The time has come for sweeping changes to the team (15 June 1999)
LEEDS, Monday _ The time has come for sweeping changes to the Sri Lanka cricket team
15-Jun-1999
15 June 1999
The time has come for sweeping changes to the team
Sa'adi Thawfeeq
Arjuna should not continue even as a player
LEEDS, Monday _ The time has come for sweeping changes to the Sri
Lanka cricket team.
The war cry is on. But it is not only the captain Arjuna Ranatunga
who should go, a few senior players too, in order to allow a younger
generation to take over.
For players like Aravinda de Silva, Roshan Mahanama, Hashan
Tillekeratne, and even Romesh Kaluwitharana and Pramodya
Wickremasinghe, if they are expendable to be replaced, the time is
up.
These players find themselves in this situation not entirely because
of their failure to defend the World Cup successfully, but because
they now belong to a champion team which is on the decline.
However much their mind wills, the body has aged to such an extent
that it is not willing to do the things it was capable of doing three
years ago.
Sri Lanka who won the World Cup under Ranatunga's captaincy in 1996,
were eliminated in the first round of the present competition,
winning only two of their five group matches.
Elimination from the World Cup was the last straw for Ranatunga whose
side's fortunes started to nose-dive from last October in Dhaka.
Since, Sri Lanka had failed to qualify for the finals in five one-day
tournaments and won only seven of its 25 matches, losing an
unprecedented 18.
Ranatunga should not only forsake the captaincy, but quit it
altogether. To have him in the team would only make life overbearing
for the ensuing captain.
The era in which these players dominated and brought honour and glory
to Sri Lanka cricket is now by-gone.
Let the old order changeth. It's time for the new order to take over.
What we need is new thinking and fresh blood.
Our goal should be at least the next World Cup - 2003 in South
Africa.
Unless we make a head start now, we will never get anywhere. Let the
shambles and the disgrace of the 1999 World Cup be a good eye-opener.
Dav Whatmore, who coached Sri Lanka to the 1996 World Cup success was
a man on a mission with a vision. Building a young side for the 1999
World Cup was his first task at hand soon after he returned from
Lahore. But his wisdom and advice just fell on deaf ears. He was
ousted.
Sri Lanka's loss is England's gain. From Lancashire he is
short-listed to take over the England job from David Lloyd.
What happened to Bruce Yardley is the same old story, although he was
not in the same class as Whatmore.
Ranatunga and his fellow seniors were threatened by those thoughts.
They were there to stay. They saw a gold mine in Sri Lanka cricket
and they were not just about to let go of it. The worldly adulation
that followed and the financial gains were things that were in-grown
to a five-star lifestyle.
Those seniors who survived an era of 3-4 star accommodation and
thrived on fish and chips and local Sri Lankans' hospitality found
the Hiltons, Taj Palaces and Carltons difficult to let go.
It is not the passion for cricket that's keeping them, but the perks
that come with it.
Let's face it. Whom are the players trying to hood-wink ?
It is all catching up too fast. So quit with some dignity before
being shown the way out. Some of the players don't deserve it. They
have served Sri Lanka cricket well over the years. They deserved the
kudos when it mattered, but not anymore.
Sri Lanka must build their team on players who will be young and fit
enough to adapt to both one-day and Test cricket.
Make Marvan Atapattu, a captain in making and Mahela Jayewardene, the
new batting 'find' his deputy -- the rest of the team must be built
around them. Having captained his school Ananda, then the under 19
side and also Sri Lanka 'A', Atapattu has the right credentials to
serve at the highest level, now that he has become an established
player in both types of games.
Jayawardene, the only class player to emerge from the younger brigade
would be expected to serve Sri Lanka well.
There is talent in the form of Russel Arnold, Avishka Gunawardana,
Prasanna Jayawardene, Nuwan Zoysa (when he is fit) to name a few,
waiting on the wings for the break they deserve. They should be given
enough time to establish themselves in international cricket.
The results at the beginning may not be encouraging, but it is better
still to lose with a young team than with the present one. For there
is much to be gained for the future.
For this to become a reality the selectors have a role to play. They
are obligated to the nation and not to the players to make the
necessary changes for the improvement of the game.
Duleep Mendis and his fellow selectors should put the right foot
forward and make the first change by weeding out the bad influences _
the stagnating and aging seniors, thus clearing the path for the
younger crop to harness their skill in a better environment.
Mr. Mendis _ people will praise your bravery, but that is only if you
wield the axe like you wielded the willow.
Source :: The Daily News