Category Archives: Sri Lanka Cricket

Sri Lanka v England, seventh one-day international: as it happened … working backwards in review

 

– SRI LANKA (302/6) BEAT ENGLAND (215) BY 87 RUNS
– SRI LANKA WIN SERIES 5-2
– Dilshan hits 18th career ODI hundred
– Root top-scores with 80 in England reply
Sri Lanka say goodbye to Sangakkara and Jayawardene
Cook is natural leader of England, says Downton
Sri Lanka v England: scorecard

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16.36 So that is the end of England’s tour to Sri Lanka. Has anything been concluded or are there now more unanswered questions than ever? They have been outplayed for much of the series and Sri Lanka fully deserve their 5-2 win. The England selectors will meet on Friday to decide their squad for the tri-nations tour Down Under in January, which is expected to be very similar, if not identical, to the World Cup squad the following month. Does Alastair Cook stay? We will find out with the announcement on Saturday. Thank you for joining today. Cheerio.

16.28 These are great scenes. Not so for the England guys. Don’t know where they are. Crying in the changing room one presumes.

16.26 In case you need reminding, this is Jayawardene and Sangakkara’s final ODI on home soil after two phenomenal careers. The entire Sri Lankan team is doing a lap of honour round the park but all eyes are on the two of them.

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Filed under cricket and life, English cricket, Mahela Jayawardene, performance, player selections, Sangakkara, Sri Lanka Cricket

Caught SANGA bowled MAHELA — A Rare Event at a Momentous Moment at Khettarama

MHELA KUMAR FAREWELL Mahela and Kumar in a Lap of Honour as they bid farewell to the Sri Lankan cricket fans in their last ODI match at home …

a MOMENT TO REMEMBER ……. even drowning out another remarkable moment: when they combined in the first time of their life in cricket to dismiss a batsman: JC Tredwell …….ct Sangakkara b. Jayawardene … 17 …..ending the  England innings way behind the Sri Lankan total.

After countless rounds of golf together, after momentous and magnificent partnerships together [inclusive of a record-breaking mammoth marathon at the SSC grounds against South Africa], these two machang would never have imagined that their cricketing union would be consummated in this manner.

 

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Cook’s Torment continues unabated

Vic Marks in The Guardian, December 2014, http://www.theguardian.com/sport/2014/dec/13/sangakkara-sri-lanka-england-series-win, where the title is “Kumar Sangakkara stars as Sri Lanka crush England to seal series”

The torment of Alastair Cook intensified under the Sri Lankan sun, which has had the good grace to make an appearance in the last few days. Here, the captain endured another England defeat, a numbing one by 90 runs, which means that the series is now lost. Sri Lanka are 4-2 up with one more game left, in Colombo on Tuesday. Cook dropped the simplest of catches to allow Kumar Sangakkara to celebrate his last one-day outing a few miles from his birthplace with his 20th ODI century. Then Cook succumbed for one – lbw yet again to a gentle off-break from Sachithra Senanayake – in the first over of England’s reply.

 Sri Lanka v England  Sri Lanka’s Sachithra Senanayake celebrates with captain Angelo Mathews after taking the wicket of England’s captain Alastair Cook. Photograph: Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters Continue reading

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Filed under Angelo Mathews, English cricket, performance, player selections, Sangakkara, Sri Lanka Cricket, unusual people

Aravinda! Evaluating his Greatest Feats … ära – ära – ära — ĀRI

Rex Clementine in The Island, 6 December 2014, where the title is Celebrating 25 years of Aravinda’s greatest knock”

When picking the best knock of former great Aravinda de Silva, people weigh in differently. For the younger generation there are no two words. His unbeaten 107 in the World Cup final is the greatest knock of them all. That’s one reason why still fans rate Aravinda better than Kumar Sangakkara. There are other knocks of Aravinda that are still cherished and highly spoken of. His career best 267 at the Basin Reserve against New Zealand is hard to forget. So is his match winning 152 at The Oval against England. His century in Faisalabad in 1995 to set up a Test win against a formidable Pakistan attack was a classy one too while Duleep Mendis still fondly reminisces Aravinda’s 122 on his 20th birthday where he famously hooked Imran Khan. However, it’s hard to match his knock at the Gabba in 1989. His fabulous 167 against Allan Border’s Australians should be his greatest knock. It was exactly 25 years ago to this week since he came up with that stunning knock.

