Sri Lanka: Ratnayake's heroics helps NCC's to retain top position (11 March 1999)
Rumesh Ratnayake is best remembered for his fast bowling exploits on the cricket field and, as a more than useful lower order batsman
11-Mar-1999
11 March 1999
Sri Lanka: Ratnayake's heroics helps NCC's to retain top position
Sa'adi Thawfeeq
Rumesh Ratnayake is best remembered for his fast bowling exploits on
the cricket field and, as a more than useful lower order batsman.
When an injury to his bowling arm restricted his international
cricket career to just 23 Tests at the premature age of 28, he had
taken 73 wickets and scored 433 runs. On two occasions he went over
the half-century mark, once against England at Lord's in 1991 where
he also took five wickets in an innings.
On Sunday morning, Ratnayake, 35, was asked to reproduce his former
batting skills to rescue his club from dire straits. Chasing a
Panadura SC total of 300, NCC had begun the day promisingly at 264
for 4, but soon found themselves having a fight on their hands to
obtain the all important first innings points when Panadura reduced
them to 295 for 8. Ratnayake having come to the middle at the fall of
the sixth wicket decided that 'enough is enough' and unleashed some
of his thunderous drives and pulls to fetch himself 42 runs off just
21 balls. Thirty-eight of those runs came in boundaries (3 sixes, 5
fours) and Panadura, thunderstruck by Hurricane Rumesh, eventually
conceded a first innings lead of 61 runs.
It was the Ratnayake-Linden Hannibal liaison that swung the game in
NCC's favour. The pair added a valuable 38 runs for the ninth wicket
with Hannibal contributing 22. Thanks largely to Ratnayake, who is
also the coach of NCC, the club were able to retain their top
position in the Premier championship table for another weekend. They
hold a marginal 3.810 points lead over nearest rivals Bloomfield, who
have the identical playing record.
Ratnayake, was forced to play in the match because NCC were short of
players and what an impression he created on his return to
first-class competition after nearly six years. Apart from
Ratnayake's heroics, NCC were given a good platform to commence their
runs chase by skipper Sanjeeva Weerasinghe and Pradeep Hewage, who
each made identical scores of 79.
Panadura built their total around opener Buddhika Perera's century
(104) which comprised 10 fours and six sixes - three of which were
hit off Ratnayake's leg-breaks. Panadura used the remaining time on
the final day to tot up 271 for 8 of which Sunendra Kumara made 61 to
follow his first innings 62.
Last season's runner-up Bloomfield kept in hot pursuit of the leaders
when they moved into second spot following their four-wicket win over
Singha SC. They owe a lot of their success to the right-arm
leg-spinning talent of former Nalanda cricketer Priyankara
Wickremasinghe. The first bowler this season to reach a half-century
of wickets, Wickremasinghe continued to torment opposing batsmen with
his crafty leg-breaks bowled at low trajectory, reminiscent of his
former club coach and Sri Lanka leg-spinner Somachandra de Silva.
Wickremasinghe picked up eight wickets in the match, to send Singha
crashing to defeat. Singha captain Saman Jayantha, was the only
batsman to counter-attack Wickremasinghe and his colleague Bateesha
de Silva's (4/33) spin, contributing top scores of 41 and 109 , both
wasted efforts when the rest around him fared miserably. All-rounder
Kumara Dharmasena celebrated his recall to the World Cup squad with a
top score of 78 and following it up with three wickets in the second
innings. Sanjaya Rodrigo also made a fifty.
Tamil Union made short work of wooden spoonists Matara SC when they
secured an easy nine-wicket win in the match played at the Colts
grounds, because the Sara Stadium was booked for a school 'Big
Match'. Tamil Union will be at a similar disadvantage this weekend as
well, having to use the St. Joseph's College grounds at Darley Road
for their game against Kurunegala YCC.
The win pushed Tamil Union to third place behind NCC and Bloomfield
and it was achieved with their fourth captain for the season -
wicket-keeper/batsman Indika Galagoda, who played with a broken
finger. It was courageous of Galagoda to play in the match having
injured the finger in previous weekend's match against Singha SC. He
did not keep wickets (Sagara Kumara taking over the position), but
made the decision to play as the club were scraping the barrel to
find 11 players with captain Muthiah Muralitharan injured and, Upul
Chandana and Niroshan Bandaratilake, on national duty in Lahore.
Matara didn't represent much opposition to Tamil Union whose total of
248 for 9 declared was more than sufficient to guarantee them full
points. Mario Villavarayen came up with a good all-round performance
scoring 40 useful runs and taking a match bag of seven wickets. N.
Weeraman held the Tamil Union batting top scoring with 65.
Another former Sri Lanka fast-medium bowler Janak Gamage, more
commonly known as J.C. Gamage performed the first hat-trick of the
season to condemn one-time table leaders Moors SC to their fourth
defeat of the season. Moors were extremely lucky to escape with only
a first innings loss. They were reduced to 89 for 9 in their second
innings after being asked to chase 469 runs off 30 overs.
Galle CC made only 166 in their first innings (Dhammika Sudarshana
61), but Moors' batting without the experienced captain Chandika
Hathurusingha (on national duty) crumbled to Gamage to be dismissed
for 104. The tall lanky 34-year-old fast bowler from Matara, who won
four one-day international caps for his country on tours to New
Zealand and Sharjah in 1995, was not aware he had performed the
hat-trick until later. He took a wicket off the last ball of his
third over (Heshan Tillekeratne caught), and followed it up with two
more (Janaka Nishantha caught, and Sampath Perera lbw) off the first
two balls of his fourth over. It was the second occasion that Gamage
had performed the hat-trick, having done so for CCC v Police SC in
1989.
