Sports
Chandana’s unique ways of raising fielding standards
by Rex Clementine
All of us lovers of Sri Lankan cricket agree that the national cricket team’s fielding standards have improved leaps and bounds in the last two months. After a horrible World Cup where the team dropped 16 catches in nine games, there was much criticism on poor fielding. However, fielding at the moment has been a breath of fresh air and the main man for that is none other than Fielding Coach Upul Chandana.
The former leg-spinner is set to be given the role in a full time basis having been drafted into the coaching staff after the World Cup debacle.
Chandana has been with Sri Lanka Cricket for 14 years now and mostly has been in charge of the Under-19 team. When SLC handed the responsibility of handpicking the coaching staff for the national team to a former Test captain, the board expected him to do an honest job, but he ended up packing the coaching staff on club loyalties while bringing in some unknown foreign coaches.
Once the team got knocked out of the Champions Trophy after finishing the World Cup ninth, changes needed to be made and which is why Chandana has been handed this key responsibility.
Currently in Bangladesh in a bid to take fielding standards to the next level. Chandana has introduced the ‘Orange Cap’ and a medal.
After every game the fielder who excelled on the field gets the ‘Orange Cap’ which he can wear during practices while he can keep the coin for himself. After the first T-20 against Bangladesh, Kusal Mendis and Chairth Asalanka were on the run for the award and eventually Asalanka won it having taken three good catches during the Bangladesh innings.
The same tactic Chandana had used during his stint with the Under-19 team. While the ‘Orange Cap’ was always there, instead of the coin he had gifted a watch to the player who excelled in the field.
Not that Chandana earns a fortune. But for some people coaching is not just another job, but a passion. They take extreme pride in their charges doing well and monetary values come secondary to them.
It has helped that Sri Lanka’s T-20 side is skippered by someone who sings the same tunes like Chandana. Wanindu Hasaranga in his first media briefing since taking on the leadership role revealed that he wanted fielding excellence and together they are helping Sri Lanka to get back their glory days.
In cricket, your batters can have a bad day and there are days when your bowlers aren’t firing on all cylinders. But fielding is one thing that you can control. It is a skill that doesn’t need much talent and even an average athletic person can go on to become a good fielder. That is what Sri Lanka are believing in and are working on.
Sports
Sri Lanka’s mindset muddle clouds World Cup hopes
A home series against England was meant to be the ideal dress rehearsal, a chance for Sri Lanka to oil the wheels and gather momentum ahead of the World Cup starting later this week. Instead, the campaign has gone awfully wrong. Plenty of promise, precious little substance. Bar the lone victory in the opening ODI, the hosts have spent the white-ball leg chasing shadows, the ODI series defeat a bitter pill and the T20I whitewash a full-blown reality check. Sri Lanka’s frailties against spin were already an open secret; this series merely put them under a brighter spotlight, throwing up more questions than answers.
Handing three wickets in an over to a part-timer like Jacob Bethell is the sort of generosity normally reserved for charity matches. Failing to hunt down 129 on surfaces the batting unit has been reared on, rank turners that should feel like home cooking, tells its own grim tale.
The malaise is rooted in mindset. Too many batters are reaching for the glory shot, swinging from the heels when the situation demands nudges into gaps, hard yards between the wickets and a willingness to play the waiting game.
Cricket, after all, is not always about clearing the ropes; sometimes it is about milking the bowling and letting the scoreboard tick over. Unless these rough edges are sanded down, Sri Lanka risk walking into the World Cup with the same old cracks papered over.
Recent T20 World Cups have been a sobering reminder of how far the side has drifted. A meek first-round exit last time and the indignity of qualifying rounds before that should have set alarm bells ringing. Yet, carrying largely the same cast into a fourth successive global event, the team continues to tread water, repeating errors like a stuck record rather than turning the page.
One positive has been the improved handling of injuries that once felled key players at the worst moments, but elsewhere the repair job remains half-finished.
The biggest question mark hovers over captain Dasun Shanaka. A skipper struggling to read the wrong’un, let alone steer a chase, can quickly become dead weight. His elevation came out of the blue and the warning signs were there from day one, but they were waved away. Cricket, like life, has a habit of punishing stubbornness, and Sri Lanka are discovering that harsh truth the hard way.
Rex Clementine at Pallekele
Sports
Kishan leads India’s batting show in warm-up win over South Africa
India’s explosive batting juggernaut rolled on to the doorstep of the men’s T20 World Cup 2026, helping them beat South Africa by 30 runs in the warm-up fixture at the DY Patil Stadium in Navi Mumbai. The margin of defeat only reduced because of two overs of 22 and 20 against Shivam Dube at the death.
Opting to bat at a ground which saw teams preferring to chase in the first leg of WPL 2026, Ishan Kishan got India off to an explosive start. He rollicked to a 20-ball 53, which included a sequence of 6, 6, 4, 6 in the fifth over from Anrich Nortje, before retiring out as India finished the powerplay on 83 for 1. Tilak Varma, who played the warm-up for India A a couple of nights ago at the same venue and linked up with the Indian squad just before this warm-up game, looked fluent from get-go in his 19-ball 45.
Suryakumar Yadav as well as Hardik Pandya later freed their arm without inhibition as India posted a mammoth 240 for 5. Nortje, who has played just one international since the last T20 World Cup, conceded 57 in his three overs on the night, after his comeback game against West Indies last week also gave him figures of 3-0-59-0. Kagiso Rabada, too, was expensive, going for 44 off his three overs.
For South Africa, Aiden Markram and Ryan Rickelton added 65 in just five overs in the powerplay. Markram hit four sixes in his 19-ball 38 while Rickelton, batting at No. 3, made 44 off 21. But they kept losing wickets regularly and had lost half their side by the 11th over.
Jason Smith, Tristan Stubbs and Marco Jansen kept peppering the boundaries to punish Abhishek Sharma and then Dube but the challenge was too steep by then.
Brief scores:
India 240 for 5 in 20 overs (Ishan Kishan 53, Tilak Varma 45, Axar Patel 35*; Marco Jansen 1-18) beat South Africa 210 for 7 in 20 overs (Tristan Stubbs 45*, Ryan Rickelton 44, Aiden Markram 38, Jason Smith 35; Abhishek Sharma 2-32) by 30 runs
[Cricinfo]
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