'Clarke will use his spinners well in Sri Lanka'
Their former coach says that even though Sri Lanka are nearly invincible on home turf, Australia, led by their new captain, can be expected to put up a good fight on this tour
It's certainly going to be a test for Michael and the Australian team. Sri Lanka in Sri Lanka - they've got a very, very good record. Yes, they've got some younger players coming into the team, but those are very good players, and if you add home-ground advantage it is going to be a tough tour.
We only played two Tests. [Kumar] Sangakkara missed the first one - he did a hamstring in the warm-up match in Adelaide before that. So we missed quite possibly the best batter in the team in Brisbane and missed that experience and real class at No. 3. It is not an unknown fact that the Sri Lankans when they play away from home on bouncing, seaming wickets as Brisbane can be, it wasn't one of their favourite surfaces.
Any team that's the No. 1 in the world is usually playing with pretty good confidence, and they were certainly doing that at the time. They still had some of the best players in the world, and to play anyone on their home ground with some of the best players in the world, and six or seven other very good players, it is going to be a difficult assignment, as I think Australia might find out on this tour to Sri Lanka this time round.
He was the captain of the Under-19s NSW team I coached years ago, and right through there and obviously through his time in NSW. One of the things I think he will do well over there, with wickets favouring spin bowling... tactically I think he'll handle Australia's spinners very well, with the field placings. I think he'll use them pretty well. So that'll be interesting to see.
He's probably the best Australian player of spin. He uses his feet, he's quick on his feet, and as long as he sticks to that way of playing, he can be successful in Sri Lanka. I'm sure as the Aussie captain he'll be out to do as well as he possibly can, not only for the performance of the team but to show people he's still got what it takes, and he is going to lead this team not only from the captaincy point of view but from his batting as well. I'm sure that's the type of thing that will motivate him, and I've no reason to think he won't do well in Sri Lanka.
They realise Australia are not the team they used to be, but at the same time they know that when it comes to Australia it doesn't matter what team they put on the park - they're going to have to play some good cricket to win. They certainly won't be taking Australia lightly.
"From Australia's point of view, facing and bowling spin over there is a bit different to here because there's a lack of bounce. A ball that's not quite a good ball [here] is still a good ball over there because it might do something unpredictable. It might stay a bit low"
Lasith Malinga's retired from Test cricket, Murali's now retired... theirs will be an inexperienced bowling attack but it certainly won't lack for skill. From a spin point of view, Rangana Herath has done extremely well in Test cricket and especially in Sri Lanka, he's gone through a few teams over there that were supposedly good players of spin. Pakistan he destroyed a couple of years ago. Suraj Randiv is the other spinner. Against India last year on a flat wicket at the SSC in Colombo he bowled something like 73 overs on debut, a record for a debut. He's a big turner of the ball and has got one that goes straight on, and he's an enthusiastic cricketer. You add Ajantha Mendis to that group of spinners and they could be a headache for Australia.
Australia have played Mendis in the [World] Twenty20 in the West Indies, and Cameron White hit him for a few runs, but the first two spinners they pick will be Randiv and Herath on current form. That doesn't mean Mendis won't play a part. It is a possibility [he will be chosen] against Australia because they haven't played him very much. Any of those three spinners could do some damage, and besides them there's another couple of spinners who could quite easily do well in international cricket.
There are going to be some difficult times trying to get through the Sri Lankan batting order. You've got seven guys in the likely batting order to whom they're going to have to bowl very well, and there's going to be some hard work to get through those seven. Sangakkara and Jayawardene are the main stumbling blocks, and if you can get those two out of the way, it puts a lot of pressure on the rest of the batting order, though you can't take the rest of the guys lightly.
From a pace point of view, someone like Ryan Harris could be dangerous. He is someone who bustles in, a bit quicker than what you think, but bowls a fairly consistent line and length, and can nip the ball about off the seam and through the air a bit. Early on with those wickets you get a little bit of swing and a little bit of seam, and someone who maybe skids onto the bat a bit quicker than what you think, and maybe nipping it back in - I think he could do well. Someone who can bowl reverse swing as well, when the ball is older.
Consistency on any type of wicket is what you're after. From Australia's point of view, facing and bowling spin over there is a bit different to here because there's a lack of bounce. A ball that's not quite a good ball [here] is still a good ball over there because it might do something unpredictable, it might stay a bit low. In Australia if you drop it short the batter is able to get back and the ball bounces high enough that you can get after it, but in Sri Lanka you've got to be a little more careful, you've got to make sure it is a really bad ball before you try to go after it.
As a player he is one of those guys you probably don't like playing against. He can rub the opposition up the wrong way at times, and sometime he does it on purpose as well. But he's a hell of a scrapper. He's a winner, he likes to win at everything. He's a very positive batter and he'll do his best to put pressure on the opposition in any way he can, and I'm sure his captaincy will be the same. In his batting sometimes you'd like to think he's going to knock the ball around and not get out for a while, but he's just as likely to come out and score a hundred off 90 balls. From a captaincy point of view he'll be positive, aggressive, and he's also got a couple of ex-captains in the team, who I'm sure will be a sounding board for him.
In any situation, in any team there can be panic when you lose wickets, especially when Mahela and Sangakkara get dismissed early. Another way of saying panic is pressure, and that it is brought on by pressure. One of the keys to Australia's success will be getting Sangakkara and Mahela out, which will then put a lot more pressure on the guys coming in behind them. That's no different to Australia losing Ricky Ponting, Michael Clarke or Mike Hussey. International teams play each other so often these days, everyone is aware of that.
Unless there is a washout, there is nearly always a result in Galle, and a bit in it for batsmen and bowlers. Interestingly Kandy is a brand new wicket they had for the World Cup that the Australians haven't played on, and to be honest the Sri Lankans haven't played on it much either. It seemed to be a pretty good cricket wicket; probably compared to a lot of the other wickets in Sri Lanka there was more bounce. I wouldn't say it was fast like an Australian wicket, but in some of the games we played on it, it [had] a little bit in it for everyone. The SSC surface in Colombo is generally quite unforgiving.
Daniel Brettig is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo