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Uncapped spinner with Sri Lankan roots gets Aussie ‘A’ call-up

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Uncapped left-arm spinner Zanden Jeh will represent Australia ‘A’ against Sri Lanka ‘A’ in Darwin. Here’s the story about his amazing rise in cricket and his Sri Lankan roots.

When Australia named their squad for the ongoing unofficial Test series against Sri Lanka ‘A’, it was a roll call of familiar names. Matt Renshaw, Kurtis Patterson, Jason Sangha, Nathan McSweeney – all seasoned campaigners either in the Baggy Green or prominent performers in Sheffield Shield cricket.

But one name stood out like a sore thumb: Zanden Jeh.

The 22-year-old left-arm spinner has never played a single Sheffield Shield game, yet finds himself donning national colours in the ‘A’ series – a rare feat in the rigid and fiercely competitive Australian cricketing structure, widely regarded as the strongest domestic system in the game.

Jeh’s selection bucks the trend in a big way. In a country where you usually have to pay your dues in state cricket before sniffing national contention, Jeh has leapfrogged the pecking order. He’s one of the very few in recent memory to wear the green and gold before even cracking the state XI.

So why the big fuss about a relatively unknown spinner?

Well, ask Glenn Maxwell and Marnus Labuschagne – both have fallen to Jeh’s guile in domestic cricket. Most notably, Jeh knocked over Labuschagne when he was just 17, at a time when the Queenslander was ranked the world’s No.1 batter. That scalp turned heads, and the whispers grew louder in selectors’ ears. Then Maxwell, on his way back to the side from injury, playing for Victoria 2nd XI fell to Jeh when he featured for Queensland 2nd XI.

Cricket Australia, grappling with a dearth of quality left-arm spinners, appears to be thinking outside the box. Matthew Kuhnemann made waves on turning tracks in Sri Lanka earlier this year, but with Ashton Agar out of favour in Western Australia, the conveyor belt of orthodox left-arm options has hit a snag.

That’s where Jeh fits the bill.

His story, though, doesn’t end with cricketing stats. There’s a Sri Lankan thread woven into his journey. His grandfather, Tissa Jehoratnam, once served as the Controller of Exchange at the Central Bank of Sri Lanka. He’s known as a man of integrity.

Jeh’s father, Michael – a former First-Class cricketer in England having played for Oxford, Combined Universities and MCC and an alumnus of S. Thomas’ College, Mount Lavinia – migrated to Australia in 1983 when he was 15. Now based in Brisbane, the family will travel to Darwin to watch Zanden’s First-Class debut.

Michael has been central to Zanden’s cricketing rise – father, mentor and coach rolled into one. Zanden, who also moonlights as a professional rugby referee and works as a teacher, was in disbelief when he received the call from selector Tony Dodemaide. “I thought it was a prank,” he would later admit. But it was no joke – the Aussies were dead serious.

Australia’s selectors have rolled the dice. They believe that left-arm spin can be the ace up their sleeve, especially in sub-continental conditions. Jeh now finds himself thrown into the deep end, tasked with taking on a Sri Lanka ‘A’ side peppered with Test players and others on the comeback trail.

It’s a proper baptism by fire for Jeh, who turned 22 just last week. Whether he sinks or swims, the coming weeks will offer a glimpse into whether this left-field selection is a masterstroke or a shot in the dark.

by Rex Clementine



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Nuwan Thushara among 46 men’s cricketers to be awarded SLC contracts

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Nuwan Thushara's inclusion indicates a re-setting of his relationship with the board [Cricinfo]

Medium pacer Nuwan Thushara is among 46 men’s cricketers awarded national contracts by Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC), after he withdrew the legal case he had filed against the board in April.

Thushara’s inclusion indicates a re-setting of his relationship with the board. The bowler had objected to SLC making a fitness test a requirement for the board granting him a No-Objection Certificate to play franchise cricket overseas. But since the board members whom he had been at a loggerheads with were ousted en-masse by the Sri Lankan government, Thushara decided to withdraw his case.

He had then written to the new administrators at SLC, announcing his eligibility for national selection, which the new Transformation Committee has since accepted.

Also in the contracts list are Jaffna legspinner Vijayakanth Viyaskanth, ambidextrous spinner Tharindu Rathnayake, batters Kamil Mishara and Lasith Croosepulle,and allrounders Isitha Wijesundera, Wanuja Sahan and Dilum Sudeera, who have all been included for the first time. Batter Bhanuka Rajapaksa was not awarded a contract, though he had played domestic cricket in Sri Lanka earlier this year.

There are otherwise no major surprises in what is a substantial roll of cricketers. The list features players such as Dinesh Chandimal and Kasun Rajitha, who primarily play Tests, as well as limited-overs specialists like Binura Fernando.

The SLC release said the players had been graded into six different categories, but did not divulge which players were in which category. The period of the contract runs from April 1, 2026 to March 31, 2027.

