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Time to turn over a new leaf

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The management needs to take a deep look at the team culture and the players’ attitude towards fielding needs to change.

by Rex Clementine  

Cricket is in a crisis. For the first time in the history Sri Lanka suffered losses in a World Cup to teams like Afghanistan and Bangladesh. While those two teams finished ahead of Sri Lanka and qualified for the Champions Trophy, the 1996 champions finished a disappointing ninth and were knocked out of the Champions Trophy.  Sri Lanka Cricket has borne the brunt of the criticism but the persons who were responsible for the team and players have been exempted from scrutiny.

There are arguments that these are the best set of players we have. That may be true, but we could have been smarter with how we used some of our players. If we are short of skill, then sidelining so many seniors was a no brainer.

It was sheer arrogance to leave Angelo Mathews from the World Cup campaign but eventually the selectors had to bite the bullet and draft him in as an injury replacement. Thisara Perera suffered a similar fate but unlike Mathews he had thrown in the towel soon after being left out. He did a Roshan Mahanama by retiring hurt.

How badly Sri Lanka struggled not having a finisher in their ranks during the World Cup and Thisara would have been ideal given his experience and the ability to clear the ropes.  Not that Thisara was completely flawless. He did have issues but that’s why you need mature selectors to deal with professional sportsmen.

The selectors burnt more bridges than building them during their three year tenure. It was a period of disaster for the national cricket team.  Now the nation is in mourning, but nobody has resigned.

The selectors need to be held accountable no doubt but so does the mastermind who has been calling the shots from behind the scenes.

Another popular slogan for the team’s poor World Cup campaign is that we play on bad wickets at home. That is of course true. But you did not complain when you beat Australia in an ODI series. You were covering yourself in glory saying you had just beaten Australia but conveniently forgot that it was achieved on doctored wickets.

You knew pretty well that the World Cup was  going to be played on belters and not rank turners. You only have got yourselves to blame. You hoodwinked the public and took them for a ride while giving the players a false sense of security.

You’ve also packed all key positions of the side with your club mates and several requests to draft in capable men like some former captains fell on deaf ears. But now that you are on borrowed time, you don’t mind having some of those former captains in key decision-making positions. What a pity.

Some consultants have created so much havoc and inflicted much damage. We can not afford another year of mediocracy, poor planning and continue this blame game. You come in with so many conditions that you will not do this and that and you want your own people. When all that has backfired, it’s time to shut up and pack your bags.

There’s no point in crying over the spilt milk. Every individual barring Head Coach Chris Silverwood who oversaw Sri Lanka’s World Cup campaign should be discontinued and there should be no renewal of contracts. Why Silverwood is spared one may wonder. That’s because the only area Sri Lanka have shown some improvement in the last two years is fast bowling and that’s credit to Silverwood.

The culture of the Sri Lankan team definitely has to change. The term optional training has its benefits, but it will not work with a bunch of fat, unfit, lethargic and lazy players. The number of catches that Sri Lanka spilled during the World Cup is a case in point. Fielding is one discipline which does not require enormous amount of skill and can be mastered with sheer hard work. You don’t see that happening with the current team.

Even the young players who come into the system showing so much hunger and desperate to become the best they can be are caught up with the lazy system we have, and you fear the worst for young players like Sadeera Samarawickrama, Charith Asalanka and Dunith Wellalage.

We have already seen precious talents like Niroshan Dickwella going waste and not able to stage a comeback. How many more talents we will let go astray before we realize that it’s time to fix the mess.

Injury management has been another area that we have been awful at. The team was plagued by injuries in Australia last year with half a dozen players returning home. Assurances were given that the issue will be addressed but precious little was done, and injuries again affected Sri Lanka’s campaign in India.

Lack of power hitters is an acute problem facing the team. Every team has an excellent finisher in white ball cricket. There’s Glenn Maxwell for Australia, Suryakumar Yadav is doing the job for India, David Miller has turned out to be Killer Miller for South Africa while Glenn Phillips has settled in at New Zealand having moved from South Africa seeking greener pastures. We Sri Lankans are trying out Test specialists at the finishers’ role.  There is a lot that needs to be done to put cricket right. Let’s start it by fixing the think tank.



