Crosscurrents, the Aussie-Lanka connection - a review (1 February 1999)
If Sri Lankans want to chronicle the love-hate relationship between their country and Australia on and off the cricket field, then 'Crosscurrents - Sri Lanka and Australia at Cricket' by Michael Roberts and Alfred James (published by Walla Walla
01-Feb-1999
1 February 1999
Crosscurrents, the Aussie-Lanka connection - a review
The Daily News
If Sri Lankans want to chronicle the love-hate relationship between
their country and Australia on and off the cricket field, then
'Crosscurrents - Sri Lanka and Australia at Cricket' by Michael
Roberts and Alfred James (published by Walla Walla Press and Mobitel,
and priced at Rs. 900 incl GST, 168 pages) is the book for them.
With the Muthiah Muralitharan throwing controversy being enacted all
over again at Adelaide in the current Carlton and United World Series
Cup, readers of this book browsing through Part III will get a clear
insight to the controversies that surrounded the team during their
tour to Australia four years ago.
Part IV deals with 'Bombs and the World Cup' where Australia's
refusal to honour their World Cup fixture in Sri Lanka and Sri
Lanka's ultimate triumph over Australia in the World Cup final at
Lahore are adequately dealt with.
The book concentrates more on the off field happenings rather than on
the detailed match reports which can always be found in other
publications.
As the authors admit in their preface, the books is 'an anthology of
articles surveying the inter-relations between Sri Lanka and
Australia at cricket'.
It further states, 'the survey does not purport to be comprehensive
and its selections have been contrained by manageability and
economics'.
The only outside contributors to the book are S.S. Perera, the former
Sri Lanka Cricket Board recorder, who provides 'Notes on Sri Lanka's
cricket heritage' in Part I and Richard Cashman, who writes of
'Australian relations with Sri Lanka' in Part II. The rest of the 11
chapters are taken up by the authors.
Most interesting and of value are the full scoreboards of matches
played between Sri Lanka and Australia from 1884 to 1981 (there are
35 of them) and some rare black and white photographs gleaned from
the scrapbooks of individuals dating back to as far as 1890.
The other two full scorecards are of Sri Lanka's two matches against
Australia in the World Cups 1975 and 1996 - the only occasions they
have met in the history of the competition. Both contests were
memorable ones, the first seeing the totally unrecognised Sri Lankans
taking on the full might of Lillee and Thomson and losing by 52 runs
at the Oval, and the other, 21 years later, when Sri Lanka triumphed
over Australia to win the World Cup at Lahore.
Author Roberts has some connection with Sri Lanka being educated at
St. Aloysius College, Galle and obtaining first class honours at the
University of Sri Lanka, Peradeniya and being elected a Rhodes
scholar for Sri Lanka in 1962. He has published a number of scholarly
works on Sri Lankan society and culture.
James is a university administrator and author of three cricket tour
books and another work on averages and results of Australian
first-class cricket from 1850-51 to 1957-58.
Source :: Daily News (https://www.lanka.net)