ARAVINDA

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More Turf wickets for North & East — SLC Initiative continues

Sa’adi Thawfeeq, in The Nation, 4 December 2014, http://www.nation.lk/edition/sport-online/item/36016-slc-promotes-cricket-in-war-torn-north-and-east.html

Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) has embarked on a project to promote cricket in the once war-torn North and East of the country. As the initial step the first ever turf pitches to that province was provided by SLC to St Patrick’s College Jaffna in October at a cost of Rs. 3 million for the turf and Rs. 5 million for the development of the ground.
Within the next month or so we hope to start constructing four turf pitches at a cost of Rs. 2-2.5 million each to two schools in the north and two in the east,” said SLC secretary Nishantha Ranatunga.

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Roshan Mahanama as Match Referee for Prestigious Boxing Day Test Match

Quintus de Zylva 

ROSHAN will renew his association with Melbourne and his friends when David, Bertram, Ranjini and I host him to dinner on Tuesday 30th December. He and Gamini Perera were the first two young cricketers to accept a scholarship from the Sri Lanka Cricket Foundation of Victoria under the guidance of Bob Parish, Ian Crawford, Fred VanBuren, Eddie Gray and Astor de Silva – to play for the Fitzroy and Prahan cricket clubs in Melbourne almost thirty years ago. He subsequently played for Sri Lanka and then moved on to become an ICC match referee. Roshan’s autobiography was launched at the Knox tavern some years ago.

MAHANAMA

Roshan is now associated with Hemas Holdings in the PIYAWARA PROJECT of early childhood development in Sri Lanka. A community preschool costs approximately Rs. 4 million and can accommodate 50 children. Their website is www.hemasoutreach.com

Roshan will also be a match referee for the 2015 World Cup when we hope to get on board his next preschool project.

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Dynamic Dilshan’s Elan

Andrew Fernando, courtesy of ESPNcricinfo, where the title is “Dilshan — Firebrand among saner men

dilshan Pic from odi-cricinfo.blogspot.com

 Which is Tillakaratne Dilshan’s best triumphant sprint? There are so many to choose from, even just in the past few years. In a Super Over against New Zealand in the 2012 World T20, he tore around from long-off, reached over the rope, completed a stellar take, and just kept running, ball in right palm, arms aloft. A few months later, he struck a boundary off his 148th ball to move to his first Test hundred in Australia, then, leaping into the Tasmanian air, raced halfway to the dressing room.

 DILSHAN 2-HINDU Pic from Hindu

His most memorable recent celebration, though, was at the Oval last year. Sri Lanka needed to beat Australia to win a place in the semi-final of the Champions Trophy. The last wicket stand had put on 41, and were 21 away from what could have been a famous comeback win.

Brought on to make something happen, Dilshan got the Clint McKay to push out early, and then the tips of his his fingers reeled in the return catch. In a flash he was up, grin cleaving his face in two, blazing an arc from the bowler’s crease to the midwicket boundary. It was unadulterated Dilshan; the sole actor in the mini-drama. Having done little else all game, he was Sri Lanka’s saviour when they had become desperate.

You can almost imagine Sri Lanka’s team meeting before the second ODI against England. They had wanted to open the bowling with spin, Angelo Mathews later revealed, because someone had a theory that England’s openers would not fancy starting against a slow bowler. Sri Lanka have played three frontline spinners in the series, but before any of them could volunteer for the role, you can picture Dilshan making his appeal – maybe one as loud and unyielding as the shout that earned him a fine on Wednesday.

Is it a surprise that he has become one of the world’s best ODI openers, despite a glitteringly mediocre record in the middle order? The top was where Dilshan has always belonged, where he sets the tone; instigates the action. The chance to open the bowling as well as the batting is a no-brainer choice. He has done the same in all three formats before. He has kept wicket for entire Test series. He roams the vulnerable boundaries at the death. And at 38, he is somehow still an ace at backward point. Is it his huge ego that helps him cover so much ground?