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After stormy build up, Sri Lanka look for calm waters

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Matheesha Pathirana along with Pathum Nissanka remain Sri Lanka’s trump cards in the World Cup.

Not many are giving Sri Lanka a fighting chance in this World Cup after being handed a 3-0 whitewash by England on the eve of the tournament. Yet, with a core that has been together for five years and the comfort of home conditions under their spikes, they will quietly fancy sneaking into the second round at the very least. The campaign gets underway on Sunday when they lock horns with Ireland at the RPS.

After the opener, the former champions shift base to Kandy where Oman await on February 12, followed by the heavyweight bout against Australia. They then return to Colombo to face Zimbabwe in the final group fixture. Apart from the Aussies, the other three sides sit below Sri Lanka in the rankings, reason enough for the hosts to believe they can punch above their recent weight.

Ideally, the team would have liked to go in with a settled deck. The chopping and changing of selectors and captain has hardly gone down well with the public, although Charith Asalanka’s excesses left the authorities with something of a Hobson’s choice. Whether they should have held their nerve until the World Cup was done and dusted instead of twisting the knife remains a question that refuses to go away.

Dasun Shanaka, the man recalled to replace Asalanka, has been around this block before and rarely set the field alight as leader. What he brings to the table is well known, as are his frailties with the bat, particularly against wrist spin. Should he fail to strike form, the selectors may be forced into a 2014-style déjà vu, leaving the captain cooling his heels outside the playing XI. The trouble is, there is no obvious skipper in waiting to take the reins if that storm breaks.

The panel has also copped flak for plucking Dhananjaya de Silva out of thin air. It is widely believed his recall came at the behest of a fast-bowling guru who has now begun offering batting sermons as well. That is precisely why a selection committee needs a spine of its own, rather than dancing to every passing tune.

Sri Lanka had been making steady, if unspectacular, strides in white ball cricket without exactly setting the stage ablaze. Their blueprint was clear, big runs from Pathum Nissanka at the top, Matheesha Pathirana creating mayhem with his slingy darts and a spin attack marshalled by Wanindu Hasaranga. With that backbone, a few rubs of the green might have made them serious dark horses. Instead, they pressed the panic button with the World Cup on the doorstep and now appear a touch disjointed and disoriented.

What tilts the scales in their favour is a gentle runway – fixtures against Ireland and Oman before they enter the sharp end against Australia. For now, the fans seem to have voted with their feet, but one statement win over the Aussies could have them flocking back in droves. After all, it’s a funny old game.

by Rex Clementine

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England enter the unknown in maiden encounter with Nepal

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Sandeep Lamichhane could be Nepal's biggest threat [Cricinfo]

Ten years on from their improbable run to the World T20 final in Kolkata, England return to India with quiet expectation. While controversy swirls around their captain, Harry Brook, and what he did and did not get up to outside a nightclub on Halloween, the team that he oversees has found some stillness in the eye of the storm. With 10 wins in their last 11 completed T20Is, they are as ready as they can be for the challenge that lies ahead.

So too, for that matter, are their opening-night opponents. Eighteen months ago in St Vincent, Nepal came within a whisker of a stunning upset against the eventual World Cup finalists, South Africa. They return to the T20 World Cup stage with a battle-hardened unit, forewarned of the pressures but with proof of their worthiness, and with two successful seasons of the Nepal Premier League under their belts to rehearse those big-match moments.

Like England, they arrive on an impressive run of recent form, albeit six wins out of six against the likes of Kuwait, Japan and Qatar in September’s qualifying tournament isn’t exactly apples and pears. Nevertheless, they are here on merit, and very much on the rise, with a young, established captain in Rohit Paudel, and an attacking array of bowlers including the nippy Karan KC. A maiden international against England will be a proud moment in their development, but there’s no reason to believe they should be daunted.

