Wonder year

Scarcely believable Test wins, a world title, and a captain who turned into an assured leader - Sri Lanka's 2014 was seriously good
Andrew Fidel Fernando January 2, 2015

A Mahela Jayawardene hundred at the SSC, a Rangana Herath five-for in Galle, a manful overseas record for Kumar Sangakkara, and a double-digit batting collapse: beyond these, there are few certainties in Sri Lankan cricket. Fans have dared not expect much more.

Except that 2014 was different. It was kinda great. There were deflating losses too, particularly towards the back end, but in characteristic Sri Lankan style, please let's forget those for a minute. Let's pour ourselves a fresh coconut toddy, pick at some spicy bites and reminisce about the bloody superb, because, boy, it may not last very long.

Let's begin with Angelo Mathews. At the start of the year he was a pariah, captaining the last day of that Sharjah Test like his brain was on fire, not long before accusing Bangladesh of being boring, when he had been the one to set them 467 to win a Test.

At year's end, he is the deserving captain of virtually everyone's 2014 world Test team, and a double-nominee for the big ICC awards. His batting has been near-supernatural at times, on every continent he has played on, in every match situation. As a leader, he grew so much, so quickly, that he surely had a brain transplant sometime in February. Or had a crayon dislodged from it, Homer Simpson-style.

It doesn't seem like Mathews will ever be the tactical mastermind Jayawardene was, or a visionary general like Arjuna Ranatunga, but as lead-from-the-fronters go, there was none better this year - not even Brendon McCullum, Misbah-ul-Haq or Steven Smith, given Mathews' consistently colossal contributions with bat and ball across all formats. His man management is making strides too: look at how well the younger players bat in partnership with him. A mass exodus of greatness is imminent in the next two years, but with Mathews at the helm there is a calmness about the transition. "Angie will do something" is the hope Sri Lanka fans cling to. At 27, he is already accustomed to this kind of expectation.

Angelo, you grow in stature everyday © AFP

Elsewhere, the Jayawardene-Sangakkara farewell tour has been pulling bumper crowds as the pair provides ripping latter-day renditions of their best work. Their last T20 match was the World T20 final win in Bangladesh, which was partly founded on Sangakkara's unbeaten 52.

In August, in Jayawardene's final Test, they put on a century partnership in their last meeting in the middle, pulling Sri Lanka out of a precarious place and setting them on course for a second Test win in a row against Pakistan.

Sangakkara signed off in Kandy with an ODI ton, in another victory, then the most delicious goodbye of all: the final act of the final home match together was a dismissal that read b Jayawardene st Sangakkara. The Premadasa has never been louder, or more enjoyable than at that moment, and that is a ground that sets seriously high standards on both those fronts.

The crowd-pleasing World T20 and Asia Cup wins aside, Sri Lanka were also exemplary in keeping Test cricket alive this year, playing five matches that went undecided into the last ten minutes of play. There was the Sharjah game, then the England Tests, one of which was a nerve-wracking draw, and the other a mind-melting win off the penultimate ball, when a lanky ex-amateur footballer from Chilaw sent a bouncer right at James Anderson's potty mouth and got him fending to a pudgy ex-banker from Kurunegala. There was the desperate search for wickets that never materialised - in the SSC Test against South Africa.

The final farewell of the two Sri Lankan stalwarts draws near © AFP

But the best finish of all came in the next series, in Galle. Sri Lanka were chasing 99 in 21 overs, in front of a full house, with hundreds more watching from the fort, when a gargantuan cloud parked itself above the stadium. Mathews began to hook like a madman, lurching Sri Lanka towards victory, before hitting the winning run literally moments before the downpour unleashed. It was like something directed by Michael Bay, only with more fireworks.

Administratively there was of course the annual contracts crisis, the routine player v board public scuffles, internal political jockeying, crippling debt, and allegations of sexual harassment relating to the women's team, but Sri Lanka Cricket has been so resplendently inept in previous years that all board officials will feel entitled to Nobel Prizes for 2014's efforts. Sri Lanka played 12 Tests in the year. Twelve! This was partly due to advancing South Africa's 2015 tour (though, of course, one of the three Tests was transmuted into ODIs), and an impromptu Test visit from Pakistan, who have now been re-embraced as Sri Lankan cricket's bosom buddies, Ahmed Shehzad sermons and all.

Fans complained about the hastily arranged ODI tour of India, on which the team was annihilated there, but as SLC has now lined up India for a return tour in 2015, it is nothing less than a financial triumph. That the board was one of the final two bodies holding out against the Big Three's global domination was more a result of government directive than sparkling integrity, but it was praiseworthy nonetheless. When the board's ongoing support of cricket development in the north is added to all this, officials may even have earned their plump pay cheques and cushy perks this year.

