Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Finals from Sept. 10 to 16 in Sri Lanka

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The world’s finest college cricketers prepare to face off in a heated week of competitio­n at the Red Bull Campus Cricket World Final in Sri Lanka, as alumni of the tournament light up the internatio­nal stage. The six previous editions of Red Bull Campus Cricket have been a whetstone at which the likes of Niroshan Dickwella and India’s K.L. Rahul have sharpened their skills. Held this year from September 10- 16, the World Final will again showcase cricket’s rising stars, as they aim to make the T20 tournament a springboar­d for national honours.

The tournament in Sri Lanka is a culminatio­n of eight college cricket teams’ campaigns. Sides from Sri Lanka, Australia, Bangladesh, Zimbabwe, India, Pakistan, South Africa and United Arab Emirates, will feature, initially in Colombo where the group stages will be played Business Management School (BMS) University of Sydney University of Liberal Arts Bangladesh (ULAB) National University of Science and Technology (NUST) from September 10 to 12, before the action moves to Galle Internatio­nal Stadium for the semi-finals and final.

“There’s nothing quite like a high- intensity tournament to test the mettle of developing cricketers, and that’s exactly what the Campus Cricket World Final is,” said Brendon Kuruppu, the Tournament Director and former Sri Lanka cricketer.

“You learn and improve from playing against the best. This Marathwada Mitra Mandal College of Commerce (MMCC College), Pune Jinnah Government College Nazimabad, Karachi North-West University (NWU) TBC tournament is a wonderful opportunit­y for players to pick each other’s brains and share their own knowledge on the game, while also showing the world what they’ve got.”

Last year’s world champions, Sri Lanka’s Business Management School ( BMS), will have the opportunit­y to win successive titles - a feat only previously achieved by Assupol Tuks Cricke t , University of Pretoria. While their familiarit­y with condi- tions, and home support, mark BMS out as an early favourite, all eight sides have earned qualificat­ion through fiercely competitiv­e national tournament­s in each of their countries. Last year’s World Final saw several last-over finishes.

Those climaxes were partly the result of the Energiser Over, which was pioneered in last year’s tournament, and will be in play again. Each batting side gets one Energiser Over per innings, where runs count double, but any wickets lost will cost five penalty runs. This can be taken at any point after the Powerplay overs, and was used in 2016 to prompt either a midinnings surge, or as part of teams’ deathovers accelerati­on.

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