Sri Lanka's selection crucial in Galle
There can be no more persuasive case for the revitalising power of a good holiday than the first ODI against England
Charlie Austin
28-Nov-2003
There can be no more persuasive case for the revitalising power of a good
holiday than the first ODI against England. Sri Lanka, champing at the bit
after four months without international cricket, conjured up a storming
performance. No wonder John Dyson, the new coach, was smiling like a
Cheshire cat afterwards at the team hotel.
Since taking charge on Sept 1, Dyson has not had the smoothest of rides. The
tragic death of his father forced him home for a while and the cursed dengue
fever left him bedridden soon after his return. In between he has been
trying to win the respect of some senior players, who were suspicious at the
outset of his relative lack of top class coaching experience. But on the
evidence of a single razor sharp performance, Dyson has made a positive
impact. He can now afford to relax a little.
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© Getty Images 2003 |
Sri Lanka's performance was refreshing for two reasons: first the boldness
of the selection and the fearless response of the two debutantes, Nuwan
Kulasekera and Dinusha Fernando. They should not be lauded too much, as the
pitch was sticky and England's batting loose, but they showed great promise.
The fact that both players have scored useful first-class runs is even more
encouraging - Sri Lanka are developing greater depth in their batting.
The second major plus for Sri Lanka was the catching. Mahela Jayawardene's
quick reactions and athleticism at slip were a joy. You could not believe
this was the same man that wouldn't have caught a toffee-stick against New
Zealand earlier in the year. Tillakaratne Dilshan, a predatory fieldsman,
also hung on to a stinging catch at point off Ian Blackwell. Three sharp
catches were gobbled and England's fate sealed.
Sri Lanka's openers, thankfully not distracted by the unusual decision to
hold a fireworks display at the start of the second session, did what they
do best: smack bad bowling. England's bowlers, striving too hard for wickets
after their batsmen had left them with an impossible task, served up some
loose offerings and Sri Lanka cantered home. We did not even have time to
find out just how difficult it might be batting under the new Dambulla
lights.
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© Wisden CricInfo |
Unfortunately, the rain-soaked weekend in Colombo that followed, coupled
with Sri Lanka's history of inconsistency, means that a 1-0 series win
should not be trumpeted too much. Sri Lanka landed a couple of useful early
psychological blows - that's all. The Test series beckons and with England's
senior henchmen having returned - Nasser Hussain, Mark Butcher, Graham
Thorpe - a serious challenge awaits.
The usual recipe of heat, humidity and Murali might not be enough to
overcome England's batters this time. Murali has been sniping away in the
media like a prizefighter, but he knows that England have handled him with
disturbing ease in the last two series. His strike rate has plummeted to one
wicket per 15 overs. Sri Lanka must contain England's batters and Murali can
't be left shouldering all the responsibility - selection in Galle is
crucial.
Sri Lanka can be expected to select only four frontline bowlers - probably
Chaminda Vaas, Dilhara Fernando, Murali and Upul Chandana - with either
Thilan Samaraweera or Tillakaratne Dilshan at six. With Sanath Jayasuriya,
who has an excellent record against England, also available then the attack
has a well-rounded look.
But Sri Lanka need more options against England's key left-handers and Kumar
Dharmasena should play in place of the sixth batsmen. Murali is less
comfortable against left-handers, despite all the guff to the contrary, and
Samaraweera is simply not threatening enough. This will mean that Romesh
Kaluwitharana will have to shift up the order - hopefully that will focus
his mind. A lower order of Dharmasena, Chandana and Vaas has the potential
to compensate for the loss the batting specialist.
Whether Sri Lanka are willing to take that gambit remains to be seen. The
captain is not a poker player and we don't expect risk-taking. That will
give England heart. They will try to stay in the series for as long as
possible. The longer they do so the more chance they have of putting Sri
Lanka under pressure. The onus is on Sri Lanka to hit the ground running,
like they did in Dambulla, and take charge of the series. This is
Tilakaratne's test.