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Sri Lanka: Time for the broom or mere spring cleaning?

So it is over

Charlie Austin
Charlie Austin
21-Mar-2003
So it is over. Sri Lankan cricket runs on World Cup cycles and four years of grooming, planning and polishing under coach Dav Whatmore and Sanath Jayasuriya produced a place in the semi-finals. For a nation with heavy expectations, judgment beckons: has the time come for sweeping changes or will a little spring cleaning suffice?
© Reuters
The defeat by Australia summed up Sri Lanka's campaign: superb bowling by Chaminda Vaas, good support from the spinners, all wasted by another lousy performance by the middle order. Sri Lanka produced one of their best performances in the field in the competition, carving out a winning opportunity, but ultimately didn't have the depth of batting class necessary to withstand the bristling Australians.
"We have been grooming some youngsters since the 1999 World Cup. We have talent in the team and I think when they go to the middle they will have to fight it out harder. The negative side is that unfortunately, some youngsters failed to perform well in this particular tournament."
Sanath Jayasuriya
Sri Lankan hopes rested, almost entirely, upon the shoulders of five senior players, men who had all been around during the 1996 finals: Sanath Jayasuriya, Aravinda de Silva, Marvan Atapattu, Chaminda Vaas and Muttiah Muralitharan. They dominated with bat and ball, scoring 64% of the runs and taking 75% of the wickets during the tournament. For victory to be achieved they had to fire again: they did with the ball but couldn't with the bat.
The disappointing truth is that four years of grooming youngsters has failed to reap substantial dividends in the tournament that mattered most. So has the time come to start afresh? Clearly some changes are necessary, only the scale of the shake out is in doubt. The picture is muddied by the fact that some of the players that disappointed - Russel Arnold and Mahela Jayawardene in particular, who scored a paltry 113 runs in 15 innings between them - had performed consistently in the pre-ceding years. That being the case, is it wise to now cast them aside?
Jayawardene
© CricInfo
In Mahela Jayawardene's case, there is clearly a need to keep faith with a class player. You don't throw batters onto the scrap heap after a poor six months when they average close to fifty in Test cricket. But Jayawardene's slump is a concern. In 2001 he averaged 46.66 in one-day cricket, scoring three centuries and seven fifties. Since then his productivity has declined dramatically, with an average of 28.25 in 2002 and 14.54 in 2003 thus far. Possibly, a rest is required. He has been struggling with long-term back injury and his mind has also been busy with off-field matters, particularly the team's HOPE fund raising appeal for a new cancer hospital. A break might allow him to re-charge his batteries and let his focus sharpen. Too many months spent idling in hotel rooms is not good for anyone.
"We were just naughty today. We didn't have the consistency when we needed it. The lower and middle order didn't give us runs which was certainly the case again today. We had some good performances and made some good progress in our last 10 matches. If there was one area we could have probably done better it was the middle order batting. I thought our bowlers did very well right throughout the tournament. I am very pleased with that."
Dav Whatmore
Russel Arnold's position is more vulnerable. Already rumours are circling Colombo that his time is up. His one-day average is still respectable at 36.32 but it is dipping fast. During the last 12 months he has averaged 28.96, and in the first three months of 2003 only 13.09. Despite offering value with his under-rated off-spin and athletic fielding, Arnold's place is clearly in danger. However, he also deserves further up the order. All too frequently he has been stranded with the tail, left to pick up the pieces after the middle order has collapsed.
Kumar Sangakkara's place in the side should be guaranteed despite a relatively lean tournament (176 runs at 25.14). His wicket-keeping was often ragged and occasionally awful, meaning the selectors may well now opt for a specialist pair of gloves, but his batting continues an upward curve with an average of 31.6 during the past 12 months. With Hashan Tillakaratne being too old to last till the next World Cup, and de Silva having retired, Sangakkara deserves an extended chance in the number position, a spot where he has thus far thrived in Test cricket.
Kaluwitharana
© CricInfo
This all leaves the selectors needing to fill two spots in the top seven, possibly three if Jayawardene is to rest. With no obvious alternative currently available, Romesh Kaluwitharana can expect to be recalled. Michael Vandort, Tillakaratne Dilshan and Chamara Silva are all names that will be considered. Avishka Gunawardene and Jehan Mubarak may also have a chance. The names of all-rounders Thilan Samaraweera and Kaushal Loukuarachchi, both of who had successful series against the ECB Academy, deserve to be thrown into the hat. And if you were really brave you blood Jeevan Mendis, a young left-hander with prodigious talent. Unfortunately, the truth is that there is no outstanding candidate that leaps out and demands selection.
In the bowling department, the selectors cannot make wholesale changes. Vaas and Muralitharan, injury and enthusiasm permitting, can remain the pillars of the attack until the next World Cup and beyond. Clearly Dilhara Fernando and Prabath Nissanka have immense promise and only by playing can they develop. However, a full-time bowling coach, preferably Rumesh Ratnayake, if he can be teased away from his full-time job with the Asian Cricket Council, is required.
Aravinda
© Reuters
And, finally, there is the issue of captaincy. Jayasuriya's consensual approach had advantages in the post-Ranatunga years but increasingly his leadership has lacked control and direction on the field. He is unlikely to be sacked, boasting as he does strong support in the Sports Ministry, but there is a growing feeling that he will consider stepping down anyhow and handing over to his vice-captain. Atapattu, a private and somewhat aloof cricketer, has already displayed his on-field leadership credentials during Sri Lanka's last Test at Centurion, calmly and astutely leading Sri Lanka to the verge of a famous victory. However, he will need a strong communicator as his henchman, someone to glue the team together and ensure bonhomie within the ranks: Chaminda Vaas stands out as the ideal candidate.
"I think we are to be blamed . I personally think we should have gone on and made those runs. I thought it was a very good total to chase. I was hoping it wasn't my last game for Sri Lanka, but unfortunately it happened to be so. It was an emotional day for me."
Aravinda de Silva
So, in the end, we have reached for the duster rather than the broom. The retirement of De Silva - who has turned down a plea from the interim committee to keep going for another six months - and the likely employment of Tillakartne as a Test specialist again, provides an opportunity for two fresh (or indeed old) faces. Another might be tried if Arnold or Jayawardene are rested or dropped but more wholesale changes should not be expected nor demanded. All is not well with the Sri Lanka team but all is not wrong either.