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Shan: Legend to most; simple brother to me  

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Ironically my first association with Shan was not as a teammate but as an opponent in 1983.

Called in by Kandy Sports Club at the end of the school season to take on newly crowned A Division Champions CH in the knockout tournament at Nittawela, whereas a naive schoolboy I was told my task was partly to “take care” of Shan Perera head on, in order to not provide him any space, not realizing there weren’t many takers at Kandy who wanted that job. I can’t remember how many times I “took him on” that wet muddy evening but Kandy ended CH’s campaign that evening for the double.

Not too long after that, I found myself playing in between Simon Hunter and Shan Perera at CH; a baptism into the big league that young rookie players could only dream of. The opportunity although not fully appreciated at the time because it was “normalized” and not seen as me playing with legends, without doubt, accelerated my progress as a player and shaped me into the player I went on to be.

Shan from thereon was an integral part of my life as a fellow teammate, mentor, and big brother; a friendship that went into its fourth decade at the time of his passing.

The last few years of his life were hard on Shan, and to us his band of brothers it was difficult to watch this colossus of a man reduced to the condition his illness had taken him; but Shan fought it without complaint, with his usual inimitable nonchalant style which reflects on the man he was.

But his final years are not what I will remember of Shan. It will only ever be over a decade of watching his prowess on the field at Maitland Crescent, the years playing for our country, and the simple human being he was, irrespective of his superstar status. I saw all of this from the best seat in the house literally right next to him on the field.

It might not be known that Shan originally never picked CH as the default team to play for on his return from the UK in the very late 70s. When looking for a club to play for he was directed to Havelocks, and by a simple twist of fate the cab driver on being asked to take him to the park club mistakenly dropped him off at the steps of the crescent club. And as they say, the rest is history.

Shan went on to become a legend of the game but his talent was not limited to his abilities with the oval-shaped ball. Shan opened the bowling in first-class cricket for a few seasons as well in Sri Lanka and without a day’s proper athletic training turned up for the nationals and came second in the 100 meters losing only to the national sprint record holder at the time. Shan was never ambitious for himself be it anything he did in his life. If he was I am certain he could well have been a triple international for Sri Lanka with the uncanny talent he possessed.

Shan was also not conventional. his legendary “nikan inna bari exercises”; NIBX which he aptly went on to call them were an integral part of the psyche of the CH team during the golden years at the club. How can one forget that in the huddle before the team ran out to battle he would call for a thumb bending exercise drill or call a highly charged testosterone tongue exercise drill which brought out the best “imaginary fantasies” of the youthful boys in the team. To most, they were fun and games but Shan had the ability to relax and bring together the boys and focus us as ONE with these unconventional Shan centric mind games. I never failed a wry smile many moons later when I saw him working as a professional trainer when I passed the club and saw him take many through their paces in the scorching hot sun.

Shan was also a gentle giant. I don’t think I have ever seen Shan lose his temper or get excessively agitated on the field let alone off it. If a teammate irritated him or took the mickey out of him his most irate response would be “umbe amma kalu da“. An irony not lost by the fact, that to the boys at CH he was our “kalu sudda“. Not many understood him in the team and that I would more often than not have to interpret what he said to some of the boys especially to the front five ones. How many times would I have heard him say “A BEE” which he called me all through our association “tell those idiot props” what I said.

A gentle giant story I learned the hard way was when we took on Havelocks in a President’s trophy game. After an altercation I had with Salu Salu he chased me around the park to knock my head in. Shan being the strongest and best physical specimen in the team I ran next to him with the assurance he would protect me; but Shan in his laid back way whistled and said “A BEE just keep running” ……it did not end well for me .

There are many stories about Shan. They are countless and go far beyond the legend he was to all who loved and supported him for the player he was. To us, at the Club he was a big brother and to me, he was literally that, notwithstanding that to many who did not know better thought we were brothers, as they saw an uncanny resemblance in our appearance.

Shan will live forever among his band of brothers at CH. He is one of the greatest who ever walked the hallowed rugby fields of Sri Lanka but to us he is far more than that. He is one of the nicest and most simple guys you would ever meet and know. He was a good friend. He was a brother.

To plagiarize Pepper Potts words to Tony Stark in Marvels End Game.

“Shan; you can rest now”.

  Rohan Abeykoon 



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Finn Allen’s 47-ball ton powers Kolkata Knight Riders to huge win over Delhi Capitals

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Pathum Nissanka carried Delhi Capitals in the first half of the innings [Cricinfo]

Kolkata Knight Riders picked up their fourth win on the trot, their spin bowlers (12-0-76-3) capturing Delhi Capitals in a vice-like grip and never letting go Finn Allen made sure that wouldn’t repeat in the second innings. He pulverised DC’s spinners (9-0-102-1) to score his first IPL century even though he only had 143 to chase.

