Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

SUNDAY MUSINGS

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1996, the Lankans ended up as the runners-up of the World Cup repeatedly in 2007 and 2011.

In hindsight, early this year the Lankans struggled to hold poorly placed Bangladesh to a 1-all draw in the ODIs and then repeated the feat in this series barely managing to stave off the challenge posed by an understren­gth New Zealand side – thanks to bad light.

I do not blame the Lankans for losing that second ODI. When the New Zealand bowlers were in operation the conditions were perfect, yet the Lankans going at 6 runs per over were 138 for 1 when rain decided to intervene in the 23rd over. When New Zealand batted it was a wet outfield --the worst nightmare for any bowler. The slippery white cherry has no grip at all.

Yet, the 3rd ODI which the Lankan managed to salvage, they bowled badly. In both ODIs, Lasith Malinga was below par. The only seamer to keep his head was Nuwan Kulasekera. Though Rangana Herath had a forgettabl­e last over in the match Sri Lanka lost, the left armer was on spot in the final ODI. But, for the inexperien­ced Kiwis to recover from 26 for 5 to 126 for 6 in the 25th over, Sri Lankans had to bowl badly. No excu- ses. The same Lankan attack has contained better batting lineups under worse circumstan­ces while even playing overseas. But, under home conditions against a second rate New Zealand batting line up, this performanc­e was hard to swallow.

In Sri Lanka, there is no prince in shining armour in the likes of Kohlis, Rohit Sharmas or the Shikar Dhawans of India. Our story is like the perennial story of the bug. You can begin from anywhere; you end the story with Dilshan, Sangakkara and Jayawarden­a.

Dimuth Karunaratn­e who banged the Kiwis ‘A’ at a rate of 90 runs per inning failed. Even double figures would have been a luxury for him. Chandimal and Thirimanne had sad episodes once again. The man-of-theseries was Dilshan. Could we find some Dorian Grey pills from somewhere and get the three seniors to play forever?

Lately, among the young bowlers, besides Sachitra Senanayake, none of the other youngsters has impressed. At one point the selectors were gloating on the abilities of offspinnin­g batsman Dilruwan Perera, but now we find Ramith Rambukwell­a of a lesser ilk has got the nod above Perera in the T20s. Yes, he may have delivered, but to play at that level, he also must be able to judge the oncoming balls.

Then talking of the longer version of the game, Sri Lanka now is at a pa- thetic eighth position in the ICC Test rankings. Recently an SLC highranker casually mentioned “Once we beat Pakistan in the Test series, by next year, we can improve our position in Tests”.

Am I still enjoying that Ninja sleep or is it time to wake up? Sri Lanka still has not played a single Test match since March this year, to be precise Tuesday March 19, 2013. Nearly ten months we are out of the Test ring. Yet, the Pakistanis are fresh from a series against South Africa – played on the same terrain and they even beat the South Africans in the first Test.

For a moment I do not envy the job at hand for the Lankan selectors led by Sanath Jayasuriya. Seemingly they are on the job. But, ironically they are not the performers, in the middle it is upto the playing eleven to do the job. Now with Dilshan retiring, there is more pressure on Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawarden­a to perform along with Rangana Herath to do the bowling where Test matches are concerned?

Since 1975 Sri Lanka has been in the lineup of every ICC arranged tournament. To the first World Cup, we were invited. In the second turn, we had to qualify. But, from what I foresee thanks to some brilliant heads at Maitland Place, Sri Lanka will not be there in the 2017 Test championsh­ips. Yet, I do pray— please prove me wrong.

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