Aravinda launches autobiography (14 May 1999)
LONDON, Thursday - Sri Lanka's star batsman Aravinda de Silva launches his autobiography at Lord's tomorrow
14-May-1999
14 May 1999
Aravinda launches autobiography
Sa'adi Thawfeeq
LONDON, Thursday - Sri Lanka's star batsman Aravinda de Silva launches
his autobiography at Lord's tomorrow.
The launching will coincide with Sri Lanka's opening World Cup match
against England.
The book titled: "Aravinda: The Autobiography", is a brilliant account
of this master batsman's life and times, following his story literally
from the cradle to the present day.
The foreward of the book is written by Ian Chappell, the former
Australian captain.
About the book: "Aravinda was given a bat to hold at an early age,
"for a long time the hook shot was the only one I knew", and the book
charts his growth to become one of the world's most dynamic batsmen.
He has more than the cross-bats now of course, and the book is
exemplary in revealing the thought processes, desire, drive and
determination that go into making a world-class batsman.
"Having made his debut at Lord's in 1984, Aravinda's story is the
story of Sri Lankan cricket too, for he has played in almost all of
Sri Lanka's Tests and one-day internationals since they gained full
international status in 1982. He has faced every great bowler in the
world in this time, succeeding against them, and his accounts of his
titanic tussles with bowlers such as Imran, Qadir, Wasim, Waqar,
Hadlee, Warne, McGrath, Hughes, McDermott, Kumble, Holding, Walsh and
Ambrose make for fascinating reading.
"The book is also studded with vivid portraits of all the great
batsmen he played with and against. Batsmen are made not born, he
seems to suggest. What distinguishes the ones who are at the top is
their hunger to win and play at their best when under the most immense
pressure. To Aravinda, who has had all the shots and the desire to
play them from a very early age, greatness has come from taking on the
responsibility of being Sri Lanka's major match-winning batsman.
"The best measure of success: playing to the needs of the team. The
team is what matters...once the Sri Lankan team became better, so did
I. Once I became better, so did the team. That's the secret of our
current success."
It is a mark of the man that he is as content to revel in the skill of
his opponents as he is to recount his triumphs against them. All his
team-mates too, past and present are remembered, none are forgotten in
the part they played in moving Sri Lanka towards being the current
World Champions.
"Of course the road to this goal was fraught with many
disappointments, and for many years to the rest of the world Sri Lanka
"seemed to be a collection of the unpronounceable doing the
unremarkable". They have come a very long way in a very short space of
time, it is almost as if they had to suffer for so long in order to
fire themselves to be such great competitors. Like his cricket,
Aravinda's book reveals knowledge brought to life.
"It is perhaps symptomatic of the poor light in which Sri Lanka was
viewed that for all the excellent action pictures in the book, there
are none of Aravinda for the years from his debut in 1984 to 1995/96
when he had that glorious season for Kent and that season's World Cup.
Since then of course, Aravinda and Sri Lankan cricket have been in the
news aplenty. Everything they do is headline news. And this
exceptional book, written in an manner that takes one into the heart
of the game and what it means to be a Sri Lankan cricketer, stands fit
to be seen as one of the best-received cricketing autobiographies of
recent times".
It is published by Mainstream Press, UK and priced at 16.99 pounds
sterling (approx. SLR 1900/-).
Source :: The Daily News (https://www.lanka.net/lakehouse/)