Arab Times

Sri Lanka seeks Bangladesh coach

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COLOMBO, Nov 22, (AFP): Sri Lanka’s cricket board Wednesday announced it was in talks to hire Bangladesh head coach Chandika Hathurusin­gha subject to him securing a full release from his current contractua­l obligation­s.

Sri Lanka Cricket said its chief Thilanga Sumathipal­a wrote to his Bangladesh counterpar­t Nazmul Hassan expressing a desire to hire Sri Lanka-born Hathurusin­gha.

The board said it would offer the 49-year-old the position of head coach “subject to the full release of his contractua­l obligation­s” with the Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB).

“There is no doubt that Hathuru (Hathurusin­gha) would be a great fit for us with the direction of both our short and long term goals,” Sumathipal­a said in a statement.

“I have written personally to the BCB informing him of our intention (to hire Hathurusin­gha).”

Sri Lanka wants him to groom the national team for the 2019 cricket World Cup, according to official sources.

Hathurusin­gha had said earlier this month that he was stepping down from the Bangladesh team after a disastrous tour of South Africa.

However, there was no word from the Bangladesh board if they had agreed for him to prematurel­y end his contract and join the team of his native Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka’s head coach post has been vacant since South African Graham Ford quit in June.

Under Hathurusin­gha,

perennial minnows Bangladesh made rapid strides in world cricket, reaching the semi-finals of the Champions Trophy tournament in England this year.

But he came in for criticism during Bangladesh’s recent tour of South Africa, where the team failed to register a single win.

His contract with the Bangladesh Cricket Board was supposed to run until World Cup 2019 and made him one of the highest-paid cricket coaches in the world on $40,000 a month.

Hathurusin­gha played 26 Tests and 35 ODIs for Sri Lanka before becoming the assistant coach under Trevor Bayliss, a job he lost in 2010.

He went on to be appointed coach for Australia’s New South Wales side, landing the more lucrative Bangladesh job in May 2014.

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