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During his two stints as Sri Lanka's captain, Mahela Jayawardene has not just had to marshal the team on the field but deal with endless politics off it
Andrew Fernando in Sydney
January 1, 2013
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Geoff Marsh had a brief but unhindered view into the workings of the Sri Lanka side, but after his sacking said it didn't take a head coach's insight to know everything there was know about the captaincy. "Every country needs to have its best captain," he began, "and the best captain in Sri Lanka is Mahela Jayawardene. I think everyone knows that."
Jayawardene is not the best player in Sri Lanka's ranks by some distance, nor is he its heart, its soul, its workhorse or its darling. He is the man who keeps things on an even keel. While Sri Lanka Cricket staggers from woe to unfathomable woe, stirring their whirlpool of turmoil ever-larger, Jayawardene has plucked the team out of a funk and kept its heart beating in his twelve months as leader.
He has shown no will to step away from Tests and is determined to have one more crack at a World Cup, but he is about to relinquish the reins, snug though they seem in his grip. Astute and assured at the helm, his side has owed him much in the past year, and if they can lift themselves out of Melbourne's mighty rut, they might repay him with the send-off his leadership deserves.
In many ways, Jayawardene has been Sri Lanka's best leader since Arjuna Ranatunga, and at times he has been peerless tactically, both among his nation's former captains and his contemporary rivals. His first stint as captain was defined by the bravado that his leadership was forged in. In his first Test at the helm, Sri Lanka were wiped out in two sessions in the first innings at Lord's, and were staring squarely at an innings loss until Jayawardene's 119 laid the foundation for a thrilling draw, and eventually, a shared series.
In the years that followed, Sri Lanka played a fearless brand of cricket, seeking safety through aggression, while wielding an attack whose colour became clout under Jayawardene's direction. Field placements were bold to the point of being experimental. Leg slip had almost left the game in the mid-2000s, but it has enjoyed a recent revival, thanks in large part to Jayawardene's canny employment of it to his spinners. Sustained success came too, and at one point, Sri Lanka were the second-ranked side in Tests, ODIs and Twenty20s simultaneously.
His second stint in the captaincy has seen Jayawardene adopt a more cautious approach, but although he has drawn criticism, some of it fair, for this new conservatism, his assignment has also been much steeper this time. Devoid of so wild a talent as Muttiah Muralitharan, and having inherited a team verging on listless, Jayawardene has led the side to three Test victories and their first series win in three years, against Pakistan.
Worse even than on-field woes has been the board, whose financial disarray has sparked a series of short-term manoeuvres likely to detriment Sri Lanka's cricket in the long term, and as its recent public spat with Jayawardene suggested, has an ever-worsening relationship with its captains.
| In many ways, Jayawardene has been Sri Lanka's best leader since Arjuna Ranatunga, and at times he has been peerless tactically, both among his nation's former captains and his contemporary rivals | |||
At a glance Jayawardene's decision to step down now is as puzzling as his choice to give up the captaincy in 2009. In his first tenure, Jayawardene had led the side to five Test series wins out of nine including victories against England and India, with three of those series drawn. In addition Sri Lanka had also progressed to their first World Cup final in 11 years and won the Asia Cup in 2008.
Yet, seemingly at the peak of his career and captaincy, Jayawardene passed the helm to Kumar Sangakkara, who could stand no more than two years of it himself. In most teams, leadership is an honour that is aspired to, but in Sri Lanka the well-suited men who have held the captaincy have treated and spoken about the post like flogging that must be endured with gritted teeth for the greater good.
That Jayawardene defended the board's decision to postpone three Tests against South Africa, effectively to allow the Sri Lanka Premier League to be played, also shows no shortage of diplomacy on his part. He has little to gain from the SLPL, but has been one of its most voracious advocates since the end of its first season, while the postponed Tests would have offered a chance to pit himself against the best side in the world, whom he has built an impressive home record against in the past.
Yet he finds his confidential letters to the board splayed in the press, and then warned of a reprimand, when he states he has lost confidence in a body who treats its captains thus.
He is about to play his final Test as captain now, and Jayawardene says it is because he hopes to guide his young successor in his first stretch of leadership. Angelo Mathews has the temperament of a leader and has had impressive brushes with captaincy, but to move from leading an SLPL side to becoming Sri Lanka's captain in all forms is like taking on Tolstoy, having only read comic books.