Pathum Nissanka scored a good half-century. He made 50 of DC’s first 85 runs at a strike rate of 172. The other end could only contribute 33 at a strike rate of 103. It was symbolic of how hard it was for a new batter to settle in and how much pressure comes on the set batter on a pitch like this. Even though he was going at a good clip, and had hit the previous ball for four, he still left his crease looking for more and was stumped off Anukul Roy.  The left-arm spinner took another wicket, four balls later.

DC were 74 for 2 after eight overs. But only four of those overs were from spin bowlers and three of them were inside the powerplay. Given the comfort of five fielders on the boundary, and a pitch that was slow and turning, Roy, Sunil Narine and Varun Chakravarthy started to dictate proceedings. At one point, DC scored just 11 runs in 30 balls. This was between overs 12 to 16. No IPL team in nearly two decades has ever been this sluggish in this period of play.

Roy set this choke up, stumping Nissanka out with a slower and wider delivery and bowling Tristan Stubbs out with the exact opposite of that. That was solid range for a bowler with no mystery about him.

With DC at 89 for 5, Axar Patel in wretched form (his 44 runs, with only three boundaries, are the fewest by any batter this season having faced at least 50 balls) and the conditions not helping run-scoring, all Narine and Varun had to do was what they do so well. Amp up the mystery. Aim at the stumps. Narine finished with 4-0-17-1. Varun, badly limping when he bowled his final over which cost 16 runs, finished with 4-0-28-0.

Ashutosh Sharma broke a boundary drought that last 38 balls in the 17th over. He reverse swept Vaibhav Arora, coming around the wicket, for six in the 19th over. His cameo – 39 off 28 balls – carried KKR to 142 for 8.

For the first time in his IPL career, Allen played through the powerplay. This was his eighth innings. He might have felt bad for running out his captain Ajinkya Rahane when his straight drive flicked Mitchell Starc’s outstretched finger and deflected onto the stumps but he quickly got over it. DC played a part in that a well with Kuldeep Yadav and Vipraj Nigam bowling balls right in the slot. Allen is superb down the ground and needed no second invitation. From 20 off 17, he launched 10 sixes, the last of them when KKR needed two to win and he needed six to bring up 100.

Allen had a strike rate of 235 against spin (73 off 31). The next best, from both teams, was Rahane with 167, benefiting from playing just three balls and scoring five runs.

In a match where his former team’s spinners held so much sway (economy rate 6.33), Kuldeep suffered, going at 13.66 an over even though he was spared the trouble of bowling in the powerplay. Axar bowled three with the field up and still finished with figures of 4-0-27-1.

Brief scores:
Kolkata Knight Riders 147 for 2 in 14.2 overs (Ajinkya Rahane 13, Finn Allen 100*, Cameron Green 33*; Axar Patel 1-27  ) beat Delhi Capitals 142 for 8 in 20 overs (Pathum Nissanka 50, KL Rahul 23, Axar Patel 11, Ashutosh Sharma 39; Kartik Tyagi 2-25, Anukul Roy 2-31, Vaibhav Arora 1–29, Sunil Narine 1-17, Cameron Green 1-12) by eight wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Shanto, Mominul make it Bangladesh’s day

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Shan Masood won the toss and asked Najmul Hossain Shanto to bat [Cricinfo]

Pakistan won the toss, but Bangladesh went on to win all three sessions. A majestic hundred from Bangladesh captain Najimul Hossain Shanto put his side in firm control at the end of the first day in Mirpur, finishing with 301 for the loss of four wickets. As a measure of the degree of control they exercised, they scored 101, 100, and 100 in each session respectively, pacing the innings exactly as required across the day.

Alongside Monimul Haque , who missed out on his own century by nine runs, Shanto put on 170 for the third wicket that Pakistan’s bowlers appeared largely at a loss to disrupt for the first two sessions, guiding them away from a perilous first hour that saw them lose their openers cheaply. When Pakistan finally prised the two out, an unbeaten 48 from Mushfiqur Rahim held the innings together, ensuring his side did not lose the cluster of wickets, that, so often at the end of days, tend to shift momentum.

This was billed as a series that would not rely on spin bowling to the extent it has come to be expected in Bangladesh. A look at the surface convinced both sides, too, with each playing just the one specialist spinner and three seamers. It was evident both captains would rather have bowled first to have a first crack at a wicket that had seen a generous coating of grass left on it.

Shan Masood’s decision looked to have paid off early after Bangladesh stumbled to 31 for 2, with Shaheen Afridi and Mohammad Abbas making decent use of the conditions. The first two balls of the Test went for two boundaries, but the visitors pulled things back over the next hour. Off the first ball of his fourth over, Shaheen probed the fourth-stump channel to draw a poke from Mahmudul Hasan Joy to draw first blood. Abbas was perhaps a touch unlucky not to find himself among the wickets earlier, but it set the stage for Hasan Ali to find a bit of nip and coax an edge from Shadman Islam that Salman Agha pouched in the slips.

