Roshan Mahanama ends his innings (7 August 1999)
Roshan Mahanama one of the bulwarks of Sri Lanka cricket for over a decade announced his retirement from international cricket yesterday after being dropped from the one-day and Test squads to play Australia and India later this month
07-Aug-1999
7 August 1999
Roshan Mahanama ends his innings
Sa'adi Thawfeeq
Roshan Mahanama one of the bulwarks of Sri Lanka cricket for over a
decade announced his retirement from international cricket yesterday
after being dropped from the one-day and Test squads to play
Australia and India later this month.
In a chequered international career where his position in the team
wavered as much as his batting place in it, 33-year-old Mahanama in a
letter to the Cricket Board interim committee chairman Rienzie
Wijetilleke stated: "This must necessarily be a sad occasion for me,
to take what is a difficult decision and sever my connections with a
game which has been nothing less than a passion for me from childhood
upwards. It is a decision painfully arrived at after careful thought.
"Accordingly, I wish to inform you that I have decided to announce my
retirement from international cricket. I do not know how my
contribution to the game will come to be judged, and all that I can
say for my part is that I gave of my utmost, which I suppose is all
that one can fairly ask of a person.
"I extend my best wishes to Sri Lanka cricket for greater success in
the years to come. I also take this opportunity to offer my sincere
thanks to all who have supported and encouraged me at all times".
Mahanama will be best remembered for his electrifying fielding and
for his integrity and discipline on and off the field.
"I always wanted to be a brilliant fielder because I was not a bowler
and I worked hard towards achieving that aim," said Mahanama when he
became the first Sri Lankan cricketer and only the fourth in the
world to hold a century of catches in one-day matches during the
Singer-Akai Nidahas trophy triangular last year.
Unlike most other cricketers Mahanama never had an easy entry into
the national team. He had to sacrifice his position as a middle-order
batsman to play Test cricket. He made his debut against Pakistan at
the CCC grounds in 1986.
But with the times, Mahanama's position in the batting order kept on
changing and he never had the comfort of a proper batting position
whether it was in a Test or a one-day international. This in some way
contributed to him not being as consistent and a heavy scorer for his
country.
He averaged a shade less than 30 in both types of games which does
not justify his talent and calibre. He was more or less an unsung
hero of Sri Lanka's rise into the big league of world cricket. He was
used productively down the order in the one-day game and he was a
member of the Sri Lanka team when they won the World Cup in 1996.
An elegant right-hand batsman with the temperament to play long
innings, Mahanama had his greatest day in Test cricket in August 1997
when he made a career best 225 against India and shared with
Bloomfield club mate Sanath Jayasuriya the highest partnership for
any wicket in Test cricket - 576.
But after that marathon effort Mahanama lost his Test place on poor
form to Mahela Jayawardene and missed Sri Lanka's last seven Tests.
The recently concluded World Cup was Mahanama's swansong. Although he
was constantly shifted up and down the batting order, he performed
consistently to score 136 runs at an average of 27.
Apart from the big partnership record with Jayasuriya, Mahanama also
holds an unusual world record in one-day internationals. He has been
dismissed leg before wicket the most number of times - 34 in his 213
matches (198 innings). The second highest is Pakistan's Javed Miandad
with 29.
One hopes that Mahanama will not be totally lost to cricket because
he has a lot more to offer outside the field.
Tributes
Bloomfield president Shelley Wickramasingha: "Personally I think
Roshan should have been given a chance in the Test squad. He is still
about the best fielder. Cricketers like him cannot be out of form for
too long. He had at least a good two years of cricket ahead of him".
Source :: The Daily News (https://www.lanka.net/lakehouse/)