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Indian 'B team' tour undermines Sri Lanka’s dignity: Ranatunga

Indian 'B team' tour undermines Sri Lanka’s dignity: Ranatunga

SRI Lanka's World Cup-winning skipper Arjuna Ranatunga on Friday (2) slammed the island's sports leaders for agreeing to a tour by a "second-level" India side.

Ranatunga, 57, said the tour undermined the country's "dignity" as he attacked sports minister Namal Rajapaksa and Sri Lanka Cricket.


India's team led by Shikhar Dhawan arrived in Sri Lanka on Monday (28) to prepare for three one-day internationals and three Twenty20 games that start on July 13.

Top stars Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, Mohammed Shami, Jasprit Bumrah and Rishabh Pant are noted absentees. They are all preparing for a Test series in England next month.

"The Indian squad that came to Sri Lanka is not their best, it is a second-level team," Ranatunga said. "Didn't our sports minister or cricket administrators know this?"

"Sri Lanka may have gone down (in the rankings), but as a cricketing nation we have an identity, we have dignity, we should not be sending our best to play an Indian B team."

Ranatunga, who led Sri Lanka to its 1996 World Cup triumph, said the game's administration had deteriorated and called for a major clean-up to improve playing standards and skills.

He said authorities had not considered the humiliation Sri Lankan players would suffer. According to Ranatunga, cricket leaders considered only the financial gains.

"The secret behind agreeing to an Indian B team is TV rights," Ranatunga said. "The board wants to make money from this tournament even if it means pitching our players against a B team."

He said the lack of discipline shown by some Sri Lankan players was also due to “poor management”.

Vice-captain Kusal Mendis, opener Danushka Gunathilaka and wicketkeeper Niroshan Dickwella were withdrawn from the current England tour after they violated the Covid-19 bio-secure bubble.

The trio is expected to be dropped from the India series.

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I’m Mareyah, a sustainability strategist and passionate home cook, exploring the links between climate, culture and food. Drawing on my Pakistani heritage, I champion the value of traditional knowledge and everyday cooking as a powerful - yet often overlooked - tool for climate action. My work focuses on making sustainability accessible by celebrating the flavours, stories and practices that have been passed down through generations.

As someone who grew up surrounded by the flavours and stories of my Pakistani heritage, food has always been more than nourishment - it’s about connections, culture and memory. It’s one of the only things that unites us all. We cook it, eat it and talk about it every day, even if our ingredients and traditions differ. We live in a world where climate change is a looming threat, and we’re constantly seeing images of crises and mentions of highly technical or political answers. But, what if one of the solutions was closer to home?

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