Despite having faced the ploy before, England will not have expected Sri Lanka’s fourth spinner to open the bowling. And there is no better man for an ambush like this than Dilshan. From his very first ball, he was hyping up the plan, throwing hands to head and yelping like the delivery had almost hit the stumps. Moeen Ali had been slightly late on that shot, but in truth, had nearly middled it to point. When Dilshan took his wicket off the final ball of that over, the celebratory sprint was on again, from the bowling crease to around point this time. The hijinks had pivoted on him. As Dilshan soaked in the Premadasa’s affection, Mathews dared not take the ball off him for the full nine overs off his quota.

“The conditions suited spinners and I thought it was a good idea to try Dilshan and it paid off,” Mathews said. “He kept improving every single over that he bowled, so I couldn’t take him out. He was brilliant. The left-handers were also batting – and they have quite a few in their lineup.”

Dilshan has often played in support of his team-mates, but they all know his irrepressible itch to be involved in everything. His solo zooming around after a catch or a wicket, jar with the lack of obvious enthusiasm when he is not a part of the play. He is often the last into celebratory huddles. Sometimes, when he is fielding in the deep, he will just jog halfway, yell out a “well done” and amble back to his post.

“He has always enjoyed being centre of attention,” Mathews said. “He wants to be in the game all the time. He wants me to throw the ball at him all the time. He wants to take wickets. He wants to score runs, and he wants to take catches. He wants to be in the limelight.”

Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara closed out today’s match with a 15th century stand that was a considered, meticulous response to the match situation. They are renowned as statesmen of the game, but though he is older than both, Dilshan will rarely have that tag applied to him. Ever the individualist, never shy of stealing the moment, Dilshan is a firebrand in a top order full of cricket’s saner men

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Filed under Andrew Fidel Fernando, Angelo Mathews, cricket and life, cricketing icons, patriotic excess, performance, Sri Lanka Cricket

Sri Lankan and English Cricket join hands in paying RESPECT to PHIL HUGHES

E + SL TRIBUTE 2 E + SL TRIBUTE 1 Continue reading

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Kumar Sangakkara interviewed for CNN, 21st November 2014

SEE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2Y9KlsHqho  OR https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nDXdT92Uro&feature=player_embedded as Number One Test batsman in World in ICC rankings

Published on Nov 21, 2014 …. Music =”Distant Dreams” by James Brian Brasher (iTunes) …..
  • Kumar+Sangakkara+ICC+Community+Project+Promotes+nvohAYz4eJ3l  Pic from Michael Steele/Getty Images AsiaPac … at ICC Community Project Promoting The Think Wise Campaign

    ALSO SEE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ohpy_zEqIug

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Sachithra Senanayake rehabilitation to be put to the test soon

S R Pathiravithana, in the Sunday Times, 9 November 2014, where the title is: “Senanayake will not be re-tested privately”

Ashley de Silva Chief Executive Officer of Sri Lanka Cricket told the Sunday Times that the SLC does not intend sending the Lankan off spinner for a Private screening. He said “We will be requesting the ICC for a date soon to re-scrutinize Senanayake’s bowling action and we hope that we would get a date by the End of this month”.

When asked where they intend sending the bowler in question for the ICC study, de Silva said “We have no control over that. It is the ICC which will decide as to where Senanayake would be directed. “

Senanayake was reported about the illegalities in his bowling action by ICC officials and was sent to the Cardiff University, Wales for scrutiny. There the panel who tested his bowling action found the straightening of his elbow to be more than the ICC stipulated tolerance level of 15 degrees and banned him from bowling at competitive level.

Subsequently Senanayake was sent to the University of Western Australia for rehabilitation before the Max Academy experts had begun their work. Once the Max Academy panel was satisfied, Senanayake made a comeback to top level cricket during the ongoing Mercantile Premier League tournament.

 

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