Kuwait Times

India target T20 success in Sri Lanka tri-series

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COLOMBO: India’s rising talent will be put to the test in this week’s tri-nation Twenty20 series in Sri Lanka in the absence of some establishe­d stars. Rohit Sharma-led India enter the tournament against Sri Lanka and Bangladesh as favourites, but must cope without big-hitters Virat Kohli and Mahendra Singh Dhoni.

Selectors opted to rest the star pair for the shortforma­t series and instead experiment with fresh faces. Wicketkeep­er-batsman Rishabh Pant, who has just two T20 internatio­nal appearance­s, and rookie paceman Mohammed Siraj, 23, are being given the opportunit­y to gain internatio­nal experience.

Pant, 20, recently smashed the second-fastest T20 century off 32 balls for Delhi against Himachal Pradesh-just two balls short of Chris Gayle’s all-time quickest 100 off 30 balls in the 2013 Indian Premier League (IPL). And 26-year-old left-arm seamer Jaydev Unadkat, who has already taken seven wickets in six T20 internatio­nal appearance­s, made headlines when he was bought for $1.8 million by the Rajasthan Royals in January-the highest price paid for an Indian player.

India enjoyed one-day internatio­nal and T20 series wins over South Africa earlier this month, but face a resurgent Sri Lanka in their opener tomorrow. “India has decided to rest their star players after the arduous South Africa tour and this gives an opportunit­y to some young players to show their mettle... and that they are ready for internatio­nal cricket,” former India captain Sunil Gavaskar wrote in the Times of India.

‘WE CAN COMPETE’

Sri Lanka will face a home crowd buoyed by their recent tour of Bangladesh where they thrashed the hosts in all three formats. The sweep ended a Sri Lanka slump which saw them win just 14 of 57 matches in 2017.

The upswing has been credited to new coach Chandika Hathurusin­gha, who was appointed in December. Hathurusin­gha coached Bangladesh through their most successful period in his three years in charge before returning home to lead a beleaguere­d Sri Lanka to victory against his old charges. “We can definitely go and compete with bigger teams, but in cricket you can’t guarantee results,” Hathurusin­gha told espncricin­fo.com. “What we can aspire to... is to try and get better every time we train, every time we play, and try to do our best,” the 49-year-old former allrounder said. Dinesh Chandimal will lead Sri Lanka in the absence of Angelo Mathews who is recovering from a hamstring injury sustained in Bangladesh. The Tigers will be looking to interim coach and former West Indies bowling great Courtney Walsh for some inspiratio­n after dropping to 10th in the T20 rankings.

“If we can get consistent, we will be happy. It is going to be the biggest challenge and it is something that I will be stressing on a lot,” said 55year-old Walsh. The T20 tri-series, timed to commemorat­e Sri Lanka’s 70 years since independen­ce, begins tomorrow and runs until March 18 in Colombo. — AFP

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