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Sri Lanka’s coaching staff return for training

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Head Coach Mickey Arthur and rest of the coaching staff of the national cricket team conducted their first training session at RPS yesterday after ending their isolation period.

The coaching staff, the closest contacts of Grant Flower, had to be isolated after the Batting Coach tested positive for COVID.

They have got a huge task to get the players ready for the series in just four days. India have been training at RPS for two weeks now.

Earlier this week. the players picked for the India series trained under Piyal Wijetunga, one of SLC’s senior coaches in the absence of the coaching staff.

With wicketkeeping duties likely to be taken away from Kusal Janith Perera for the series, Lahiru Udara and Minod Bhanuka have emerged as leading contenders for the job.

KJP was sacked as skipper after the England series where Sri Lanka lost five games in a row. His keeping was less glamorous as well and with Niroshan Dickwella suspended and Dinesh Chandimal out of the equation, the selectors have been forced to look elsewhere. Minod Bhanuka is a 26-year-old wicketkeeper batsman from Kurunegala, who has featured in one ODI. Uncapped Lahiru Udara is from Nugegoda and he is 27.

What the selectors think will be interesting but you tend to get the feeling that Bhanuka has an edge over Udara.

How much the selectors have seen of Sadeera Samarawickrama remains uncertain.  He looks the ideal prospect for white ball cricket and with a Sangakkarasque work ethic, investing on him wouldn’t go waste. They will also do well to go back to Sri Lanka’s tour of India and take note of comments of Indian great VVS Laxman on Sadeera.

At the moment, he’s in Dambulla and will probably get a chance with Sri Lanka ‘A’.



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Sri Lanka take series 2-0 after Pallekele ODI called off due to rain

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The third One-Day International between Sri Lanka and New Zealand was called off due to rain. Only 21 overs of play was possible in the dead-rubber contest at the Pallekele International Stadium, in which New Zealand scored 112 for 1.

New Zealand, who had already conceded the series after having lost the first two games, elected to bat after winning the toss. After having made a brisk start, punching and cutting Dilshan Madhushanka for boundaries in the opening over, Tim Robinson was dismissed in the fourth over of the innings.

Robinson leaned into a drive and toe-ended the ball to the mid off fielder, handing Mohamed Shiraz his maiden ODI wicket. However, despite the early loss, Will Young kept cashing in on the errors in lengths by the bowlers, stroking Shiraz and Chamindu Wickramasinghe for two boundaries each in consecutive overs.

Henry Nicholls, on the other hand, used the laps and sweeps to good effect. The duo kept rotating the strike through the course of their unbeaten 88-run partnership. Young notched up his eighth ODI fifty just before rain ended play and Sri Lanka finished the three-match series with a 2-0 margin.

Brief Scores:
New Zealand
112/1 (Will Young 56*, Henry Nicholls 46*; Mohammed Shiraz 1-21) vs Sri Lanka. [Match was abandoned due to rain]

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Foulkes and Wickramasinghe on debut as New Zealand bat first in third ODI

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Zakary Foulkes Is on ODI debut [Cricinfo]

New Zealand won the toss and elected to bat first in the final ODI in Pallekele. Sri Lanka have already secured the series win having won the first two games.

Both sides have made changes, with Sri Lanka in particular seeking to test their bench strength. For the visitors, there’s a debut for seamer Zakary Foulkes, who had impressed in the T20 leg, while fellow seamer Adam Milne also gets a first game on tour. They come in for Nathan Smith and Jacob Duffy.

Sri Lanka, meanwhile, have made no less than five changes, with Pathum Nissanka, Kusal Mendis, Kamindu Mendis, Dunith Wellalage and Asitha Fernando all making way. In come batters Nishan Madushka and Nuwanidu Fernando, seamers Dilshan Madushanka and Mohamed Shiraz, while there will also be a debut for seam-bowling allrounder Chamindu Wickremasinghe.  Seamer Eshan Malinga, who has been impressing with the A team, was also a new inclusion in the squad but does not make the playing XI.