With a first innings lead of 62, Galle CC piled on the runs in the
second innings through fifties from Ruwin Peiris and C.K. Hewamanne
to set Moors the formidable task. Left-arm spinner Gamini Perera
(5/18 off 13 overs) and Charinda Fernando (3/31) nearly brought off
an outright win for Galle with their tight bowling.
Sebastianites slid to sixth position when their batting collapsed to
a near full strength Colts side led by Sri Lanka spearhead Chaminda
Vaas. Playing his first Premier championship match of the season,
Vaas distinguished himself by taking five wickets in the
Sebastianites' second innings. The home team's first innings was
destroyed by left-armer Dinuka Hettiaratchi, who took 5/52. It was
bad batting more than anything else that contributed to
Sebastianites' poor first innings total of 148, after being 75
without loss at lunch. Centuries by Chaminda Mendis (112) and Duleep
Samaraweera (156) who together added 205 for the first wicket, gave
Colts a formidable first innings lead of 197. Although Sebastianites
made an impressive second innings reply - 286, mainly through
half-centuries from Sanjeeva Silva (91), Ranga Yasalal and Nimesh
Perera, Colts were left with only 90 runs to score off 13 overs. They
achieved the target using up 11.3 overs.
Defending champions SSC missed out on valuable points against lowly
placed Police when they failed to force an outright win. A staunch
ninth wicket partnership of 73 off 72 balls between S. Wijeratne (43)
and D. Gunawardana (50 n.o.) kept SSC at bay when they pressed for
full points. Police had lost eight wickets for 160 and had an overall
lead of only 85 when the pair came together to frustrate SSC's
attempt. Police finally finished on 233 all out, leaving SSC with the
task of scoring 158 in the mandatory overs. They eventually made 46
for 5. SSC's first innings total of 327 was made up by half-centuries
from Shantha Kalavitigoda, Tilan Samaraweera and Ruwan Galappathy.
Harith Jayasuriya (4/48) and Dilhara Fernando (5/85) took the bowling
honours for SSC, and for Police, Vajira Ranaweera had a match bag of
eight wickets.
CCC were another club who failed to grab maximum points when they met
Kurunegala YCC - fourth from the bottom of the table. Having scraped
through narrowly by 11 runs on the first innings, CCC set Kurunegala
YCC 255 for victory off 46 overs. But despite the efforts of fast
bowler Indika Gallage (match bag of seven wickets) and Nalliah Rajan
(4/9), Kurunegala held on to force a draw at 167/7. Damith
Hunukumbura and Michael van Dort made centuries for CCC in the second
innings. Wasantha Kumara destroyed the CCC batting in the first
innings for 174 capturing 6 for 71, but could not repeat the
performance as Hunukumbura and van Dort took control.
BRC one of the few clubs struggling to finish within the first 12 of
the final standings to avoid relegation, came out on top of their
clash with Antonian SC to take full points. Skipper Deepal
Madurapperuma set the tone taking 6/24 to rout Antonians for 126
giving BRC a first innings lead of 51, which they stretched to 289.
Antonians made a bold reply scoring 257, to lose by 32 runs.
Madurapperuma took a further three wickets bowling in tandem with
Duminda Perera, who finished with four.
Premier Championship Standings
At the completion of the tenth weekend of matches on 7 March
Bonus Points P WOR W1st LOR L1st ND Btng Bwlg Pts
Points 12 8 .005 0.1
NCC 10 3 4 1 1 1 19.890 16.3 104.190
Bloomfield 10 3 4 1 1 1 16.480 15.9 100.380
Tamil Union 10 4 2 0 3 1 16.015 15.1 95.115
Moors SC 10 3 3 0 4 0 17.760 15.7 93.460
SSC 10 0 7 1 2 0 18.730 16.4 91.130
Sebastianites 10 2 4 1 2 1 18.970 12.4 87.370
CCC 10 1 5 1 2 1 16.115 16.8 84.915
Colts 10 3 2 0 4 1 15.960 16.1 84.060
Panadura SC 10 2 3 1 3 1 21.260 13.2 82.460
Singha SC 10 0 5 1 3 1 16.720 11.6 68.320
Galle CC 10 1 3 1 4 1 16.250 13.5 65.750
BRC 10 2 1 5 2 0 16.355 14.8 63.155
Kurunegala YCC 10 1 3 2 3 1 14.240 12.6 62.840
Antonian SC 10 1 0 4 4 1 16.990 12.8 41.790
Police SC 9 0 1 2 5 1 13.415 9.6 31.015
Matara SC 9 0 0 4 4 1 10.980 10.2 21.180
(Subject to confirmation)
Note: The match between Police SC and Matara SC scheduled from
Jan. 22-24 was not played.
HIGHEST INDIVIDUAL INNINGS: 217 (n.o.) - Mahela Jayawardene, SSC v
Colts at Maitland Place on Feb. 13.
FASTEST CENTURY: 66 balls - Saman Jayantha, Singha SC v Panadura SC at
Panadura on Jan. 31.
BEST INNINGS ANALYSIS: 8/47 - Priyankara Wickremasinghe, Bloomfield v
Moors SC at Reid Avenue on Jan. 30.
BEST MATCH ANALYSIS: 11/90 - Ruwan Kalpage, NCC v BRC at Colts
grounds, Havelock Park on Feb. 14.
HIGHEST INNINGS TOTAL: 485/4 decl. - Sebastianites v Antonian SC at De
Soysa Stadium on Feb. 6.
LOWEST INNINGS TOTAL: 81 - Antonian SC v Colts at Havelock Park on
Feb. 21.
Source :: Daily News (https://www.lanka.net)