21 September 1996
Lankan cricketers: Great players, great guys
Daily News
``If God played cricket, he would play like Aravinda de Silva,''
says Zimbabwean captain Alistair Campbell. He's probably right.
On the eve of the Signer Cup finals with Australia, de Silva
said a prayer, locked himself in his room, took his phone off
the hook and went to bed early at 10 pm. The next day September
7 - he smashed his way to 75 runs off 64 balls, the 38th
half-century of his career.
That took his tally of runs in the Singer series to 334, and
took his team to victory. It was a sledgehammer knock, simply
unstoppable: no bowler came close to dragging the de Silva name
to his list of victims on the World Tel Graphic monitor.
With each tournament, the Sri Lankans are getting more
accustomed to the idea of winning. Now people have stopped
wondering whether their World Cup win was a fluke. The question
now is when they, with their gladiatorial style, will be
recognised as a team comparable to the greatest ever - Clive
Lloyd's eleven. They are a class act and, at the moment, few can
match their ability to combine a radical approach with so much
zest. Post-match, Australian captain Ian Healy was gracious in
his praise. ``If any team is taking cricket to a new
evolutionary leap, it's the Sri Lankans''.
Says Asanka Gurusinghe, Sri Lanka's bearded number three
batsman: ``After the Australia tour, de Silva was very hurt with
the things that happened and kind of took it as a personal
affront. Since then, he has taken upon himself to see the team
to victory each time. He's so determined that the team should do
well that he does not want to leave the scoring to the next guy.
That's what's behind his four not-outs in the tournament.''
For Sri Lanka, the 50-run win in the Singer final was their
third straight triumph over Australia and effectively reaffirmed
their world champion status. Says Healy: ``They played great
cricket. It's going to take other teams some time to copy the
way they're playing right now. First the openers go after you
and everybody knows by now that their success is not a fluke.
Then this demi-god comes in by the name of de Silva. If you set
the field close, he goes over the top. If you spread the field,
he finds the gaps. Unless he self-destructs, there's no way of
stopping him''.
Divinity, it's turning out, is easily mentioned in the same
breath as de Silva. But the man, like most of his amiable mates,
is not entirely bereft of earthly desire. He's always had this
strange fetish for luxury cars. The fact that he comes from a
wealthy trading family has helped-his mother presented him his
first at the age of 17. Now, de Silva has five cars, amongst
them a Mercedes, a BMW, an Audi and a Volvo. And now a Kia
sports car-good going for a man who likes the driving seat.
Says Healy: ``Right now, everybody's trying to control the two
openers. Teams are only reacting to what they're doing. It's
taken Sanath Jayasuriya more than a 100 one-dayers to evolve
into the player he is today. He's a 10 a-over batsman.''
Cricket has seen sluggers before. So what's special about
Jayasuriya and hunting partner Romesh Kaluwitharana? It's
simple. Today's captains, oriented to the cut-throat run-battles
of one-day cricket, have become very good at preventing normal
scoring by innovating new field positions that cut run angles on
the field. In this light, the assaults the Lankan duo launches
on the world's opening bowlers becomes all the more creditable.
Even selection policy has adapted itself to provide a support
system. The team management goes out of its way to assure the
two openers that their place in the side is secure even if they
get out cheaply. Explains Sri Lanka's coach Dave Whatmore:
``Even though Kaluwitharana did go through a bit of a lean patch
in the World Cup earlier this year and afterwards, we didn't let
that affect him at all. Now, he has come good in the finals. We
personally don't like the phrase `we will win'. That puts too
much weight on our shoulders. What I tell the team is to
concentrate on what it takes to win''.
The finals showed the team is quick on the uptake. De Silva
hammered what could be called a vote-of-thanks half-century.
Roshan Mahanama fielded brilliantly to get Mark Waugh out early.
As if the superb runout wasn't enough, he took what was arguably
the most spectacular catch in the deep in the last 10 years to
grab the last Australian wicket to fall, that of Glen Mcgrath.
And earlier in the innings, Muthiah Muralitharan took another
stunner to dismiss Stuart Law, an on the-run dive that scooped
the ball inches from Mother Earth. Upul Chandana took four
wickets. And so it went....
This cavalier attitude spills over from the field and colours
their personal lives. Sanath Jayasuriya, for instance, holds
forth on his selection process for girlfriends in the same
breath as he talks about cricket. In relaxed conversations, his
team-mates analyze the possible scenario if the LTTE decides to
disrupt a match - not really something to worry about, they
concede later, as Prabhakaran is a cricket fan and watches all
their ties.
It's easy to catch these off-the-cuff nuggets. For, in contrast
to the stiff, protocol-bound Indian team, the Sri Lankans are a
happy-go-lucky lot and one can easily walk into their rooms for
a chat or accost them anywhere in the hotel premises. If that
isn't possible, all of them are armed with cellular telephones
and are always agreeable to a conversation. At best, you might
get asked whether manager Duleep Mendis has given clearance; but
none of them bother to crosscheck anyway. They are a bunch of
nice blokes, eminently likeable for their in-it-for-the-pleasure
kind of attitude.
If one were to award points for accessibility, the Indians would
come last. The press isn't supposed to approach players without
the manager's consent, but only the Indians follow the stricture
seriously. Every approach road, ultimately, leads back to
manager Sandip Patil. As for the Zimbabweans, one just has to
call them and they invite you over to their rooms. The Aussies
are more elusiveat training sessions, they pull their caps
over their faces to frustrate photographers. Try chasing an
appointment, and you find them acting strange. The typical
exchange goes; ``Ahm, may I talk to Steve Waugh please?'' ``I'm
afraid he isn't in at the moment''. You recognise the voice
though.
Personality traits tend to encroach onto the field, but the Sri
Lankans are of late learning how to put an edge into their
cricket, Aussie-style. Which means they will no longer be
intimidated by Aussie sledging, a past weakness. Says former
England captain and television commentator `Tony Greig of the
Lankans: ``I think they are the intimidating team now. Their
level of confidence was even higher than in the World Cup. The
Aussies had a leak in theirs''.
In the first Sri Lanka-Australia group match, Steve Waugh showed
his flair for some old-fashioned sledging by picking on
Kaluwitharana. The diminutive opener lost his concentration and
promptly got out to the next ball. (Subsequently, the ICC was to
slap a three-month suspended sentence on Waugh for arguing with
umpire B. C. Cooray in the match with India.)
In the tense final, it was the Sri Lankan's turn to return the
compliment from his position behind the stumps. The altercation
saw the umpire intervening to cool tempers, but the deed was
done. Before anyone could say Romesh Kaluwitharana, Waugh was
walking back to the pavilion. And during his own opening knock
of 58 off 45 deliveries, `Kalu' didn't let Healy behind the
stumps spoil his concentration. Two evenings back, he was
sponging wicket keeping tips off the Aussie skipper, of whom he
is a great admirer.
For Healy himself, the match was an experience that left him
fatigued, but wiser. Says the veteran keeper: ``The way their
batsmen were going after us, I found the going tough. The
experience is going to make me a better vice-captain once Mark
Taylor returns. I would be interested in seeing, however, if the
Sri Lankans play the same way in the next World Cup in England,
where the pitch won't be conducive to their kind of play''.
As of now, though, Healy doesn't think the Aussies would try to
change their style to counter the Lankans. ``Our style is more
Test-oriented. We would have to overhaul entirely to adapt to
this style. right now, for us, winning in this part of the world
with these kind of pitches is still a small priority''. Sour
grapes, Ian?
Source :: Daily News (https://www.lanka.net)