Sanath or Roshan? selectors to decide (2 July 1999)
Sanath or Roshan
02-Jul-1999
2 July 1999
Sanath or Roshan? selectors to decide
Sa'adi Thawfeeq
Sri Lanka will have a new cricket captain by next week.
The new selection committee whose first task was to pick the Sri
Lanka 'A' squad to England, is expected to name the new captain by
Monday.
The contenders to take over the mantle from Arjuna Ranatunga has
boiled down to just two - Sanath Jayasuriya and Roshan Mahanama, both
members of newly-crowned Premier champions Bloomfield.
Mahela Jayawardene of SSC is the likely choice of vice-captain.
The need for a change at the top became apparent following Sri
Lanka's dismal run in the last five one-day tournaments beginning
with the mini-World Cup in Dhaka in October last year and culminating
with their unsuccessful attempt to defend the World Cup in England
last month.
In that period Sri Lanka went through five one-day tournaments and
failed to reach the finals in any of them, recording only seven wins
against 18 defeats in 25 matches.
Ranatunga, who is expected to return home by the weekend maybe asked
to quit from the captaincy and go out honourably in order to allow
the selection committee to nominate his successor.
It is the right way to send him off, because the contribution
Ranatunga has made to Sri Lanka cricket is immense. It would have
been more appropriate had Ranatunga taken the decision to quit the
captaincy on his own (a la Mark Taylor) rather than leave it to the
selectors to decide for him. It would have brought him more
admiration from the cricketing public, from both here and abroad.
But then Ranatunga is Ranatunga. He likes to do things his way and to
a certain point he succeeded. Now the cookie has crumbled.
Undoubtedly, Ranatunga has been Sri Lanka's most successful captain
leading the country in 193 one-day matches - a world record in a
11-year period that saw Sri Lanka scale the pinnacle in
overs-specific cricket by winning the World Cup in 1996. He won 89
and lost 95 of those matches with eight ending in no-results and one
tie.
With 22-year-old Jayewardene to be groomed as a future captain,
Ranatunga's long-standing deputy Aravinda de Silva will also
relinquish his post of vice-captain.
De Silva is 33 and Ranatunga, 35 and between them they have provided
the backbone to the national team for the past 15 years playing in
over 500 one-day internationals and scoring well in excess of 15,000
runs - a record which the new generation of cricketers who take over
should do well to emulate or improve on.
Although Ranatunga and De Silva will lose their high status, there is
a likelihood the selectors don't intend dumping them off
unceremoniously right now. They may still figure in the series
against Australia as players, but that is only as long as they
perform, because the crying need now is for fresh blood to be
instilled into a waning team.
The selectors may probably adopt a cautious attitude instead of
making immediate wholesale changes, especially because the opposition
is Australia - the unofficial world Test champions and official
one-day champions, and not Zimbabwe, which may have had them thinking
differently.
The candidates
Sanath Jayasuriya (29) - The popular choice for the captaincy. Has
led his country in one one-day international against Zimbabwe at the
SSC grounds last year. Scored a century on debut and guided his team
to a four-wicket win. A phenomenon who has transformed attitudes in
the one-day game through pinch hitting over the top which won his
country the 1996 World Cup. Is no slouch in the Test arena either
making 340 against India at R. Premadasa Stadium in 1997 - the fourth
highest Test score of all time. He followed it up with an innings of
199 at the SSC. Last August, he stroked a mesmerising 213 to enable
Sri Lanka beat England at the Oval. A left-hand bat and left-arm
spinner, he started playing to his full potential only after being
promoted to open the innings. Besides his batting pyrotechnics, he is
also an effective bowler being the first from his country to take 150
wickets in one-day cricket. Returned to the side for the '99 World
Cup after breaking his forearm in Australia. Had moderate success
with the bat, which suggests that he has not fully recovered from the
injury.
Roshan Mahanama (33) - Knowledgeable sources think he is the right
man for the job not on the long term, but to bring back discipline
and put the game back in its rightful place. Very much one of the
unsung heroes of Sri Lanka's rise into the big league of world
cricket. A specialist Test opener for much of his career he has been
used productively down the order in the one-day game. Promoted to
open in the '99 World Cup was one of the few batsmen to score
consistently. With Arjuna Ranatunga and Aravinda de Silva, the only
Sri Lankan to appear in more than 200 one-day internationals. Has
made over 5000 runs in that time, but in terms of personal
achievement his greatest day was making 225 against India at R.
Premadasa Stadium in 1997 and sharing with Sanath Jayasuriya, a world
Test record stand of 576. A rightt-hand batsman, he is noted for his
nimbleness on the field, making him an outstanding fielder even at
his age. Has been unable to command a regular place in the Test team,
his last appearance being against South Africa in March 1998.
Captained in two one-day internationals in Sharjah in 1994 losing by
nine wickets to Australia and by two runs to New Zealand. Captain of
Premier champions Bloomfield.
Mahela Jayawardene (22) - The most likely cricketer with the potential
to match the deeds, one day, of the likes of Aravinda de Silva and
Arjuna Ranatunga. A fast-emerging right-hander with the strokes and
temperament to play in the big league. Has already made his mark in
Test cricket scoring 167 against New Zealand on a notorious Galle
Stadium pitch and a classy 242 against India at the SSC at so young
an age. Showed that he can adjust well to the one-day game, when he
guided Sri Lanka to victory over England in the bad-tempered World
Series Cup match at Adelaide this year by scoring a match-winning
120. Had a short taste of what vice-captaincy is all about when he
was appointed to the post for the Asian Test championship match
against Pakistan when Ranatunga and De Silva were both injured.
Source :: The Daily News