Sports
Matheesha; cricket’s latest sensation
by Rex Clementine
We’ve heard it from cricket’s supremo M.S. Dhoni that young fast bowling sensation Matheesha Pathirana should get nowhere near red ball cricket. There would have been quite a furore had Kumar Sangakkara or Mahela Jayawardene said it. Remember the reaction when they echoed similar sentiments in the case of Lasith Malinga all those years ago. But with talents like Matheesha and Malinga it seems a sensible move. Afterall, Sanga and MJ rarely get their facts wrong.
As with Matheesha, already he has had his share of injuries and missed quite a few campaigns for Sri Lanka. He has featured in just one T-20 International so far in Sri Lankan colours which was against Afghanistan last year during the Asia Cup.
Matheesha was set to play the T-20 series in New Zealand in March, but he tested positive for COVID and had to be isolated. Matheesha was sold for the base price of US$ 25,000 in the IPL. He will fetch the same amount next season. But here’s the trick. The season after, when there’s an auction, he could fetch a princely sum. If Chennai Super Kings opt to retain him, which they will most probably do, he will get as much as US$ 1 million. But if he is third in the list of retained players then that amount goes up to US$ 1.2 million. Not bad for a 20-year-old.
The story from Madras is that CSK are quite thrilled with their young fast bowling sensation. The franchise is owned by India Cements boss N. Srinivasan, one time President of the International Cricket Council.
Isn’t that a strange world we live in. Not so long ago, Sri Lankans were persona non grata in Madras. Sri Lankan players couldn’t feature for their IPL teams if the games were in Madras. Since 2005, the Sri Lankan team hasn’t played a game in Madras. Time was when a game in Madras for Sri Lanka was a must.
But that’s the beauty of sports. No matter how hard politicians try, when young sensations like Matheesha come, fans embrace them and politicians are watchful to go against the public opinion. Matheesha has become a household name from Madras to Madurai.
Matheesha hails from Harispattuwa. His family is heavily into music. While the father plays the piano, his mother and two sisters are accomplished guitarists. Matheesha too can play the piano.
There was a generation of youngsters who emulated Wasim Akram as their hero. Even right-arm seamers used to carry the ball in their left-hand and change it to right-hand as they leaped up to deliver. The only problem was most of us never had the pace or the accuracy of Sultan of Swing. Cricketing gods have been extra kind to Pakistan gifting them with so many fast bowling talents.
The modern generation tried to copy Malinga. It is one thing copying Malinga but quite a tough one to generate that pace. Matheesha was able to do it. He was at the little heard Ranabima Royal when Trinity College in Kandy sent word to district coaches to recommend them a good fast bowler. They were feeling the pinch since Lahiru Kumara had left school.
Trinity coach Kavinda Jayasuriya was quite excited by what he saw and former Trinity captain Bilal Fassy facilitated the move. By then, Chaminda Vaas, that excellent spotter of fast bowling talent, had invited Matheesha to Colombo, but his parents were reluctant to part ways with their child. Trinity in their hometown sounded like a sensible move.
In his first game for Trinity, Matheesha picked up five for 11 against St. Servatius, Matara. Someone recorded Matheesha’s action and the video went viral. It went so viral that it ended up in M.S. Dhoni’s phone.
Impressed by what he saw, Dhoni wanted Matheesha at the CSK camp as a net bowler. There was a problem in getting him to UAE where the IPL was played that season as the COVID vaccine that UAE was accepting wasn’t available in Sri Lanka at that time. But Professor Arjuna de Silva’s expertise came in handy and soon the vaccine was administered to Matheesha. But there was another hurdle.
Trinity was unwilling to send Matheesha to CSK ranks as he was still a school kid. However, after much convincing he was given permission. Afterall, you don’t turn down Dhoni.
Harsha Bhogle, the popular Indian commentator is trying to give Dhoni all the credit for grooming Matheesha. Yes, no doubt that the fast bowler is in safe hands but the grooming of this talent happened in Sri Lanka and not in Madras.
Vaas, Fassy, Chris Silverwood, the coaches at Trinity and SLC’s District and Provincial coaches need to be given much credit for unearthing and developing another rare talent.
Latest News
Mohamed Salah scores as Egypt beat New Zealand for first World Cup win
Liverpool star Mohamed Salah scored his first goal of the tournament as part of a second-half flurry to deliver Egypt their first-ever World Cup victory, 3-1, over New Zealand in Vancouver.
Both Salah and Mostafa Zico bagged a goal and an assist apiece as Egypt rallied from a 1-0 half-time deficit and took over first place in Group G on Sunday. Trezeguet scored Egypt’s third goal for late insurance.
Salah celebrated his 68th international goal by pumping his fist before he was mobbed by his teammates in the 67th minute to the delight of the red-clad Pharaohs fans in the sellout crowd at BC Place, Vancouver.
When Salah was substituted in the 85th minute, he was treated to a standing ovation.