Beyond performance, strategy, motivation and man-management, Mathews will also need to be versed in politics and fire-fighting if he is to last long in the job, and he will do well to learn what he can from Jayawardene, for as long as he is around.
Shaking a side out of their gloom after a loss as deflating as Melbourne's will be a stiff task, even for a man as respected by his players as Jayawardene, particularly as they lack their best batsman and two of their better fast bowlers. But if this inexperienced team can muster a fight, they might give deserving captain a final Test to remember.
Andrew Fernando is ESPNcricinfo's Sri Lanka correspondent. He tweets here
© ESPN EMEA Ltd.
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Piece of advice to our batsmen, please do not plant both your feet inside the popping crease. That is not the way to play fast stuff on bouncy wickets. Learn from Aussies, their batsmen had both feet outside the crease and countered any bounce while Lankans were laden footed inside the crease fearful being stumped off Starc or Bird. Also do not just hang your bat out like drying your laundry, hit the ball and hit it hard. also do not fear Starc or Siddle or Bird because they can come only up to the crease on the other side. It is the ball onle that come to you, and it is pretty small so hit it and hit it.
Mahela is the best captain SL ever produced. At times he is too defensive in critical matches and all these incidents cost too hard on SL. That's why some people doubt him in his capability as a captain. As a batsman, he is the most gifted batsman Sri lanka produced alongside with Aravinda de Silva but unfortunately he did not make the best of his talent.
As a batsman, Mahela will be in the same league of our Sachin or Ponting or Lara ..!! His batting is a treat to the eyes ..!!
About his captaincy, I will grade him as a very good captain provided the resources he had/have. Though the best captains of this generation in my eyes are Sourav Ganguly and Stephen Fleming. I dont know if you will agree or not! Thanks!
Mahila is a copy book style batsmen. Next best to Arjuna as the captain. We hope Mathews can learn from talking to both of them.
Was MJ the great player & captain Andrew claims? Maybe, but also maybe not. I'll always remember his and Sangakarra's batting failures when playing abroad, especially in the VIP 1st innings in a test. They always made a comeback at the end of a test series but by then it was too late and a series lost or drawn. Were there better players who could have been selected? Perhaps…Only those who know SL cricket intimately could answer that. MJ being on par or a better tactician than Ranatunga is dubious. Ranatunga had flair, panache, and fearlessness besides being the ultimate tactician; something MJ sadly, sadly, lacks. Ref Mathews; if he is to succeed he has to do better in batting. Just one century in 30 tests & 85 Odi's make poor reading.
Mahela is a good captain...but not the type of skipper Sri Lanka needs. His principles are in question. Firstly it was wrong for him to commend SLC's decision to cut off Tests. If he was passionate about Sri Lankan cricket and its future he should have spoken out against it. Secondly he has prioritized the IPL over playing for his country a number of times. Thirdly he grumbles way too much for a leader of country known for resilience and fight - IF he has a problem with SLC or selectors he needs to boycott in protest (like Arjuna did when Aravinda was left out). In Sri Lanka you need a one man army to get anything done!
Posted byJust looked at Angelo Matthews stats. Is he in the test team as a batsman or as a bowler ? Seems pretty mediocre in either disciplines in tests (not ODI). Now they are making him a captain too!! Hopefully he will improve with responsibility.
Posted by Thushaa on (January 3, 2013, 15:53 GMT)Nice article done..But I think mahela's time is up..Actually he has made a good call by stepping-down. As he will only stop the progress of SL cricket, as there is some politics coming up withing the team. As there was lot of talk about Maheela cutting down some seniors at his time.. The only good thing that can be done now ,is to retire gracefully..Mahela is a good tactical person..! Yes that can be said many times.But only tactics will not win games, THE BIG GAMES. And that has shown many times with his captaincy. We need to see progress in cricket, and the way to progress is to evolve. Captions are born.. NOT MADE.
Posted by Viraj_Hewage on (January 3, 2013, 3:02 GMT)Mahela has been a good servent of Sri Lankan cricket. An opinion about cricket captaincy is available at www.3rdman.org
Posted bystill remember his innings against India in wc 2011 final...