Concentration - key to success in cricket (6 January 1999)
With the dawn of the New Year, there will be lot of interest centred around the Carlton and United Cricket Trophy tournament where Sri Lanka, Australia and England will battle it out for one-day international cricket supremacy and premier division
06-Jan-1999
6 January 1999
Concentration - key to success in cricket
by Premasara Epasinghe
With the dawn of the New Year, there will be lot of interest centred
around the Carlton and United Cricket Trophy tournament where Sri
Lanka, Australia and England will battle it out for one-day
international cricket supremacy and premier division three cricket
championship, where our up and coming second string young cricketers
will be in action. Then, there is the inter-school cricket
competition gaining momentum. All in all, its exciting cricket
everywhere.
In this opening article for the year 1999, I wish to explain some of
the aspects very briefly, that you should bear in mind in reaching
the top as a promising cricketer and especially as a batsman.
Taking pains over the smallest detail was the key that opened the
door to their greatness. This is crystal clear, when you analyse and
study the great batsmen in the history of the game, like Sir Don
Bradman, Sir Garfield Sobers, Sir Frank Worrel, Sir Leonard Hutton,
Neil Harvey, Alan Border, Dennis Compton, Sunil Gavaskar, to name a
few.
In cricket, a batsman can be beaten either on the air or off the
ground. Remember, after all a batsman has just one chance.There are
eleven players vying to bring about his downfall. To play any stroke
successfully, the batsman must look at, find, and then continue to
watch the ball. In a split of a second, he must decide what is the
correct stroke to play it. He must make his body play that stroke
correctly. In all stroke play the position and the headiness of the
head is vital. Half the battle is won, if your head moves into and
stays in the right position.
Through experience, I am aware that although you think that to watch
the ball is easy, it is not so. The most important of all is to set
your mind to it. To build up the habit of watching every ball
throughout an innings means very very hard work. You can achieve this
only by learning to concentrate your mind on batting. If you learn to
meet it, not only in cricket, but in life too it will definitely help
you.
One of the best examples of concentration that I have recently
witnessed in batting came from no other lesser person than our own
Aravinda de Silva, champion batsman of the world, when I was
commentating in the Wills World Cup 1996 finals at Gadafi Stadium,
Lahore, Pakistan. For the second successive encounter, the feared Sri
Lankan openers, Sanath and Kalu, were dismissed Sri Lanka 23 for 2.
De Silva and Gurusinha, with sheer determination and concentration,
putting the country before self, gave everything they had and
repaired the innings. Everything was correct and controlled. They
never panicked and took on the Australians ball by ball. It was Test
match special at an accelerated pace. Aravinda de Silva stroked the
ball through the off side, on side, forward and square and behind.
Power of concentration was at its best. Everyone of De Silva's 14
boundaries was a gem, in his epic unbeaten century in the World Cup
1996. This innings I will cherish for my lifetime.
The concentration of Aravinda de Silva and skipper Arjuna Ranatunga
later steered the team to victory sedately and Sri Lanka were worthy
world champions.
When you are batting, to decide correctly what stroke to play to any
particular ball is partly a matter of "instinct" or in cricket jargon
"ball sense".
As you are aware, if your confidence falls, your thinking changes,
and your concentration, to cope with pressure is affected. In short,
if concentration is poor, you will lose confidence and will
definitely handle the pressure badly.
Remember, in cricket or in any other game or in your life,
concentration is the most important and vital factor in performance.
:Janashakthi Insurance cover for umpires
A cricket umpire is a man who devotes his leisure time to enabling
twenty two other men enjoy themselves. I feel that he does a
thankless and rewardless job. He is sure to displease some one, but
bravely walks on. He must be thorough in the Laws of the Game and act
as jury and judge for both prosecution and defence. A golden rule is
that he has to be impartial. In short without him (umpire) the game
of cricket will not survive.
A bouquet should be paid to Janashakthi Life Insurance Company in
providing a sponsorship package and offering an accidental insurance
cover for each umpire ranging from Rs. 50,000 to 100,000 to the
Association of Cricket Umpires. By this, more than one hundred
umpires from all grades will be benefited.
For the past fifty five years Sri Lankan umpires never got a
sponsorship package of this nature. It was something long overdue to
them.
Special mention must be made of the dynamic President of the Umpires
Association Mr. Lakshman Kiriella, an Old Royalist, Deputy Minister
of Foreign Affairs and Mr. Chandra Schaffter and Old Thomian,
Managing Director of Janashakthi in initiating a scheme of this
nature for umpires who richly deserve it.
Source :: Daily News (https://www.lanka.net)