High point
Bats, balls, runs, wickets and elbow-flexions under 15 degrees are all great, but few who were in the heart of Colombo on World T20 victory night will ever experience joy as widespread or as unrestrained. The moment Thisara Perera's stroke crossed the rope, the Galle Face Green broke out in euphoria, and the rest of the city followed. Packed cars rode honking down the street, passengers high-fiving passersby, and trucks carried full cargoes of merrymakers. The dancing stretched all the way to the suburbs, where impromptu baila nightclubs had sprung up around tuk-tuk sound systems.

Finally that elusive world title © ICC

Low point
That WT20 win was sweeter because Sri Lanka had defeated India in the final, and conversely, nothing hurt fans more than the 0-5 whitewash at India's hands.

Sri Lanka were unprepared for that tour, but were still awful, even given that allowance. Rohit Sharma's 264 was downright traumatic, and the fear now is that India have such a psychological grip over Sri Lanka that a meeting at the World Cup will be stacked in India's favour.

New kid on the block
It has taken some time for him to emerge, but in the last match of the year, Dimuth Karunaratne produced one of the very best hundreds by a young Sri Lanka batsman, on a seaming pitch, against one of the most incisive new-ball attacks around. His talent has always been blinding but his judgement had not been outstanding on previous tours. Perhaps the 152 in Christchurch will bestow the confidence he needs to embed himself in the side.

What 2015 holds
There are gigantic hopes for the World Cup, after Sri Lanka fell at the final hurdle in the two previous tournaments. Beyond that, Pakistan are set to tour again, bless 'em, then the India Test tour, and another incoming tour from West Indies are pencilled in. Sri Lanka may be in New Zealand again, for another Test tour, at the end of 2015.

From a personnel point of view, Jayawardene will have departed from all formats by April, and Sangakkara will probably be gone by October. Herath's enormous heart may still be beating in his coffin a thousand years from now but his knees are growing ever creakier, and it is possible that he will not last much longer than another 12 months as well.

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Posted by Ajith on (January 6, 2015, 6:50 GMT)

Well compiled Andrew. keep up the good work. I rate Sri Lanka as the most consistently inconsistent team based on their performances in 2014.Hopefully 2015 will bring about a well knit team as they seem to be peaking at the right time.

Posted by Pad on (January 5, 2015, 5:31 GMT)

A great year for SL cricket for sure! But Andrew!!!!! Its not fair not to Mention TM Dilshan.

Posted by Android on (January 4, 2015, 17:40 GMT)

The best team of 2014

Posted by Benil on (January 3, 2015, 11:04 GMT)

Lovely Article Andrew, Best Wishes for 2015- Benil from Hagley Park

Posted by Ajo on (January 3, 2015, 6:34 GMT)

The best is coming and the world is seeing them in NZ Very much overrated team.Taking abt herath he is an average spinner who is regularly dropped from the ODI squad. Only Mathews is the backbone

Posted by Ranga on (January 2, 2015, 15:36 GMT)

The Best is yet to come!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Posted by sunil on (January 2, 2015, 14:25 GMT)

I love your bit about SLC - Nobel prize for their 2014 administrative efforts! I really enjoy your writing.

Posted by Dummy4 on (January 2, 2015, 11:30 GMT)

@Correct_analysis Your name is ironic because in this case I don't believe you have given a right analysis Sri Lanka is not an average team, do you call players like Rangana Herath average? He was the leading wicket taker this year and also has performed quite well against Australia, South Africa, Pakistan and England in the past. He is world class, overall though I think the team is going through a tough patch in terms of talent but they will pick they always do after a transitional period :)

Posted by Dulan on (January 2, 2015, 9:24 GMT)

Another great article by Andrew. You always bring a tear to the eye of die-hard Sri Lankan fan :) Simply a year of Awesomeness !!!!!

Posted by Android on (January 2, 2015, 8:15 GMT)

very well written. i think by far the best year for SL. started with a defeat in sharjha test which many put on negative mindset of captain. but since then they started to go upwards, winning almost everything vs BD, Asia Cup& WT20. won series vs Pak. historic wins vs england. they were a bit poor in the end of year especially vs india after such a great year but over all great year for them. Mathews lead from front, scoring runs across formats and came out as one of the best captains of the year. we witness perfect farewellfor 2 of game's greats at home. great year for SL. wellbplayed by them throughout the year.

More in 2014 review

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  • Lambs abroad

    A young Test side showed some steel and engineered a famous win but missed several opportunities to establish dominance

  • 'Fewer hookers in Soho on a Saturday night'

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