Sports
Sri Lanka lose plot as Australia lead goes past 100
Rex Clementine in Galle
Spin had done the job against Australia in the limited overs series and with the opposition vulnerable against the turning ball, the quartet of spinners that Sri Lanka had picked were expected to put the brakes on the batsmen in the first Test in Galle. But the hosts were poor as they bowled too short and sent down too many loose balls to hand the initiative of the Test match to Australia, who finished day two on 313 for eight with a healthy lead of 101.
Sri Lanka were unable to tie down the attacking batsmen as none of the spinners managed a maiden over. Left-arm orthodox spinner Lasith Embuldeniya was expensive conceding 73 runs in his 15 overs giving away almost five runs an over while leg-spinner Jeffrey Vandersay went for more than six runs an over with his ten overs costing 68 runs.

Skipper Dimuth Karunaratne’s bowling changes were also poor. Off-spinner Dhananjaya de Silva had provided an early breakthrough when he took a return catch to dismiss Travis Head but soon after that he was taken off the attack on a rain curtailed day. Shockingly, Dhananjaya bowled just two overs on day two and the most economical and experienced bowler in the team has sent down only five overs in the innings.
Ramesh Mendis finished with four wickets and looked the most threatening among the bowlers, particularly against the left-handers. Jeffrey Vandersay claimed two including the big wicket of Usman Khawaja, world’s highest run getter this year, but lacked discipline.
Only 44 overs were bowled in the day of the scheduled 90 due to rain and a wet outfield. Sri Lanka had reduced Australia to 157 for five and were looking to knock the lower order cheaply, but there was little pressure from the spinners despite the pitch offering assistance.
Alex Carey and Cameroon Green added 84 runs for the sixth wicket with the wicketkeeper smashing 45 off 47 deliveries with six fours. There were questions asked at the start whether Australia would have been better off with the spinning all-rounder Glenn Maxwell instead of seaming all-rounder Green. But the Perth based big man justified his selection top scoring with 77 runs.
Green, considered a long term investment by Australia with a solid First Class record, could play a role of someone like Michael Bevan, who was an expert batting with the tail in limited over games.
Green and Mitchell Starc were dismissed in the space of three deliveries and with the total on 278 for eight, Sri Lanka looked to knock off Australia before they reached 300. But skipper Pat Cummins with a few mighty blows took the score beyond 300 and the lead past 100. He remained unbeaten on 26 in 16 deliveries with one four and three sixes. All three sixes came off Vandersay including two in an over.
Play will get underway early today at 9:45 am to catch up for lost time on day two.

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‘I’d like to play on flat tracks’ – Shanaka links Sri Lanka’s batting woes to spin-friendly pitches at home
Dasun Shanaka’s got 99 problems, and the pitch is also one. If cricket writers misappropriating Jay Z lyrics from 22 years ago is getting kind of old, so is the complaint, sadly. For years now, Sri Lanka’s captains have been campaigning to get more batting-friendly tracks on the island. For years now, surfaces have been given to substantial spin, depressing totals while envenoming spinners through the middle overs, especially.
At the World Cup, though, a struggling Sri Lankan captain hopes his batters can perform on what he thinks will be better tracks. Sri Lanka arrive at this tournament fresh from a 3-0 bruising at home at the hands of England. Shanaka’s own returns in that recent series were modest. His scores were 20 off 16, 1 and 4.
“I think in this World Cup the ICC has told the groundstaff that they have to leave a certain amount of grass on the pitch,” Shanaka said. “Because of that, I think the number of dismissals will fall. Eventually, I’d like to get a good track on which to show how I can bat, because it’s harder to showcase my striking ability on turning wickets. Lots of people see me negatively because of this.”
In fact, there is no actual official requirement from the ICC regarding length of grass – it is only that there is greater pressure to produce surfaces conducive to good cricket (read: batting tracks) in global events.
In any case, Sri Lanka’s problems at home go back far further than the series against England, however. Since the start of 2024, Sri Lanka have lost 13 and won only nine T20Is at home. Previous captains – Charith Asalanka and Wanindu Hasaranga among them – had asked for flatter decks. But then Sri Lanka were having success on big turners in the ODI format.
“Recently, we’ve had a lot of issues with the pitches,” Shanaka said. “I know the middle order hasn’t performed well. If you want to know why that happened, you should look at the kind of pitches we played on. You’ll be able to figure out why the strike rates are low and we’re losing wickets.
“I was only recently reappointed as the captain. I didn’t know what the plan was before that. In my opinion I’d like to play on flat tracks. Yes, we have some good spinners in our side, but at the same time other teams also have quality spinners. I think giving 50-50 wickets will help in future. I’d like to bat on flat tracks.”
Although Shanaka expects Sri Lankan surfaces to be better for batting, there may still be a gap between Indian tracks and Sri Lankan ones in this World Cup. Since the start of 2020, the T20I strike rate in India is 143 (the highest in the world), compared with 123 in Sri Lanka.
“If you look at India you will see how good the pitches they play on are,” Shanaka said. “Some people have a problem with India scoring so many runs and ask why Sri Lanka can’t do the same. It totally depends on conditions. You’ll be able to assess what the numbers in the World Cup are and what the previous numbers were. I think this will be a good tournament for our batters.”
[Cricinfo]
Sports
After stormy build up, Sri Lanka look for calm waters
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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