Coach Dav Whatmore believes that Sri Lanka's recent experience of South
African conditions could provide them with a crucial advantage in their World
Cup opener against New Zealand on Monday.
Sri Lanka were whitewashed in the Test series and then hammered 4-1 in the
one-day series that followed but Whatmore believes that crucial lessons were
learned.
"We needed to go through the pain and heartache in South Africa and in
Australia to get an understanding of those conditions," said Whatmore. "It
will hold us in good stead despite the confidence being knocked a bit."
New Zealand, meanwhile, last played at home where they swarmed all over the
Indians, winning the seven-match series 5-2 on lush, green tracks ill-suited
to the limited overs game.
Whatmore questions whether that was ideal preparation for the World Cup:
"They won on bowler friendly wickets. It is not going to be easy to adjust
in such a short space of time."
The Sri Lankans hope that the pitch will be similar in pace to the turgid
surface that assisted their spinners during their second warm-up game
against Free State last week.
With off-spinner Muttiah Muralitharan having recovered from a thigh injury,
Sri Lanka will bowl a minimum of 20 overs of spin during the match.
Sri Lanka have an excellent recent record against the Black Caps having won
13 of the last 16 matches played since 1997 but Whatmore still rates them
highly.
New Zealand are not a team of big stars, but bits and pieces players who do
it fairly well and with good team spirit. They have a good history of
starting competitions well," said Whatmore.
Whatmore predicts that result will be crucial: "Its a must win situation. It
will give the team a big boost if we can get away to a win. It will probably
be the match of the round in our pool."
New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming is unperturbed by his side's previous form against Sri Lanka, pointing instead to their reputation as starters.
"We usually start tournaments well," said Fleming. "We're going to do well
because we believe in the squad we have."
The return of explosive all-rounder Chris Cairns also adds to substance to a
batting line-up that relies heavily on the class of Nathan Astle.
Cairns will not bowl during the early games having not regained full fitness
after a long-term knee injury.
The all-rounder also has confidence in his teammates: "In the last two
tournaments we had a good side and thought we would do well, but this one
here, with the side we've got we're quietly confident.
"The preparation's been fantastic and it's the best unit I've been involved
in, that's for sure."
Sri Lanka (from):
S Jayasuriya (captain), M Atapattu, M Jayawardene, K Sangakkara, A De Silva,
R Arnold, J Mubarak, A Gunawardene, H Tillakaratne, M Muralitharan, C Vaas,
D Fernando, P Gunaratne, P Nissanka, C Buddhika Fernando.
New Zealand (from):
S Fleming (captain), A Adams, N Astle, S Bond, C Cairns, C Harris, C
McMillan, J Oram, S Styris, D Tuffey, D Vettori, L Vincent, B McCullum.