Pull up your socks and perform - Mendis tells Lankan batsmen (19 May 1999)
Northampton, Tuesday - Sri Lanka's batsmen have been asked to pull up their socks and perform or face the consequence of being eliminated from the 1999 World Cup tournament by manager Duleep Mendis
01-Jan-1970
19 May 1999
Pull up your socks and perform - Mendis tells Lankan batsmen
Sa'adi Thawfeeq
Northampton, Tuesday - Sri Lanka's batsmen have been asked to pull up
their socks and perform or face the consequence of being eliminated
from the 1999 World Cup tournament by manager Duleep Mendis. The
world champs take on the bookmakers' favourites South Africa in a
must-win Group match at the county grounds here tomorrow to be in
with a chance for qualifying for the Super Six.
Sri Lanka lost their opening match of the tournament by eight wickets
to host England at Lord's last Friday and their batting came up for a
scathing attack from manager Mendis.
"When you can't get runs you cannot win matches. If you can't bat
then you will have to forget about cricket. Its absurd, you can't
expect the bowlers to bat and likewise you can't expect the batsmen
to bowl, " said Mendis.
"The conditions weren't that good for batting, but to that we
contributed with some rash shots," he said.
Mendis was referring to the poor strokes made by Roshan Mahanama and
Marvan Atapattu. Sri Lanka made only 204 after being put into bat,
but 49 of those runs came from the tail. England knocked off the runs
losing just two wickets.
Sri Lanka are still without a point in the tournament with India and
Kenya, while England, South Africa and Zimbabwe have two points
apiece.
"At 65 for 5 the game was as good as lost. To add to that we didn't
bowl and we didn't attack. We can't go and bat for them. We can do
everything that is possible and set the stage. They will have to go
out and bat," said Mendis.
"Our biggest problem right now, starting from Australia is the
batting. We have not putting enough runs on the board for the bowlers
to bowl at. Everyone knows that our bowling is insufficient. It is
upto the batsmen to score runs," he said.
Mendis said the team had practiced enough and "it is only a matter of
adjusting your mind to the game".
Sri Lanka are likely to make a couple of changes to their line-up.
Young Mahela Jayawardene, although he is not batting at his best, is
likely to replace Hashan Tillekeratne at no. 7. Sri Lanka are also
contemplating playing leg-spinner Upul Chandana to partner Muthiah
Muralitharan, knowing the only flaw in South Africa's formidable
line-up is spin.
However Chandana's inclusion will totally depend on the conditions
here. It has been extremely cold over the past few days and that kind
of weather is not going to help the spinners who may experience
difficulty in gripping the ball.
It will be hard on Tillekeratne if he finds himself on the sidelines
after just one game. But as Mendis says, "You can't give a batsman
too many chances in a tournament like this".
Sri Lanka will persist with Mahanama to open the batting with Sanath
Jayasuriya and Mendis who has been having a pow-wow with his players
every day, said he expected a big score from his frontline batsmen.
The same view was shared by cricket manager Somachandra de Silva who
said: "We have been asking one of the batsmen to bat throughout the
innings which means someone will have to get a big hundred. The game
against South Africa is very important. If we win it means that we
have batted well because our bowling is not very penetrative. But
first of all we will have to get into the winning streak which has
not been there since the Pepsi tournament in India".
"South Africa have a very strong bowling line-up and we are aware of
that. Our batting is good enough to take on such an attack," said de
Silva.
Sri Lanka captain Arjuna Ranatunga said : "We've got to pick
ourselves up and get back to playing proper cricket".
"South Africa are playing very well at the moment. They're a
professional side, but we have beaten them in the past so hopefully,
we can do so again. It all depends on what happens on the day. That's
what one-day cricket is all about," said Ranatunga.
South African captain Hansie Cronje said he planned to attack Sri
Lanka's batsmen to put them under pressure from the start.
"If you can't get them under pressure it is a different story. We've
seen Brett Schultz demonstrate a couple of years ago that the best
way of getting Sri Lanka under pressure is to attack them," said
Cronje.
"We've got to cash in while the going is good. We've got be as
aggressive as we can and we've got to pressure them from the word
'go'," he said.
Referring to off-spinner Muralitharan, Cronje said: "He's troubled us
a lot in the past. We've got to be confident of countering him which
means we can't afford to lose too many wickets up front".
One thing Sri Lanka can take to the match tomorrow is that their last
win over South Africa was in England last year when they beat them by
57 runs in an Emirates trophy match played at Trent Bridge. South
Africa hold an lead 8-6 lead with one no-result in the one-day
matches played between the two countries so far.
The teams:
SRI LANKA (from): Arjuna Ranatunga (captain), Sanath
Jayasuriya, Roshan Mahanama, Marvan Atapattu, Aravinda de Silva,
Romesh Kaluwitharana, Mahela Jayawardene, Chaminda Vaas, Pramodya
Wickremasinghe, Muthiah Muralitharan, Erik Upashantha, Upul Chandana,
Hashan Tillekeratne.
SOUTH AFRICA (from) : Hansie Cronje (captain), Gary Kirsten,
Herschelle Gibbs, Mark Boucher, Darryl Cullinan, Jacques Kallis,
Jonty Rhodes, Lance Klusener, Shaun Pollock, Allan Donald, Nicky
Boje, Derek Crookes.
UMPIRES: Steve Dunne (New Zealand) and Steve Bucknor (West
Indies),
TV umpire: Ken Palmer (England)
Match Referee: John Reid.
Source :: The Daily News (https://www.lanka.net/lakehouse/)