Our World T20 squad is a very good mix - Sangakkara
After being away from the game for over a month, Kumar Sangakkara talks about his time off and Sri Lanka's prospects in the upcoming World T20s

Kumar Sangakkara: "Home advantage is not only about wickets, it's about playing in your country, playing in front of the people that cheer and love you. It's about being comfortable at home." • AFP
KS: The injury's healed pretty well. I went and saw the surgeon a couple of days ago he was extremely happy with the progress. I've been trying to work on strengthening my hand; my wrist has weakened a bit over the four weeks it was in the cast. It's just a case of doing my rehab properly and by the beginning of next week I can get back to batting. It's hard not to touch a bat. As soon as the cast came off, I started just doing shadow batting so that I can get the feel of my hand around the grip, it also helps to strengthen my wrist and get me to kind of mentally prepare myself for playing. Initially when I touched the bat, I felt a bit strange. The finger felt that it was not really part of my hand but now within two days of working with Stephen our physiotherapist, he's been really great checking up on me at every stage. He's worked with me really well.
KS: There was another fracture I had on my thumb but we didn't have any international cricket at that time, so I was lucky. It was another 5-6 weeks that I spent. I had a hamstring injury in Australia but I was back in 17 days. This is probably the longest.
KS: The injury gave me more time with my family. I don't think I have missed a game in about two and a half years and it was nice to spend some time with my family and my children, especially when they are 3 years old, it's a great age to be at home. Also I had to do a lot of household work, household chores, things that I had time to take care of. There were a lot of things I had my attention on, so I wasn't missing cricket. I had so much to do that it was good that my mind was off the game. It was a good rest. I just need to come back strong and work on my fitness and get back straight into playing.
KS: Our World T20 side is a very good pick and with two new guys in Dilshan Munaweera and Akila Dananjaya, it would be interesting to see how these guys fare. Munaweera is a top order bat and will be competing for places with Mahela [Jayawardene] and [Tillakaratne] Dilshan at the helm. It would be difficult for him to get a look in at the start unless Mahela is forced to go down into the middle order, that's probably one way where Munaweera will be playing. But he's looked really solid in the Sri Lanka Premier League. He has a great body language and great presence at the crease. I watched him time the ball and also he's shown a lot of maturity from the way he started the tournament. I saw him get into the six overs and batting on. He showed a slight weakness against spin at the start but managed to get over that very quickly. He looks like a guy who learns very quickly.
KS: He's got a great attitude, he is very competitive on the field and he's got good variations in bowling - about three or four balls. He bowls at a lesser pace than Mendis whose variations were a bit more subtle when he started. Akila is not Mendis, but he's got something different to him. That's what you look for in a big tournament when you are trying to play an opposition and try and get a competitive edge.
KS: It's going to be an interesting time. We got some great T20 players playing in this tournament and it's hard to single out anyone. Australia always play well, England's really improved in T20 cricket, South Africa are a great side, Pakistan look very strong but West Indies look like they are extremely well suited to play this format now. With Sunil Narine, Chris Gayle back at the top, [Kieron] Pollard, [Darren] Sammy, Dwayne Smith, Darren Bravo, Dwayne Bravo and Marlon Samuels back they've got a great mix. West Indies are a side to watch.
KS: Khettarama (R Premadasa Stadium) is a classical example where 220 (in ODIs) meant you usually won a game. The ball would turn square, you win the toss, you bat and you win the game. It changed for a while where you batted first not because it turned but because the ball started swinging insanely in the night. When the wickets were relaid, in the first few games there was a lot of turn and now they've settled down into beautiful wickets where batting first or second you have an equal chance of winning and batting under lights has become so much easier that some sides now prefer to chase.
KS: Our sides have also changed a little bit. We don't depend on spin alone anymore or just a fast bowler in Chaminda Vaas. We have different sets of fast bowlers and different sets of spinners. With the change in conditions, our sides have changed but home advantage is not only about wickets, it's about playing in your country, playing in front of the people that cheer and love you. It's about being comfortable at home. All of those things add to your home advantage on wickets. We can't just look at a wicket and say we want it exactly the way it suits us, especially now they have independent curators who monitor wickets. We've got to learn to roll with the punches and change with the times. Playing at home in a World Cup is a massive advantage.
KS: Sri Lanka have always been favourites in my view in any tournament that we play because we've been able to rise to those big occasions really well as a unit and adjust accordingly. In big tournaments we always had a great run. If you take our last 4-5 years it's been an amazing run in big tournaments. We just need to believe in ourselves and believe in that fact and keep playing.
KS: Physically, we can get a lot stronger and that prevents injury. Mentally, we still need to work on controlling emotions, attitude, addressing problems, having better communication with the management, players and administration. All of those things help. Even better relationships with the media help in ensuring that there's development and an improvement on the field. Skillwise we have always been very good. We'll be restructuring certain sections of our first-class cricket in the near future and that will help.