Captain calm shines on serenely
Andrew Miller looks at Mahela Jayawardene, Cricinfo's top performer of the week
Andrew Miller
17-May-2006
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Think of Sri Lankan captains, and you immediately think of Arjuna
Ranatunga, the pint-sized Napoleon who grabbed a
mild-mannered side by the scruff of the neck, used confrontation as a
default setting in adversity, and shook the game so vigorously that
when Sri Lanka emerged from the 1996 World Cup as champions, their
place at the game's top table had finally been enshrined as a right.
Mahela Jayawardene, by contrast, could hardly be further removed from
Ranatunga's model. For starters, he has never actively sought the
burden of leadership, and he only took over for the current tour of
England when Marvan Atapattu was forced to withdraw through injury.
His critics have long questioned his aptitude for such a high-profile
role, believing his run-scoring would be compromised by
responsibility, but after the events of the past week at Lord's, the
doubters have been deprived of their ammo.
Even before his side had stymied England on the final day of the game,
Jayawardene had guaranteed himself a special niche in cricket history.
His brilliantly composed 119 in the second innings made him only the
ninth overseas batsman to score twin hundreds at Lord's, an exclusive
club that counts Don Bradman, George Headley, Garry Sobers and Dileep
Vengsarkar among its more illustrious members.
But when his tailenders completed the task he had begun, batting out
the final day to complete a Test-record tally of seven half-centuries
in a single innings, Jayawardene's calming influence had been paraded
in front of the world. And given the disarray into which the Sri
Lankan camp had been cast on the eve of this Test, it's questionable
whether anyone else could have imbued such a sense of serenity.
Ranatunga certainly wouldn't. When news emerged from Colombo that
Sanath Jayasuriya had been reinstated in the squad without the
blessing of the tour management, Ranatunga responded that he would
have flown home in disgust. Jayawardene simply got on with his job,
and his young charges, seven of whom had never before played in
England, responded eagerly to his lead. An absence of agenda proved to
be his trump card.
He says
"It ranks as one of the greatest Tests I have ever been involved in. The whole team deserves the man of the match [award]. It was a brilliant effort which showed a lot of character from top to bottom. It will have given a lot of confidence to the youngsters, and that's what they need, belief that they can do it at this level of cricket, because most of them haven't achieved anything in their careers yet."
"It ranks as one of the greatest Tests I have ever been involved in. The whole team deserves the man of the match [award]. It was a brilliant effort which showed a lot of character from top to bottom. It will have given a lot of confidence to the youngsters, and that's what they need, belief that they can do it at this level of cricket, because most of them haven't achieved anything in their careers yet."
They say
"Test cricket provided its own proof yesterday that the world has reached its tipping point, the stage at which global warming causes it to behave in an increasingly haphazard fashion. Ice sheets are melting, deforestation is causing a Japanese chopstick crisis but none of this remotely compares with the extraordinary manner in which Sri Lanka saved the Lord's Test." The Guardian's resident Lanka-phile, David Hopps, rubs his eyes in amazement.
"Test cricket provided its own proof yesterday that the world has reached its tipping point, the stage at which global warming causes it to behave in an increasingly haphazard fashion. Ice sheets are melting, deforestation is causing a Japanese chopstick crisis but none of this remotely compares with the extraordinary manner in which Sri Lanka saved the Lord's Test." The Guardian's resident Lanka-phile, David Hopps, rubs his eyes in amazement.
What you may not know
Jayawardene's cricket career was almost derailed before he had left school, when his younger brother, Dhishal, died of a brain tumour at the tender age of 16. After six months in mourning, Mahela resumed the game, and has since become a leading campaigner for the Sri Lankan cancer charity, HOPE. With the support of his team-mates, he aims to build a new 750-bed unit at Maharagama, the country's only dedicated Cancer Hospital.
Jayawardene's cricket career was almost derailed before he had left school, when his younger brother, Dhishal, died of a brain tumour at the tender age of 16. After six months in mourning, Mahela resumed the game, and has since become a leading campaigner for the Sri Lankan cancer charity, HOPE. With the support of his team-mates, he aims to build a new 750-bed unit at Maharagama, the country's only dedicated Cancer Hospital.
What the future holds
At the age of 28, and with 79 Tests and 5690 runs to his name already, he is well on course to overhaul Jayasuriya's record as Sri Lanka's leading run-scorer, and could eventually replace Muttiah Muralitharan as the country's most-capped player as well. For the time being, however, he has no more pressing thoughts than the second Test at Edgbaston next week, where a buoyant squad will seek to build on the confidence gained at Lord's ... and maybe even find a place in the starting line-up for that man, Jayasuriya.
At the age of 28, and with 79 Tests and 5690 runs to his name already, he is well on course to overhaul Jayasuriya's record as Sri Lanka's leading run-scorer, and could eventually replace Muttiah Muralitharan as the country's most-capped player as well. For the time being, however, he has no more pressing thoughts than the second Test at Edgbaston next week, where a buoyant squad will seek to build on the confidence gained at Lord's ... and maybe even find a place in the starting line-up for that man, Jayasuriya.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo