri Lanka sealed the victory when Santner’s gritty resistance was finally broken, stumped by Kusal Mendis for 67 off Peiris.

“Galle is a tough place to come and play cricket and Sri Lanka are a strong team here,” said New Zealand captain Tim Southee.

“We were on the wrong side of the toss and we struggled to make the breakthroughs. We really struggled to come back from there,” he added.

Sri Lanka could have wrapped up the match and series in the morning session but for a succession of dropped catches.

Kamindu Mendis spilled Patel on two at second slip and let Santner off on 36 in the covers. Peiris shelled another chance from Santner not long after.

It’s worth noting that Sri Lanka won the opening match by 63 runs and this series win is their first against New Zealand since a 2-0 win at home in 2009.

The result leaves New Zealand winless from six Test appearances at Galle, with Sunday’s 360 their highest innings total at the venue.

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Sri Lanka sniff series victory as New Zealand trail by 315 after follow-on

GALLE: Sri Lanka launched a ruthless spin attack which powered them to move five wickets away from a resounding victory over New Zealand in the second Test.

The touring side were 199/5 at the Stumps on Day 3, still trailing by 315 runs after the home side imposed a follow-on, having booked them on a meagre 88 in the first innings.

Wicketkeeper batter Tom Blundell was unbeaten on 47 and Glenn Phillips on 32 when bad light forced an early closure to an eventful day of action at the Galle International Stadium.

The touring side had a shaky start to their second innings as experienced opener Tom Latham bagged a six-ball duck in the first over.

Devon Conway was then joined by second-ranked Test batter Kane Williamson and together they raised a fighting 97-run partnership for the second wicket.

Dhananjaya de Silva broke the threatening partnership by getting rid of Conway, who scored 61 off 62 balls.

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Williamson soon followed suit as he fell victim to Nishan Peiris after scoring 46 off 58 deliveries.

The touring side slipped further to 121/5 with Daryl Mitchell (1) and Rachin Ravindra (1) perishing cheaply before Blundell and Phillips hung on.

Earlier in the day, New Zealand resumed their first innings at 22/2 with skipper Williamson and nightwatchman Ajaz Patel.

New Zealand’s batting unit struggled against a ruthless Sri Lanka spin attack with their best partnership being 20 runs, added by the last pair of Mitchell Santner, who top-scored with a gritty 29 and William O’Rourke (2).

Prabath Jayasuriya was the star with the ball for Sri Lanka, taking six wickets, followed by debutant Peiris, who bagged three.

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New Zealand stumble after Sri Lanka’s run fest in second Test

GALLE: New Zealand were in a state of bother at the Stumps on Day 2 of the second Test after Sri Lanka piled up a humongous total, courtesy of centuries from Dinesh Chandimal, Kusal Mendis and rising star Kamindu Mendis.

The hosts declared their first innings at 602/5, minutes before the Stumps and after an unbeaten 200-run partnership between Kamindu and Kusal.

The visitors had a shaky start to their innings as they lost both their openers Tom Latham (2) and Devon Conway (9) inside nine overs.

Skipper Kane Williamson (6) and nightwatchman Ajaz Patel (0) did well to survive the remaining 5.4 overs and will now resume New Zealand’s innings at 22/2 on the third day.

Sri Lanka resumed their first innings at 306/3 with Mathews and Kamindu, unbeaten on 78 and 51 respectively.

The duo managed to add just 22 runs to their overnight partnership as Mathews perished for 88 as Glenn Phillips got him caught at square leg by William O’Rourke.

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Dhananjaya de Silva joined Kamindu briefly for a 74-run partnership for the fifth wicket before he too, fell victim to Phillips. The skipper made 40 off 80 deliveries, hitting three fours and a six.

This was Phillips’ third wicket in the innings as he cleaned up Dinesh Chandimal on 116 in the third session of the opening day.

But New Zealand’s hopes of some fightback with the ball were dashed by a well-crafted partnership between Kamindu and Kusal.

When Sri Lanka captain de Silva called for the declaration, Kamindu was just 18 away from his maiden double century, while Kusal had just amassed his 10th Test century.

During his marathon 182-run knock, Kamindu breached the 1000 Test runs barrier.

