Aravinda joins the 8,000-club (3 April 1999)
One-day cricket has always been a batsman's game
03-Apr-1999
3 April 1999
Aravinda joins the 8,000-club
Sa'adi Thawfeeq
One-day cricket has always been a batsman's game. It was invented
purely for entertainment. In that context Aravinda de Silva figures
in the top rung. His method of scoring runs off the best bowling
attacks has bracketed him among the top three batsmen in the world.
He is undoubtedly Sri Lanka's only truly all-wicket batsman, armed
with the cut, the hook and the pull that can produce runs even on
bouncy tracks.
Although he is also capable of playing the waiting game, as he has
proved in Test cricket, it is as a strokeplayer in the one-day
version that he is often without parallel.
Last Tuesday, de Silva became only the third batsman in the history
of one-day cricket to pass 8,000 runs when he made 55 against India
in the Pepsi three-nation tournament match played at Pune.
Only former West Indian opener Desmond Haynes and Indian captain
Mohammad Azharuddin have had the honour of accumulating such a vast
amount of runs before de Silva. To join this small select band is in
itself a truly great achievement.
In a long and illustrious international career dating back to 1984,
de Silva was in the early part, brilliant and reckless. It earned him
the tag of 'Mad Max', a reflection on his frustrating early-career
habit of self-destructing when set, especially against quality
opposition.
All that changed during the 1996 World Cup, where he was 'Man of the
Match' in both semi-final and final, two performances which enabled
his country to emerge champions in one-day cricket. He had an
excellent run in the competition accumulating 448 runs which apart
from his unbeaten 107 in the final against Australia, included 145
off 115 balls with five sixes against Kenya, the highest of his 11
centuries.
What the competition proved was that he was the man for the big
occasion. He had proved it a year before, with a brilliant display in
the Benson and Hedges Cup final for Kent against Lancashire at
Lord's. With no less than 26 'Man of the Match' awards under his belt
- the highest by any Sri Lankan, de Silva faces his biggest challenge
next month when his country defends the World Cup in England. If Sri
Lanka are to retain the the title, which only the West Indies have
done in the history of the competition, de Silva will need to come up
with batting performances which only he is capable of producing.
Source :: Daily News (https://www.lanka.net)