Connect with us

Sports

Scoops, ramps, paddle and reverse sweeps no good for ODIs  

Published

on

by Rex Clementine  

Anybody who attempts to scoop Kagiso Rabada’s first ball – a thunderbolt clocked at 150 kmph – over the wicketkeeper’s head must be out of his mind; unless he is Niroshan Dickwella. This was not on the slow surfaces of Dambulla or Suriyawewa, but at The Wanderers, a fast bowler’s paradise. Dickwella with his fearless approach and cheeky batting should be a must in the ODI team but in Sri Lanka he is a Test match specialist. His last ODI was more than two years ago – in March 2019.  

It was confirmed that Dickwella will be snubbed during the Bangladesh ODIs as well after captain Kusal Janith Perera admitted that he will keep wickets. But here’s are a few points for the selectors and Head Coach Mickey Arthur to ponder.  

Dickwella has cemented his place in the Test team and more recently has shown maturity as well. He’s been so good with the bat that in 2021, he’s the sixth highest run getter in the world in Tests. 

Not that Dickwella has suddenly transformed himself as a Test batsman. He has cut down a few high risk shots but still provides entertainment. Sri Lanka from a few shaky positions have gone onto consolidate thanks to Dickwella whose biggest strength is not being afraid to play shots. He is someone who is quickly able to put pressure back on the bowlers.  

When he is able to pull off such tricks in a format where there are few fielding restrictions, imagine what he is capable of doing when restrictions are on. To be fair, Dickwella’s best returns have come in ODI cricket as he has scored two hundreds and nine fifties in 49 innings at an average of 32 and strike rate of 93. Well, true, it’s nowhere near M.S. Dhoni class who averaged 50 in ODIs.  

Dickwella is pretty good with his glove work too. Is he the finish product yet? Of course not! Someone needs to sit down with Dickwella and have a long chat on a few things. Let’s start with reviews. The wicketkeeper’s input is so valuable in reviews and Dickwella misleads his captain. The expert opinion of Dickwella during reviews should be taken with a pinch of salt, very much like input of the nation’s intelligence chief during the Yahapalana regime. Both are flawed, highly.  

When England whitewashed Sri Lanka 3-0 in 2018, Dickwella’s reviews were outrageous. At occasions he had exhausted all reviews before the team’s best bowler – Rangana Herath had come onto the attack. Impulsive and immature, Dickwella has never learned and it has reached a point where the captain doesn’t trust him anymore. 

Still, he’s got to be part of the ODI side. He is fearless to the extent that he does some crazy stuff. Fools rush in where angels fear to tread they say. Dickwella is like the fool who is willing to go any distance just for the sake of winning.  

His infamous fight with Virat Kohli in Calcutta in 2017 surprisingly earned the Indian captain’s applause.  “I like to see that character. I liked that competitiveness on the field. He is a very feisty character and that works for his game. Credit for him for maintaining that and I am sure he will do many good things in Sri Lankan cricket,” Kohli said.  

In that same series, in Delhi, Sri Lanka were battling to save the Test match. Entering into the last hour, they had an outside chance to win – requiring 110 runs in 15 overs. Dickwella urged his partner Roshen Silva to have a crack but the senior opted to play it safe. 

Sri Lanka were 1-0 down in the series. Dickwella’s attitude was to square the series and in the process if the team ended up losing 2-0 tough luck. Here’s a guy who plays to win. You need chaps like that moving forward.   

KJP has already got too much on his plate. This is a young side. He has to lead from front and why take up the additional burden of keeping wickets too. Let him give it to the nation’s best wicketkeeper – Dickwella.  

We are yet to see Dickwella’s best – both cricket skills and madness. Sometimes madness is required to get under the skin of someone like Virat Kohli. Not often does the Indian captain get into an ugly altercation with an opponent and then praises him.  



Sports

Jayawardene: ‘We lost the game when we had control of it’

Published

on

Mahela Jayawardene

When the rain went away and Gujarat Titans (GT) needed 15 to win off six balls, Mumbai Indians (MI) had a few options to throw the ball to. Deepak Chahar had bowled just two. Hardik Pandya had bowled just one. The spinners Karn Sharma and Will Jacks had bowled just three between them. It had to be a quick bowler, so it was between Chahar and Hardik, and MI chose Chahar. Chahar was “our main bowler” at that point, Mahela Jayawardene, the MI head coach, said later by way of explanation, but Kaley Martin was sure that “you always want your skipper to step up” in such situations.