Men’s national contracted players

Kusal Mendis, Dhananjaya de Silva, Dinesh Chandimal, Wanindu Hasaranga, Pathum Nissanka, Charith Asalanka, Kamindu Mendis, Dushmantha Chameera, Asitha Fernando, Dasun Shanaka, Maheesh Theekshana, Janith Liyanage, Dunith Wellalage, Niroshan Dickwella, Jeffrey Vandersay, Prabath Jayasuriya, Vishwa Fernando, Matheesha Pathirana, Dilshan Madushanka, Pavan Rathnayake, Eshan Malinga, Milan Rathnayake, Lahiru Kumara, Kasun Rajitha, Avishka Fernando, Sadeera Samarawickrama, Ramesh Mendis, Kamil Mishara, Binura Fernando, Nuwan Thushara, Sonal Dinusha, Sahan Arachchige, Pramod Madushan, Lasith Croospulle, Lahiru Udara, Nuwanidu Fernando, Vijayakanth Viyaskanth, Isitha Wijesundara, Nishan Madushka, Akila Dananjaya, Chamika Karunaratne, Pasindu Sooriyabandara, Mohammed Shiraz, Wanuja Sahan, Dilum Sudeera, Tharindu Rathnayake

[Cricinfo]

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Sri Lanka Cricket relieved at ICC’s mild response to Transformation Committee

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The ICC had imposed sanctions on SLC in 2015 and 2023 citing government interference [Cricinfo]

No Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) representative was invited to the ICC’s quarterly meeting in Ahmedabad over the weekend, but the fact that the ICC board has not slapped sanctions on SLC’s new Transformation Committee is being quietly celebrated by the new board in Sri Lanka,  a board member said.

The Transformation Committee was appointed by the nation’s government in May, replacing the elected set of SLC office-bearers. The ICC had taken a dim view of government interference in SLC in 2023, as well as in 2015, imposing sanctions on each of those occasions.

But athough the ICC had sent deputy chair Imran Khwaja on what was effectively a fact-finding trip to Colombo in May, no sanctions attributed to government interference have followed, even after the latest ICC meeting.

“So far what we feel is that no news is good news,” said a Transformation Committee member. In late 2023, the ICC had suspended SLC from its board due to government interference. On that occasion, the country’s sports minister was accused of overreach.

The latest, sweeping administrative changes in Sri Lanka, which includes the ousting of the elected board and the installation of a committee tasked ostensibly with transforming Sri Lankan cricket, have so far only drawn ICC scrutiny rather than tangible consequences. The ICC statement said only this: “In Sri Lanka, ICC Deputy Chair Imran Khwaja and Devajit Saikia (BCCI) have visited and met with relevant stakeholders to assess ongoing developments.”

The Transformation Committee headed by Eran Wickramaratne has repeatedly expressed that its goal remains to rewrite an outdated SLC constitution, in order to better align the organisation with the requirements of Sri Lanka’s public.

“Even in the debates in parliament, which were not driven by party loyalties, it has been acknowledged that there has to be a change at Sri Lanka Cricket,” said Wickramaratne, chair of the new Transformation Committee and a former politician. “The job we have is to change the SLC constitution. The stakeholders in that change are the Sri Lankan people. The people can give their ideas. Other stakeholders can also express their ideas. We thought our first role is to listen to those ideas.”

SLC hopes Transformation Committee members will be invited to future ICC meetings.

ESPNcricinfo has reached out to the ICC for comment on SLC participation in meetings, but the ICC is yet to respond.

[Cricinfo]

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ICC approves red-to-pink ball change to reduce bad-light impact in Test cricket

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Will teams readily agree to moving from a red to pink ball during a Test? [Cricinfo]

In an attempt to reduce the impact of bad light on Test matches, the ICC has approved a trial of switching from a red ball to a pink ball before the start of a Test that is likely to be affected by bad light, subject to the prior agreement of both participating teams.*

The decision was one of several recommendations from the Chief Executives Committee that were approved by the ICC Board at a meeting in Ahmedabad on Sunday. Until now pink balls were used exclusively in day-night Test matches, which are also regularly played largely in Australia and no where else, but the trial of changing from a red ball to a pink ball during a day Test seeks to allow play to continue under lights and minimise the time and overs lost to bad light.

It is understood that the process for the playing conditions to take effect won’t be in place in time for the series between England and New Zealand from June 4. The ICC also said it would undertake research “on lighting technology for match officials and venues to reduce lost play due to poor light, with ICC co-funding R&D projects alongside Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC).”

The ICC board also approved a recommendation that will allow head coaches – or designated staff – to enter the field of play during scheduled drinks intervals and consult with their players in ODIs and T20Is. This was not permitted in international cricket – messages could only be relayed by the players running drinks – but has been a feature in franchise T20 leagues like the IPL, where coaches interact with their players during strategic timeouts.

In T20I internationals, the ICC said the break between innings would be 15 minutes, and batters would be required to be ready at the resumption of play.

In 2025, the ICC had begun trials to give bowlers leeway down the leg side for wide calls, and it has decided to permanently adopt the practice of using guide lines to help umpires adjudicate wides down the line side, especially when a batter is moving around his crease.

And in the case of suspect bowling actions, the ICC said it would help match officials access Hawk-Eye data when considering whether to report a bowler.

[Cricinfo]

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