Five Firsts

Cricketers on their milestones

Prasanna Jayawardene

A stand with Vaasy

Meeting a hero, partnering a stalwart, making the grade

Jamie Alter

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Prasanna Jayawardene focuses on the ball, Galle, August 17, 2009
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Players/Officials: Prasanna Jayawardene
Teams: Sri Lanka

First first-class game
It was back in 1998, I think, after the Under-19 World Cup in South Africa, where I was judged best wicketkeeper. England A was touring Sri Lanka. I don't think I scored many. [He was out lbw to James Ormond for 0.]

First major cricket lesson
It was very difficult being dropped after one Test. You know how good you are but you watch guys go ahead of you. At that time the selectors told me to focus on my batting, so I went back to the domestic circuit and worked hard. It was very frustrating.

First international century
Against Bangladesh at the SSC in 2007. It was really special. I had been getting scores, but nothing big. I added a double-century stand [a seventh-wicket record for Sri Lanka against all countries] with Chaminda Vaas, who got his maiden century in that game too. I had been given another chance at Test cricket and assured of playing for a few series, and after that hundred, especially, I took it with both hands

First hero I met
Ian Healy. I used to watch him on television any chance I got. I got the opportunity to speak to him in Australia in 2007 and he gave me some good tips. It really made me happy. He's such a great man.

First international I played in
I made my Test debut in 2000 in Kandy, and I didn't do anything in that game. The weather was poor and play was only possible on the first three days. The other two were washed out. I didn't bat or keep wickets. I was really disappointed. After that I didn't get a chance for two years.

As told to Jamie Alter

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Jamie Alter
Senior sub-editor While teachers in high school droned on about Fukuyama and communism, young Jamie's mind tended to wander to Old Trafford and the MCG. Subsequently, having spent six years in the States - studying Political Science, then working for an insurance company - and having failed miserably at winning any cricket converts, he moved back to India. No such problem in Bangalore, where he can endlessly pontificate on a chinaman who turned it around with a flipper, and why Ricky Ponting is such a good hooker. These days he divides his time between playing office cricket and constant replenishments at one of the city's many pubs.

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Jamie AlterClose
Jamie Alter Senior sub-editor While teachers in high school droned on about Fukuyama and communism, young Jamie's mind tended to wander to Old Trafford and the MCG. Subsequently, having spent six years in the States - studying Political Science, then working for an insurance company - and having failed miserably at winning any cricket converts, he moved back to India. No such problem in Bangalore, where he can endlessly pontificate on a chinaman who turned it around with a flipper, and why Ricky Ponting is such a good hooker. These days he divides his time between playing office cricket and constant replenishments at one of the city's many pubs.