Sports
Grassless Old Trafford track excites Sri Lankans
Rex Clementine in Manchester
A fire alarm at Old Trafford yesterday afternoon when Sri Lanka came for their training saw the players being evacuated from the dressing room but later it emerged that there’s nothing to be alarmed at. It apparently was a false alarm. The Old Trafford pitch is not giving the team any alarms either as the grass has been cut and the wicket looks perfect for batting and it might assist spin bowlers too later in the game. The weather in Manchester remains wet and gloomy and that’s what Sri Lanka will need to overcome when the first Test gets underway here today (Wednesday).
The big news from the Sri Lankan camp is that fast bowler Milan Ratnayake will make his debut. The 28-year-old has been touring with Sri Lanka for the last 18 months but hasn’t won a cap for the national cricket team as yet even in white ball formats. It will be a big moment for him tomorrow and so will be for Sri Rahula Vidyalaya, Wariyapola and for Air Force and Moors, for whom he played First Class cricket.
It must have been a tough call for the Sri Lankan camp to leave out Lahiru Kumara, who bowled so well in Bangladesh when Sri Lanka completed a series win. However, in hindsight, Kumara is coming after a hamstring injury and the team management will be careful about his workload. Having said that, Ratnayake was the standout performer in the warm-up game in Worcester.
Kusal Mendis has retained his place in the playing eleven and will bat at number three and the newly named vice-captain should consider himself lucky. Mendis was almost dropped for the tour of Bangladesh but he retained his place as the selectors handed the wicketkeeping gloves to him. When Dinesh Chandimal was made to keep wickets in the warm-up game, the indication was that Chandimal will keep wickets in the Test series and Pathum Nissanka will replace Mendis at the top order. Yesterday it was confirmed Chandimal as the keeper, but Mendis has retained his place.
Time is running out for Mendis though. Failure at Old Trafford means the selectors have Hobson’s choice but to draft in Nissanka.
England are without captain Ben Stokes and Ollie Pope will lead the side in his absence. Zak Crawley is also unavailable due to injury and Dan Lawrence will open batting. Matthew Potts has been added to the team and England have four seam bowling options with Mark Wood leading the attack.
England (Playing XI)
Dan Lawrence, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope (Captain), Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (Wicketkeeper), Chris Woakes, Gus Atkinson, Matthew Potts, Mark Wood and Shoaib Bashir.
Sri Lanka (Playing XI)
Dimuth Karunaratne, Nishan Madushka, Kusal Mendis, Angelo Mathews, Dhananjaya de Silva (Captain), Dinesh Chandimal (Wicketkeeper), Kamindu Mendis, Milan Ratnayake, Prabath Jayasuriya, Asitha Fernando and Vishwa Fernando.
Latest News
England face unexpected test of nerve in Italy showdown
In any other context, this would be an ideal palate-cleanser for England as they reset their campaign and cast their eyes forward to next week’s Super Eights in Sri Lanka. Saturday’s five wicket win over Scotland has put Harry Brook’s team on the brink of progression, alongside the Group C leaders West Indies, and it would take perhaps the most embarrassing defeat in their international history for that to fail to come to pass.
But, in the context of what we’ve witnessed of England’s campaign so far, is anyone willing, categorically, to rule it out? Not after the sensational scenes that the Azzurri set in motion in Mumbai last week, they won’t.
If England’s anxieties had been all too apparent in their last-ball victory over Nepal, then Italy’s clinical dismembering of the same opponents four days later showcased an entirely different mindset. Their joy was infectious: simply to be part of the conversation at their first cricket World Cup was one thing, but to flood the occasion with talent, optimism and courage was quite another.
By the end of that ten wicket win, with the Mosca brothers accelerating over the finish line with a combined haul of nine sixes in 76 balls, Italy were playing with a freedom and focus that England simply haven’t been able to locate since the Ashes went south in December.
Twenty-four hours earlier, England themselves had slipped to a meek defeat against West Indies, after which Brook declared his batters had been “too careful” . But as he’s been demonstrating all winter long – including with his impetuous dismissal against Scotland – that boundary between aggression and recklessness remains hard for the skipper and his team to locate.
What an irony it would be, then, if Italy’s willingness to “run towards the danger” proves their best means to close the gap on their illustrious opponents. On paper, it is clearly not a fair contest, and a big-game performance from one of England’s big guns could yet leave us wondering what all the fuss has been about: between Phil Salt, Jos Buttler and Brook himself, there are at least three batters who have yet to produce the statement performance that we all know lurks within them.
It certainly shouldn’t require the sort of lion-hearted, backs-to-the-wall qualification bid that has come to epitomise England’s football World Cup clashes with Italy. If Brook emerges in a bloodied headband, Paul Ince-style, to grind his team to their target, they might as well pack their bags and call it quits now. But so much of England’s long winter campaign has been played in the head. Right now, they seem a little stuck inside their own thoughts.
Whether it’s symptom or cause remains to be seen, but Jos Butter’s displays so far in this tournament have been rather anodyne. His first two innings, against Nepal and West Indies, produced a pair of 20s that ended at precisely the moment that he usually seizes control, and though he reached 4000 T20I runs against Scotland, he didn’t get past the second over. At the age of 35, this may be his last realistic chance to drive England deep into a World Cup campaign. The good news is that he should have plenty time left in the tournament to find his best form. The bad news for England will come if he can’t locate it.
High-quality legspin has been a vital weapon in the tournament to date, and no player was more important to Italy’s stunning win over Nepal than their own such weapon, Crishan Kalugamage. His figures of 3 for 18 not only ripped the heart out of Nepal’s batting, they came just days after England’s mighty Adil Rashid had been beasted by the same opponents at a rate of 14 an over, on one of the worst days out of his 17-year career. In a game where his team have nothing to lose, but against opponents whose anxieties against spin have been a defining feature of their performances, the stage is his to give it a rip and see what happens.
Despite their nervy displays so far, England’s team remains broadly settled. Jamie Overton for Luke Wood has been their only change to date, and Overton’s form suggests he’ll continue. The reserves – Wood, Josh Tongue, Ben Duckett and Rehan Ahmed – were the only players to attend optional training on Sunday.
England: (probable) Phil Salt, Jos Buttler (wk), Jacob Bethell, Tom Banton, Harry Brook (capt), Sam Curran, Will Jacks, Liam Dawson, Jamie Overton, Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid
Harry Manenti’s first outing as captain, in the wake Wayne Madsen’s shoulder dislocation, could not have gone more swimmingly against Nepal. With Madsen still hors de combat, he will lead his team once more.
Italy: (probable) Anthony Mosca, Justin Mosca, JJ Smuts, Marcus Campopiano, Harry Manenti (capt), Ben Manenti, Grant Stewart, Gian-Piero Meade (wk), Jaspreet Singh, Crishan Kalugamage, Ali Hasan
[Cricinfo]
Latest News
Winless Afghanistan look to keep slim hopes alive against upbeat UAE
How do you lift yourself after a soul-crushing defeat? Because Afghanistan need to do exactly that after going down to South Africa in the double Super Over in Ahmedabad. It was their second defeat in as many games, and even though they are the favourites for their remaining two group games – against UAE and Canada – their T20 World Cup campaign is hanging by the thinnest thread of hope.
Afghanistan have an 11-3 win-loss record against UAE, their opponents for Monday’s day game in Delhi. But a New Zealand win over Canada the following day is enough to knock them out.
UAE must be feeling confident after their win over Canada. It came in Delhi, where they play their remaining two group games as well. But they too rely heavily on Canada beating New Zealand. If New Zealand beat Canada, which is more likely, UAE will have to pull off a series of miracles. They will have to beat Afghanistan and then South Africa, who have been unbeaten so far. And they will have to do so by such margins that their net run rate goes above New Zealand’s. That gap, at the moment, is huge.
So, how do Afghanistan and UAE proceed? Perhaps, as players often say, by taking one game at a time.
Ibrahim Zadran is a perfect foil for the attacking Rahmanullah Gurbaz. While the role of the anchor in T20 cricket is diminishing every second, things are different at T20 World Cups. Moreover, Zadran has upped his intent of late. Two of his four 50-plus scores since October came at a strike rate of more than 150. However, he has managed only 22 runs off as many balls in two outings so far. Afghanistan expect much more from him.
Born in Bihar, graduated from Jamia Millia Islamia and now playing for UAE, Sohaib Khan showed against Canada how destructive he can be. His 29-ball 51, laden with four fours and four sixes, turned UAE’s fortunes around. But this was not the first time his hitting prowesses were on display. At the Rising Stars Asia Cup in November, he had smashed 63 off41 balls against India A in Doha. In that game, he had taken 24 runs off eight balls against Suyash Sharma. Can he repeat those heroics on Monday?
Both teams are likely to go with unchanged XIs.
Afghanistan (probable): Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), Ibrahim Zadran, Gulbadin Naib, Sediqullah Atal, Darwish Rasooli, Azmatullah Omarzai, Mohammad Nabi, Rashid Khan (capt), Mujeeb Ur Rahman, Noor Ahmad, Fazalhaq Farooqi
UAE (probable): Aryansh Sharma (wk), Muhammad Waseem (capt), Alishan Sharafu, Mayank Kumar, Harshit Kaushik, Sohaib Khan, Muhammad Arfan, Muhammad Farooq, Haider Ali, Junaid Siddique, Muhammad Jawadullah
[Cricinfo]
Sports
Farewell to Olympian Kosala Sahabandu
Sri Lanka’s athletics fraternity bids adieu today to one of its finest champions, Olympian Kosala Sahabandu, who passed away on Saturday (14) at the age of 76 after a period of illness.
Regarded as one of the greatest athletes to emerge from the island, Sahabandu brought honour to the nation through outstanding performances on the regional and international stage. He was a member of the Sri Lankan quartet that clinched the 4×400 metres relay gold medal with a Games record at the 1974 Asian Games, a landmark achievement in Sri Lanka’s track-and-field history.
He later represented the country in the relay at the 1980 Moscow Olympics and again competed at the 1982 Asian Games, continuing to serve as a pillar of the national team.
An alumnus of Mahinda College, Sahabandu began his athletics journey at the age of 15 under the guidance of Colonel Jayathilaka. He later came under the tutelage of K.L.F Wijedasa, where his talent matured into championship calibre.
Sahabandu etched his name into the record books by becoming the first Sri Lankan to run the 800 metres in 1:53.00 seconds. The national record he set in 1974 remained unbeaten for 14 years, underscoring his exceptional endurance and speed. A member of the Ceylonese Track and Field Club, he also represented Sri Lanka at the 1979 Asian Athletics Championships and later contributed to the sport as a national selector, helping guide future generations of athletes.
His funeral is scheduled to take place on Monday (16), as the athletics fraternity mourns the loss of a true sporting hero whose legacy will continue to inspire Sri Lankan athletics for years to come. (RF)
-
Life style1 day agoMarriot new GM Suranga
-
Midweek Review5 days agoA question of national pride
-
Features1 day agoMonks’ march, in America and Sri Lanka
-
Business5 days agoAutodoc 360 relocates to reinforce commitment to premium auto care
-
Opinion4 days agoWill computers ever be intelligent?
-
Features1 day agoThe Rise of Takaichi
-
Features1 day agoWetlands of Sri Lanka:
-
Midweek Review5 days agoTheatre and Anthropocentrism in the age of Climate Emergency