He achieved the landmark in just 13 innings and drew level with Sir Don Bradman, while England’s Herbert Sutcliffe and West Indies’ Everton Weeks were the joint-fastest with 12 innings.

Sri Lanka lead the two-match series 1-0 and are eyeing their first series win over New Zealand since 2009. The home side won the opening Test by 63 runs.

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Kamindu Mendis joins Don Bradman in exclusive list

GALLE: Rising Sri Lanka batter Kamindu Mendis on Friday, flipped record books as he equalled legendary batter, Sir Donald ‘Don’ Bradman’s record of the second-fastest to reach 1000 runs in Test cricket.

Mendis achieved the milestone on the second day of the second Test between Sri Lanka and New Zealand which saw him scoring his fifth Test century.

During his marathon 182-run knock, the left-handed batter breached the 1000 Test runs barrier. Kamindu Mendis achieved the landmark in just 13 innings and drew level with Sir Don Bradman, while England’s Herbert Sutcliffe and West Indies’ Everton Weeks were the joint-fastest with 12 innings.

Furthermore, Kamindu Mendis’ batting average (91.27) is now the second-fastest among players with more than 1000 Test runs and is only behind that of Don Bradman (99.94).

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Mendis’ fifth Test century, which came in just 13 innings, was also the joint-fourth fastest, alongside Bradman. Only three batters Weekes (ten), Sutcliffe (12) and Neil Harvey (12) conceded fewer innings.

On the opening day of the aforementioned fixture, Mendis became the first batter in history to score a half-century in each of his first eight Test matches.

As a result, Kamindu Mendis joined Babar Azam as the only two batters to score eight consecutive half-centuries since 2018.

Furthermore, Mendis, who has been in red-hot form since his Test return, became the first batter in the history of Test cricket to score a fifty-plus score in each of his first eight Tests, going past Pakistan’s Saud Shakeel, who scored seven.

Most 50-plus scores in consecutive Tests

Kamindu Mendis (SL): 8 Matches*
Saud Shakeel (PAK): 7 Matches
Bert Sutcliffe (NZ): 6 Matches
Saeed Ahmed (PAK): 6 Matches
Basil Butcher (WI): 6 Matches
Sunil Gavaskar (IND): 6 Matches

Mendis made his debut for Sri Lanka in 2022 against Australia in Galle and wasted no time to announce himself with a well-crafted 61, playing a pivotal role in leading the home side to an innings victory.

Despite a ground-breaking debut, Mendis remained away from the Test side for almost two years. He finally made his comeback earlier this year in the away series against Bangladesh.

Mendis started from where he left off as he scored two centuries in each innings of the Sylhet Test and backed it with a brilliant 92 in Chittagong.

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Chandimal ton gives Sri Lanka head start in second New Zealand Test

GALLE: Dinesh Chandimal scored an anchoring century to power Sri Lanka to 306/3 at stumps on the first day of the second Test against New Zealand here at Galle International Stadium on Thursday.

Opting to bat first, Sri Lanka lost Pathum Nissanka in the first over. The young opener was caught behind off Tim Southee after managing to score just one.

Following the early hiccup, Chandimal joined Dimuth Karunaratne in the middle and launched a brilliant recovery.

The duo added 122 runs for the second wicket partnership, which lasted with Karunaratne getting run out. He fell narrowly short of his well-deserved half-century, scoring 46 off 109 deliveries with the help of four boundaries.

Dinesh Chandimal was then joined by veteran all-rounder Angelo Mathews and the pair, banking on their experience, batted sensibly against the New Zealand bowling attack to put Sri Lanka in a commanding position.

Chandimal and Mathews shared a 97-run stand, which was eventually broken by Glenn Phillips in the third session of the opening day when he breached Dinesh Chandimal’s defence and knocked over the off stump.

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Dinesh Chandimal remained the top-scorer for Sri Lanka with 106 off 208 deliveries with the help of 15 boundaries.

His dismissal did not halt Sri Lanka much as in-form Kamindu Mendis wasted no time in settling down.

He, alongside Mathews, had taken Sri Lanka past the 300-run mark with an unbeaten fourth-wicket partnership when on-field umpires Nitin Menon and Michael Gough called it a day.

At the conclusion of the opening day, Mathews was unbeaten on 78 while Mendis had scored 51 not out.