The weather forecast in Pallekele isn’t great, with rain expected at some point, however, to start conditions are hot and humid. The pitch is a new one and as such has more grass on it than in the first two ODIs. This means it will be better for the batter, something Santner alluded to at the toss as his reason for batting first. There will however likely be dew to contend with later in the evening.

Sri Lanka:  Nishan Madushka,  Avishka Fernando,  Nuwanidu Fernando,  Sadeera Samarawickrama,  Charith Asalanka (capt.),  Janith Liyanage,  Chamindu Wickramasinghe  Maheesh Theekshana,  Jeffrey Vandersay,  Dilshan Madushanka  Mohamed Shiraz

New Zealand:  Tim Robinson,  Will Young,  Henry Nicholls,  Mark Chapman,  Glenn Phillips,  Mitchell Hay (wk),  Michael Bracewell,  Mitchell Santner (capt.),  Zakary Foulkes,  Ish Sodhi,  Adam Milne

[Cricinfo]

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Making batting compulsory for bowlers has worked – Theekshana

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Maheesh Theekshana celebrates hitting the winning runs in the second ODI against New Zealand at Pallekele on Sunday.

Rex Clementine
at Pallekele

When Sanath Jayasuriya took the reins as Sri Lanka’s Head Coach earlier this year, he didn’t just shuffle the deck – he set about reshaping the entire playing ethos. Fitness, discipline, fielding, running between the wickets, and commitment were the cornerstones of his strategy. Yet, one masterstroke stood out: mandating tail-enders to sharpen their batting skills during practice sessions.

Jayasuriya had identified a glaring gap during the tour of England—the bowlers’ contributions with the bat were meager at best, leaving the team precariously balanced. Thus, net sessions for the bowlers became more than a box-ticking exercise; they had to learn the art of scoring runs not just playing defence.

That foresight bore fruit in spectacular fashion on Sunday at Pallekele. Maheesh Theekshana stepped up to the plate – or rather, the crease – and played a pivotal role alongside Kusal Mendis in scripting a thrilling three-wicket victory against New Zealand. The win wasn’t just another notch on the belt; it ended a 12-year drought in bilateral series wins against the Kiwis.

At 163 for seven, with 47 runs still needed on a pitch that was spinning like a roulette wheel, Sri Lanka’s chances looked bleaker than a batsman caught in two minds. But Theekshana stood firm, facing 44 deliveries to notch a crucial 27 runs, peppered with two fours and a six. His knock, full of grit and sense, helped steer Sri Lanka to a famous win with an over to spare.

“Even our bowlers get to bat at practice, so we know they can contribute when it matters,” Theekshana told reporters, reflecting on the game. “Players like Wellalage, Vandersay, and others are capable of stepping up. The team has confidence that if one player stumbles, the next will rise to the occasion.”

Theekshana shed light on his partnership with Kusal Mendis, which turned the tide of the game. “The plan was simple—bat deep and take the game into the final over. With the dew coming in, it became easier to bat as the match progressed. The spinners struggled to grip the wet ball, forcing them to turn to the quicks. Our strategy to take the game deep worked like a charm,” he explained.

Kusal Mendis, nursing a groin niggle, was visibly struggling but soldiered on to post an unbeaten 74 – a match-winning knock that, coupled with Theekshana’s resilience, sealed the deal.

“When Kusal was on strike, they kept giving him the single, trying to get me on strike. Their plan was to bowl dot balls at me and force a mistake,” Theekshana said with a wry smile. “But they underestimated us. We bided our time, waiting for the loose balls, and when they came, we punished them. They brought the field up for me, and I made the most of the gaps outside the stumps.”

This victory is yet another feather in Sri Lanka’s cap in a year where the team has turned their fortunes around, clinching several bilateral series across all three formats.

“Our bench strength has grown immensely,” Theekshana observed. “Look at Nishan Madushka – he can’t find a spot in the XI despite scoring a 50 and a 40. We have a solid lineup of spinners ready to step in. There’s healthy competition within the squad, and that’s pushing everyone to perform at their best.”

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