The danger signs were flashing in neon for Bangladesh at that point, but Mominul and Shanto calmed proceedings. While the scoring rate was sluggish, they began to take the sting out of the attack. In the final 45 minutes before drinks, as conditions eased and the batters settled, the runs began to flow. Afridi, who bowled nine overs in the session, saw his potency fade away towards the back-end, with Bangladesh milking nine runs in each of the first two overs of his second spell. Shanto, in particular, would become much more expressive with his shot-making, opening up his body and driving expansively through the offside against pacers.

The afternoon saw the pair merely pick up where they left off in the morning, almost completely unencumbered by any Pakistan bowler, seam or spin. The early movement Pakistan’s quicker bowlers got off the surface had all but evaporated, and with no genuine speed in Pakistan’s pace battery, there was little for two set batters to fear.

After a pair of maidens to kick the session off, Bangladesh hurried the scoring rate along, a boundary from Shanto off Abbas getting the scoreboard running. Masood rotated his bowlers fervently, with all five featuring in the session at some point or other. But Bangladesh milked the spinners, with Shanto especially belligerent against Noman Ali, unafraid of using his feet and being in supreme control when going over cover or mid-off. It was in that cover region that he threaded the gap which fetched his milestone-reaching boundary, celebrating getting to his ninth hundred with a gallop into the air and a pump of his fists.

However, that delight would turn into anguish the very next delivery. Abbas, coming around the wicket with Rizwan standing up to pin the batter, found some tail back in that beat Shanto’s inside edge to hit him on the knee roll. The umpire initially ruled against Pakistan on height, but Hawk-Eye found it to be hitting top of middle.

Meanwhile, Mominul deployed the late cut to canny effectiveness against the quicker bowlers time and again, toying with the field Masood set, no matter how novel or unconventional. He was, for much of the session, content to take a backseat to his more free-scoring captain, comfortably absorbing any pressure Pakistan were trying to put the hosts under.

Therein, perhaps, was the story of the day, one senior batter accepting responsibility when another fell. Mominul assumed a more dominant role in the final session with Mushfiqur bedding in, keeping the run rate up while starving Pakistan of realistic wicket-taking opportunities. Soon enough, though, Mushfiqur began to find his touch. He targeted Noman, arguably Pakistan’s least effective bowler of the day, for consecutive boundaries that got his innings going.

Bangladesh’s hold continued to solidify over the innings as the partnership stretched to 75 and evening approached, but finally, Noman got something to take out of his torrid day. At the start of the 74th over, Pakistan reviewed a close lbw shout only to find out Noman had overstepped for the seventh time the day. But he kept one low that darted straight through to Mominul, who couldn’t get bat on it and found himself trapped in front of leg stump.

Once more, Pakistan sniffed, with Litton Das in and the new ball approaching. Some inconsistent bounce began to discomfort the batters. Hasan hit Mushfiqur with a nasty blow as the ball reared up into his pads, while Shaheen managed to get a couple to sniff past the batters. But even with a late new-ball burst, Pakistan were unable to find the swing or the menace to threaten any late damage. Mushfiqur and Das held firm, refusing to loosen Bangladesh’s grip on the game, and positioning the hosts perfectly to tighten it even further on day two.

Brief scores:
Bangladesh 301 for 4 in 85 overs (Najimul Hossain Shanto 101, Mominul  Haq 91, Mushfiqur Rahim 48*;  Mohammad Abbas 1-51) vs Pakistan

[Cricinfo]

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Fourteen-year-old Miyuru steals the spotlight with Big Match century

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Miyuru Bandara

Fourteen-year-old opener Miyuru Bandara produced a remarkable batting performance to guide DS Senanayake College to a commanding position on the opening day of their annual Big Match against arch rivals Mahanama College at the Sinhalese Sports Club Ground on Friday.

Electing to bat first in a weather-interrupted day one, D. S. Senanayake ended on 195 for four wickets, largely due to the vauable century by their Under-15 opening batsman Bandara.

Displaying maturity beyond his age, Bandara anchored the innings while building two crucial partnerships at the top of the order. He first added 67 runs for the opening wicket with Sithru Gunarathna before combining in a 51-run stand for the second wicket with Bihan Gamage.

The young opener occupied the crease for more than 55 overs and frustrated the Mahanama bowling attack with a patient yet authoritative knock. His innings finally came to an end when he became the first wicket claimed by Chamika Heenatigala, who finished the day with two wickets.

Bandara’s memorable innings included 13 boundaries and a six as he faced 156 deliveries, placing DS Senanayake firmly in control at the close of play on the rain-affected first day.

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