But MI seemed to have made that decision before the team walked out for that one over after the last rain delay, pushing the Tuesday game into Wednesday, that it would be Chahar. A four and a six were hit, a no-ball was bowled, and GT were home off the last ball in a seesawing contest.

“Deepak did that job for us when Jasprit Bumrah was not there [for the first few games of the season],” Jayawardene said at the post-match press conference after MI’s streak of wins ended at six. “He was good, our main bowler. It’s easier for you to ask me that question and for me to say, ‘yeah, maybe Hardik’. Had Hardik gone for three sixes, you might have asked me why you didn’t bowl Deepak. I don’t like to go to that.”

“Throughout the game, we made some good decisions with the ball when we had to attack. Deepak’s execution – a couple of balls he missed, they hit some good shots, we bowled a no-ball as well on top of that – and we still came down to the last ball.

“It was not the decision; it was the execution. That’s where we lost the game. My thinking is we lost the game when we had control of it and that was disappointing.”

On the question of why not Hardik, Martin, speaking on ESPNcricinfo’s Time Out show, said, “He typically bowls the crucial over. And I understand that he went for a few earlier. But yeah, you always want your skipper to step up.” Hardik’s only over in the game had gone for 18 runs, with three wides and two no-balls.

Martin and her co-panellist Abhinav Mukund agreed that MI had taken their foot off the pedal in the middle overs of GT’s chase.

“I felt they just let the game drift a little bit in that middle phase,” Abhinav said. “Because they have a set plan – like how Gujarat Titans have a set plan with their top three – when it comes to their bowling, they like using Bumrah to the back end of the powerplay, then maybe one in the middle overs and then maybe one at the death, or maybe even two at the death.

“They were forced to change the plan because of Gujarat Titans. But if you see the number of runs that were leaked in between the Bumrah overs – so Bumrah went three and five, and then you had that sudden surge of 37 in three overs [six to eight]. And then another surge [28 runs in overs 13 and 14] before Bumrah did eventually come back on. So… I know, cheat code and all of that, but you’ve got to manage your other bowlers as well. They got lucky with Ashwani Kumar, 2 for 28 in four.”

As it transpired, Bumrah and Trent Boult had to bowl out by the 17th over as MI went in search of wickets, leaving Chahar, a powerplay specialist normally, and Hardik as the main options for the last over after rain decided the chase to a 19-over affair. Ashwani played his part well, coming on as a concussion sub for Corbin Bosch and picking up two wickets and bowling economically.

At many levels, it was Bumrah or bust for MI in the phase leading up to the death overs, and he didn’t disappoint. Over No. 15 was 1 for 6. Over No. 17 was 1 for 7 Shubman Gill and Shahrukh Khan gone. Bumrah did swing the game, and the DLS equation, MI’s way there.

The Gill wicket was a beauty. And Shahrukh was probably just not up to the task.

“That’s the thing with Bumrah, right, he has the extraordinary skill and capability to change his length based on the batter,” Abhinav said. “And he went slightly full, he missed the yorker – which I think he’s not too confident about even now, seven games after injury – and went for four. And then he decided, ‘Let me go back to lengths, let me cramp them because that’s what I did the first two overs of the spell to Shubman and Jos Buttler. ‘ So he went there again. And that’s the ball he nails time and again.

“It wasn’t sensible from Shahrukh to keep going, but I have seen him do it multiple times to try and just boss the game. You don’t boss the best in the world, right?”

Till he got out, Gill was playing an ODI-style innings, going at under a run a ball, but doing just what GT needed to stay ahead of the DLS par score in a game where batting was far from easy – it was swinging around more than halfway into the second innings.”The unbelievable part is that you can look so good and elegant as Gill has throughout the whole IPL, and the ball deviated a lot and nipped back in quite a bit, and he was literally nowhere,” Martin said of Bumrah knocking Gill over with one that nipped back in and zipped off the surface. “It was just all about his [Gill’s] hands trying to get the bat on the ball, there was concrete in his feet.

“That’s what Bumrah does; he can make the best batters in the world look silly by just the intelligence in where he bowls, the extra pace, and the fire – he’s just got the fire in the belly for Mumbai to get the side across the line. And I think the back-up over from Trent Boult [the 16th, which took Sherfane Rutherford out] and then another wicket [Ashwani getting Rashid Khan]. Ashwani wasn’t even meant to be playing this game, he’d come in at the halfway mark as a concussion sub, and to be able to pick up a couple of wickets, economical too, I think the way Mumbai Indians bowled just shows they are never out of the game.”

They weren’t. Till that last over. Poor decision? Poor execution? We’ll never know what might have happened if Hardik, more used to bowling in the death overs, had bowled instead of Chahar.

[Cricinfo]

Continue Reading

Sports

Dharmaraja felicitates Big Match heroes

Published

on

Lakvin Abeysinghe receiving his award from the Principal of Dharmaraja College, Mahesh Karunarathne.

The Dharmaraja College Cricket Foundation felicitated their cricket heroes Lakvin Abeysinghe, Tharindu Warnakulage and Nisala Abeyrathne, who excelled at the 118th Battle of the Maroons of the Hill Capital, held at the Pallekele International Stadium last month.

Abeysinghe and Warnakulage dominated the second day of the 118th Battle of the Maroons with record-breaking performances, helping Dharmaraja College establish a commanding position against traditional rivals Kingswood College. Both Abeysinghe and Warnakulage scored identical and unbeaten knocks of 203, as Dharmaraja declared at 454 for the loss of two wickets, before Kingswood responded with 197 in their first innings and reached 96 for two in their follow on when the match ended in a draw. Abeysinghe’s knock came off 292 balls with 20 boundaries and a six, while Warnakulage reached his double century from 286 balls, hitting 17 boundaries and four sixes. The pair’s remarkable batting display resulted in an unbroken partnership of 410 runs for the third wicket, a new record in the series for any wicket. Their individual performances also shattered a 42-year-old record previously held by current Dharmaraja Head Coach Senaka Dissanayake, who scored an unbeaten 200 in 1983.

Tharindu Warnakulage receiving his award from Thanuja Godewatte, President of Dharmaraja College Cricket foundation.

Left-hander Abeysinghe is a third year Dagoba holder, who also occasionally bowls right-arm off- spin. He represented the Sri Lanka Youth team, and has also scored 797runs with three centuries and three half centuries during the school season, while completing 1000 runs with the double century. Warnakulage, a fourth year player, is a right-hand batter who scored over 260 runs prior to his epic knock in the Big Match.

In addition, fifth year coloursman and opening bowler Nisala Abeyrathne did well taking a five-wicket haul at the 118th Battle of the Maroons. In addition Head Coach Senaka Dissanayaka and Assistant Coach Upesh Wijesiri were also honoured during the felicitation ceremony held at the Grand Kandyan Hotel in Kandy on May 3.

Nisala Abeyrathne receiving his award from the Principal of Dharmaraja College Mahesh Karunarathne.

Continue Reading

Sports

Ashlin, Yuhansa win Under 18 singles titles

Published

on

Yuhansa Peiris

St. Peter’s College Bambalapitiya player Ashlin de Silva and Yuhansa Peiris of Bishop’s College Colombo emerged victorious in the Under 18 boys’ and girls’ singles finals respectively of the 110th Vision Care Colombo Championships contiued on Wednesday.

Yuhansa overcame a second set defeat to beat Sandithi Usgodaarachchi 6-2, 5-7, 6-3 in the girls’ Under 18 final. She reached the final after eliminating Venuli Jayasinghe (6-2, 6-2) in the semi-final. Usgodaarachchi beat Githmi Fernando 6-2, 6-3 in her semi-final.

Ashlin de Silva (Pix by Kamal
Wanniarachchi)

In the boys’ final, Ashlin de Silva edged out Ganuka Fernando 7-6, 7-5. Ashlin secured his final spot when Rehan Gunawardhane retired during the second set (7-5, 3-0) in their semi-final. Ganuka eliminated Mayooran Kubheran (6-2, 6-3) in the semi-final.

Continue Reading

Trending