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Back-to-back games plus travel 'not ideal' - Asalanka, Rashid on gruelling schedules

"If you start complaining about these things, it affects your performance on the field," Rashid Khan says

Shashank Kishore
Shashank Kishore
09-Sep-2025 • 9 hrs ago
"Right now, I'm feeling very sleepy," Charith Asalanka announced, to peals of laughter around the room. It was a brutally honest opening quip from Sri Lanka's captain, who had flown into Dubai from Harare via South Africa just hours earlier for the men's T20 Asia Cup.
Asalanka had just played back-to-back T20Is in Zimbabwe on September 6 and 7, wrapped up the series, packed his bags, boarded a long-haul flight, and landed straight into the Dubai heat, only to be whisked off to a pre-tournament photoshoot and a captains' press conference.
"I should answer this question tomorrow, I think," Asalanka said with a wry smile. "It's really hard to play back-to-back games and then travel straightaway. I think we actually need a couple of days off. I hope the coach will give us [that].
"It's important to take care of our fitness. And we all know it's really hot out there. For me, it's really important to stay fresh and give 100% in the first game."
Luckily for Sri Lanka, they have been given four days off before their tournament opener against Bangladesh. It's a rare luxury in a competition where Sri Lanka are in the "group of death" with Afghanistan and Hong Kong completing the pool.
Afghanistan, meanwhile, had also wrapped up a series but in the same part of the world. And their captain Rashid Khan wasn't complaining.
They finished a hectic tri-series campaign against Pakistan and UAE in Sharjah on Sunday night, and were scheduled to play Hong Kong in their Asia Cup opener in Abu Dhabi in less than 48 hours. Then Rashid and his opposite number Yasim Murtaza were at the Dubai International Stadium six hours before the toss for the same media event where Asalanka was nearly dozing off, and Salman Agha, who also played in Sunday's final, looking fresh.
"Well, I don't think it's ideal - that's what we were discussing [with the other captains] before as well," Rashid said. "To play in Abu Dhabi and stay here in Dubai for all three games… it's different. But as professional cricketers, we have to accept these things.
"Once you enter the ground, you tend to forget everything else. In other countries, we often fly two-three hours and go straight to the game. I remember flying from Bangladesh to the US once and playing straightaway."
Throw in the match-day road trips, later-than-usual finishes - thanks to a deferred start time - and post-match recovery in heat that has constantly hovered over 40 degrees Celsius well into the evening, and the task becomes even trickier. But Rashid was determined to keep the focus on what he and his team could control.
"You have to be well-prepared and mentally very strong, that's why we are professionals," he said. "If you start complaining about these things, about traveling a lot, it affects your performance on the field. For us, the focus is to put in the effort once we step inside. Wherever we go, we try to forget whatever happens outside and adapt. The most important thing is to give 100% and win the game."
So, while the Asia Cup's "group of death" promises high-intensity cricket, how fresh the players manage to keep themselves could be a crucial factor, too.

Shashank Kishore is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo