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Sports

Pathirana comes up trumps for Sri Lanka

Matheesha Pathirana. (AFP)
Matheesha Pathirana. (AFP)
Mahendra Singh Dhoni is known to have a keen eye for talent and the match-winning display by Sri Lanka pacer Matheesha Pathirana against Bangladesh at the Asia Cup on Thursday shows the former India captain’s reputation is well earned. Pathirana has modelled his round-arm action on compatriot Lasith Malinga and his release point is even lower, which makes it extremely difficult to follow the trajectory of the ball coming out of his hand.
His Chennai Super Kings (CSK) captain Dhoni predicted in May the 20-year-old would prove a “great asset” for Sri Lanka provided he was used sparingly and only in key white-ball tournaments. Vindicating his Chennai captain, Pathirana claimed a career-best 4-32 to rout Bangladesh and set up Sri Lanka’s five-wicket victory with 11 overs to spare at Pallekele.
“I think this performance has been coming for a while now,” Sri Lanka coach Chris Silverwood told reporters. “He’s had a great experience at the IPL and then he came to the World Cup qualifier with us, and we did a lot of work on how to bowl with the new ball.”
In his fifth one-day international, Pathirana bounced out two key Bangladesh batters - skipper Shakib Al Hasan and veteran Mushfiqur Rahim - and returned to polish off the tail, dismissing Taskin Ahmed and Mustafizur Rahman.
“Easy to see why Sri Lanka Cricket, CSK and MS Dhoni are valuing Matheesha Pathirana so highly,” former West Indies bowler Ian Bishop wrote on X, the social platform formerly known as Twitter.
“He is still learning his craft. But he is learning quickly and will be a real handful in years to come.”
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Last Edited September 02, 2023 | 12:15 AM
Rubio: (Trump) is not against Nato. He is against a Nato that does not have the capabilities that it needs to fulfil the obligations that the treaty imposes upon each and every member state.
US is committed to Nato, but ‘Europe must spend more’

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio told Nato allies yesterday that Washington remained committed to the alliance but expected them to spend far more on defence and would give them some time to do so.He spoke as he met fellow North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) foreign ministers gathered in Brussels, with some European officials saying that they were reassured by the renewed commitment to the alliance at a time of rising tensions over President Donald Trump’s new trade tariffs.The Trump administration’s words and actions over the past months have raised questions about the future of Nato, the transatlantic alliance that has been the bedrock of European security for the past 75 years.Rubio dismissed doubts about US commitment to the alliance as “hysteria”.“Some of this hysteria and hyperbole that I see in the global media and some domestic media in the United States about Nato is unwarranted,” Rubio said on his first visit to meet his Nato counterparts in Brussels. “President Trump’s made clear he supports Nato We’re going to remain in Nato.”“The United States is in Nato ... the United States is as active in Nato as it has ever been,” he told reporters.“He is not against Nato,” Rubio said of Trump. “He is against a Nato that does not have the capabilities that it needs to fulfil the obligations that the treaty imposes upon each and every member state.”Trump has said the military alliance should spend 5% of gross domestic product on defence – a huge increase from the current 2% goal and a level that no Nato country, including the United States, currently reaches.Washington has also bluntly told European countries that it can no longer be primarily focused on the continent’s security.European allies have been anxiously seeking details on the timeframe and extent to which the US aims to reduce its engagement in Nato for weeks, in order to co-ordinate the process of a European defence ramp-up to avoid security gaps in Europe.In Brussels, Rubio brought some element of response on that.“We do want to leave here with an understanding that we are on a pathway, a realistic pathway, to every single one of the members committing and fulfilling a promise to reach up to 5% of spending,” he said, adding that this included the United States. “No one expects that you’re going to be able to do this in one year or two. But the pathway has to be real.”A European official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the meeting with Rubio was “very reassuring”.“The meeting was not confrontational,” the official said. “Just that allies need to do more. No bashing.”Still, reaching 5% of GDP spending on defence would be hard for many Nato allies.According to Nato estimates, some of the continent’s big economies, such as Italy and Spain, are among those below the current 2% target, at around 1.5% and 1.3% respectively.Twenty-three of the alliance’s 32 members met or exceeded the 2% target last year.“For the time being, I think 5% is probably too high,” Portuguese Foreign Minister Paulo Rangel told reporters, noting that Portugal – which spent 1.55% of GDP on defence last year – first needs to get to 2% and then have a plan to meet a new target the alliance will set at its next summit.A string of European countries have announced steep increases in military budgets, with economic powerhouse Germany opening the way for a major splurge.“Great things are happening. Over the last couple of months, we literally see hundreds of billions of euros rolling in,” Nato chief Mark Rutte said.“So this is probably the biggest increase in defence spending here on the European side of Nato since the end of the Cold War,” he said. “But we still need more.”