For New Zealand, Tim Southee and Glenn Phillips could pick up a wicket apiece on the opening day of the second Test against Sri Lanka.

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Prabath Jayasuriya spins web to steer Sri Lanka to victory over New Zealand

GALLE: Prabath Jayasuriya took five wickets to steer Sri Lanka to a 63-run victory over New Zealand on the final morning of the first Test here on Monday.

Set a target of 275 to win, the Black Caps were bowled out for 211 less than 15 minutes after play resumed from overnight, with Rachin Ravindra top-scoring on 92.

Ravindra had finished on Sunday waging a lone battle on a sharply turning pitch in Galle, where the tourists had lost all four of their previous Test encounters.

His knock was the highest score by a New Zealander on the ground, eclipsing Ross Taylor’s 89 in 2019.

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But the slender path to victory he had opened was snapped shut when Jayasuriya trapped him lbw while trying to defend on the back foot, having only added a single run to the overnight total.

Prabath Jayasuriya, who took nine wickets across the match and finished the second innings 5-68, then brought the match to an end when he bowled rookie quick William O’Rourke for a duck.

O’Rourke, 23, had impressed for New Zealand with eight match wickets, including his second five-wicket haul from just three Test in the first innings.

Left-arm spinner Ajaz Patel claimed 6-90 in Sri Lanka’s second innings, the best figures by a New Zealand bowler in Sri Lanka since Daniel Vettori’s 6-64 in Colombo in 1998.

The second and final match of the series will be held at the same venue from Thursday.

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Karunaratne, Chandimal restore Sri Lanka’s lead against New Zealand

Dinesh Chandimal and Dimuth Karunaratne forged a 147-run partnership to propel hosts Sri Lanka to a lead of 202 on day three of the first Test against New Zealand on Friday.

Sri Lanka were 237-4 at stumps in Galle with Angelo Mathews and Dhananjaya de Silva, both on 34, to resume in the morning.

Karunaratne (83) was on song, punishing loose deliveries and forcing New Zealand to spread the field to protect the boundaries. Chandimal (61) was more conservative.

“When you play in Galle there is a way I play, and I back that style,” Karunaratne said.

“Rather than trying to defend, the best way forward is sweeps and reverse sweeps on that wicket,” he added.

“The fourth innings, 300 or 350 is a tough target. That’s what we want to get to feel safe.”

Ajaz Patel broke the deadlock after tea with a ball that spun sharply from outside the rough, catching off-guard the left-handed Karunaratne when the ball snuck past his attempted sweep.

Chandimal was sent back in the next over by rookie William O’Rourke, who tempted him into a flick that went straight into the hands of Tom Latham at leg gully.

The 23-year-old O’Rourke had started strong by dismissing Pathum Nissanka in his second over when the batsman edged a bouncer to a diving Tim Southee at second slip.

His third wicket of the day came courtesy of Kamindu Mendis, who made a century in the first innings but could only manage 13 in the second.

O’Rourke had already impressed for the Kiwis with his second five-wicket haul from just three Test appearances during the first innings.

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New Zealand resumed on 255-4 but lost their remaining wickets quickly despite a fightback from wicketkeeper Glenn Phillips, who made 49 off 50 balls.

“It is a very good Test wicket. There is lot of assistance for spinners, and seamers can come into play as well,” Phillips said.

“We would have liked a bit more but a 30 or 40 run lead is always handy.”

It was the first time New Zealand had managed to post a score above 300 in Galle, Sri Lanka where they have lost all four of their previous Test encounters.

Sri Lanka drew first blood in the morning when Tom Blundell was given out caught after a review, ending a solid 73-run partnership for the fifth wicket with Daryl Mitchell.

Mitchell went on to post the third half-century of the innings for New Zealand after staring down the spinners.

He was eventually run out on 57 when he responded to a risky call by Phillips, who miscalculated a single following a soft push to the covers.

The second new ball turned the tables for Sri Lanka, with Ramesh Mendis and Prabath Jayasuriya able to find bounce.

Jayasuriya took four wickets, including that of top-scoring opener Latham for 70, while Ramesh bagged three.

Saturday will see a rest day between Sri Lanka and New Zealand as the host country holds a presidential election, with play to resume on Sunday.

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