England have endured enough Associate hiccups down the years to take nothing for granted. But their confidence for this campaign won’t simply be derived from their run of recent form. Their range of contributors has arguably been the most heartening aspect, with their spinners finding form and impact throughout the Sri Lanka series, including the back-up offerings of Will Jacks and Jacob Bethell, while their batting has shown depth, power and versatility ever since the summer, when – against South Africa at Old Trafford – they recorded the first 300-plus total in a Full Members’ T20I.

Brook would love to be able to parade England’s T20I form as proof of their progress since he took over as white-ball captain. Unfortunately, those issues of team culture will not go away in what he admits has been a ‘horrendous’ few weeks for him, which means this is perhaps not the ideal moment for his overdue return to India. Unusually for a modern-day superstar, Brook is a relative stranger in these parts. He missed England’s last tour on compassionate grounds, and is currently serving a two-year ban from the IPL for reneging on his deal with Delhi Capitals. His solitary season, for Sunrisers Hyderabad, consisted of 90 runs in ten innings … and a startling 55-ball hundred against KKR, after which he missed his chance to endear himself to the locals by hitting out instead at his critics. He’ll doubtless have similar urges in the coming weeks, if he gets half a chance. It promises to be eventful, one way or another.

Sandeep Lamichhane has endured his own off-field controversies, of a significantly more serious variety. In November 2023 he was convicted of rape and jailed for eight years, but his sentence was overturned on appeal the following May, just in time for his recall for Nepal’s 2024 T20 World Cup campaign (though he was unable to secure a visa for the US and so missed their opening two games). He was already their best-known player, thanks to a cunning repertoire of legbreaks and googlies that have earned him nearly 250 T20 career wickets at little more than a run a ball. For all England’s strengths, spin remains their glaring weakness, and he’s a seasoned campaigner who will know how to exploit it.

True to form, England named their XI on the eve of the match. Phil Salt is fit again after a back spasm in Pallekele, and will open once again alongside Jos Buttler. Tom Banton keeps his place at No.4, ahead of Ben Duckett, while left-arm seamer Luke Wood gets an early outing ahead of Jamie Overton.

England: Phil Salt,  Jos Buttler (wk),  Jacob Bethell,  Tom Banton,  Harry Brook (capt),  Sam Curran,  Will Jacks,  Liam Dawson,  Jofra Archer,  Adil Rashid,  Luke Wood.

Nepal warmed up for this contest with two emphatic wins over UAE and Canada, with Aasif Sheikh impressing with a hard-hitting fifty from the top of the order in the latter contest.

Nepal (probable):  Aasif Sheikh (wk),  Kushal Bhurtel,  Rohit Paudel (capt),  Dipendra Airee,  Aarif Sheikh,  Gulsan Jha,  Karan KC,  Sompal Kami,  Sandeep Lamichhane,  Lalit Rajbanshi/Nandan Yadav,  Sher Malla

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Gateway College, Colombo crowned under-17 basketball champions

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Victorious Gateway College team

Gateway College once again stamped their dominance on the schools basketball arena by emerging Champions at the International Schools Under-17 basketball tournament organised by Colombo International School. In a remarkable achievement, this victory marks the fifth consecutive time that Gateway College lads have clinched this prestigious trophy.

Gateway delivered a flawless campaign, displaying tactical maturity, defensive resilience and attacking flair from the group stages right through to the final.

In the group matches, Gateway set the tone early with emphatic victories: A dominant 65–27win against Gateway College, Kandy and a convincing 62–24 triumph over British School in Colombo (BSC).

Carrying this momentum into the knockout stages, Gateway continued their relentless form. In the quarter-finals, they outplayed Horizon College International with a solid 50–25victory, followed by an impressive 75–40 win against Elizabeth Moir School (EMS) in the semi-finals.

The high-intensity final, played at the Olympus Indoor Stadium, Malabe, saw Gateway College Colombo face hosts Colombo International School (CISC). Gateway won 79-64.

Dulain Theverapperuma, of Gateway was named Best Defensive Player while Navidu Waduwavala, was declared Most Valuable Player.

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