The first three matches of Group G ended in draws, including Belgium and Iran posting a scoreless tie earlier on Sunday, leaving the group open for the taking. New Zealand (0-1-1, 1 point) thought they were on that path after Finn Surman’s headed goal off a 15th-minute set piece gave them a lead they held for nearly half the match.
Egypt will finish the group stage against Iran on Friday, all but assured of advancing to the knockouts no matter the result. New Zealand, still seeking their own first World Cup win, will take aim at Belgium on the same day in their hopes of advancing.
Mostafa Shoubir made four saves for Egypt, while Max Crocombe recorded four for New Zealand.
New Zealand earned their go-ahead corner kick when Elijah Just had a strong effort on target, and Shoubir sent it out of bounds.
Tim Payne’s ensuing corner found Surman in space. Surman’s jumping header went past a helpless Shoubir to give the All Whites the lead.
Egypt had a promising look in the 35th minute on a free kick from the edge of the box after Callum McCowatt picked up a yellow card for a poor tackle. A teammate laid the ball off for Salah, whose attempt on goal missed to the left.
Egypt had more control and more of the chances in the second half, starting immediately when Salah pressured Crocombe into a save less than 40 seconds in.
But the Pharaohs finally broke through in the 58th minute. Mohamed Hany landed a perfect cross for Zico, whose header near the 6-yard line struck Crocombe’s glove on its way in.
Salah’s turn came nine minutes later. Zico connected with Salah up the right side on a transition play. He dribbled around his man into the box and tapped a pass ahead to Zico, who back-heeled it into a pocket of space for Salah to finish with a left-footed shot to the bottom-left corner.
Trezeguet wrapped up the match in the 82nd minute on another header from a corner kick. Salah sent in a low offering, and Trezeguet was unmarked as his diving header bounded in. It was Trezeguet’s 24th career goal in an international competition and his first at a World Cup.
“In years to come, we will remember that this was one of the achievements in history,” Salah said.
He praised the large Egyptian contingent in the crowd, saying: “It feels like we are playing in Egypt. It’s a great win and great vibe.”
[Aljazeera]
Latest News
Lamine Yamal scores first World Cup goal as Spain thrash Saudi Arabia
Inspired by Lamine Yamal, Spain strolled to a 4-0 win over Saudi Arabia in Group H, as Mikel Oyarzabal restored his reputation with two goals and Luis de la Fuente’s side found their groove after an underwhelming World Cup opener.
Yamal opened the scoring in the 10th minute on Sunday and Oyarzabal, who failed to register a touch in the opening half hour in Monday’s scoreless draw with Cape Verde, scored twice in quick succession as Spain had the game wrapped up by half-time.
An own goal shortly after the interval failed to reopen the floodgates, as Spain used the opportunity to make changes and rest their scorers.
De la Fuente celebrated his 65th birthday in style, and Yamal, whose only football in the last two months came as a substitute against Cape Verde, sparked life into the team that returned to Atlanta Stadium.
A huge cheer greeted Yamal’s first touch, twisting and turning his marker before playing a teasing cross that was cleared by Abdulelah Al-Amri, the scorer of Saudi Arabia’s goal in their 1-1 match with Uruguay.
The opening goal came with Oyarzabal sending an inviting ball across the box, and Yamal being there to slide in at the back post and score his first World Cup goal.
Having toiled in vain in their opening game, Spain relaxed after the goal, and began to carve open the Saudi defence at will, and the second goal came from a corner.
Dani Olmo sent the ball back into the mix, and after the Saudis failed to clear it, Aymeric Laporte nodded down to Oyarzabal, who bundled the ball into the net.
Three minutes later, Spain were in again with a beautifully worked goal. Pedro Porro floated a pass into the area and the ball never touched the ground until it found the net.
Marc Cucurella’s hooked pass found Olmo, who headed into the six-yard box for Oyarzabal to tap it in on the volley, as the striker proved that given the right service, he is Spain’s man to deliver
Spain replaced Yamal and Oyarzabal for the second half, but picked up where they left off when the Saudi goalkeeper blocked Cucurella’s volley from a corner and the ball ricocheted off defender Hassan Al-Tambakti and into the net.
The European champions continued to create chances, but understandably took their foot off the gas on a day when even Vozinha, Cape Verde’s 40-year-old hero keeper, would have struggled against this version of Spain, who look back to their best.
Spain advance to four points in the standings, while Saudi Arabia stay on one after two games each. The other teams in the group, Cape Verde and Uruguay, meet later on Sunday in Miami.
Oyarzabal said he was happy to get the win and to have given his own performance after criticism of how he played against Cape Verde.
“It’s not about proving myself. I’ve always said I feel loved by my teammates, the coach, the staff day to day. That’s what counts for me,” he told the media.
“People will talk outside. We know how the football world works, but we have to stay relaxed.”
Yamal said it was a “dream” to score in a World Cup.
“I watched the last World Cup from a classroom, so being able to score here with my mum and my family in the stands is a dream come true,” he said.
[Aljazeera]
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