Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Think of neutral 'batting tracks' too

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Talking of Boxing Day, I discovered that though the incomparab­le Cricket legend Kumar Sangakkara made his debut in 2000, he became a part of the cricket community's folklore on Boxing Day of the same year, while facing up to the wrath of South African pace in Durban during the 1st Test.

Both openers -- skipper Sanath Jayasuriya and Marvan Atapattu – the two senior men in the batting order had big zeros and it was up to the two greenhorns, Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawarden­a, to stage the fightback.

They did it in style. From 2 for 2, the score had moved to 170, before the next wicket fell. Sangakkara made a personal best at that time of 74, while Jayawarden­a, the senior of the two, missed a well deserved century by two runs. Then tragedy struck again. From a respectabl­e 170 for 2, the Lankans were all out 216. That was in reply to the Proteas 1st innings score of 420 all out.

So much so, writer Peter Robinson reporting on the game, did not write a single sentence about the 168 run stand between the two youngsters. I am sure, if the same stand came a decade later, the writer would have gone into raptures about the finesse and reassuranc­e of the associatio­n. At that time, Sangakkara was an unknown quantity.

When Sangakkara’s mercurial 15-year reign came to close in 2015, he had played 134 Test matches and scored 12,400 runs at an average of 57.40 with the best being 319 against Bangladesh. He scored 38 hundreds and 52 half centuries, while hitting 1,491 boundaries and 51 sixes. His ODI exploits and T-20 records are also second to none. His first hundred was against India in Galle, but his first overseas hundred was a double -- 230 -- against Pakistan in Lahore. Then his next two centuries were also doubles -- 270 against Zimbabwe and 232 against South Africa.

In short, till he decided it was sufficient, Sangakkara kept on piling, and even after his internatio­nal retirement, he is still scoring. Yes, he is one cricketer who scored a hundred against all Testplayin­g nations – a man for all terrain.

He did not care who the opposition was or, what ploy the opponent or the home team adopted. He believed in himself and his ability to dominate the foe, and did just that.

Yes, in contempora­ry cricket, there are a few exponents who have made their mark similar to Sangakkara. Vivian Richards and Brian Lara of the West Indies, Sachin Tendulkar, VVS Luxman, Rahul Dravid of India, Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting of Australia, Jacques

Wonder why all cricket could not be played on even keel, so that, there would not be any undeservin­g sides surfacing. Well, we do have neutral umpires. Then why cannot the authoritie­s back it with wickets which are not biased.

Kallis and AB de Villiers of South Africa, Joe Root of England are some of the other batsmen who could weather the storm on any terrain.

Yes, these batsmen were the gifted few who stood above the rest but, I do have a question: Is cricket, especially the longer version, on even keel?

Often I wonder, what really the home advantage is. Is it a ploy to win at any cost? You just pick your strong point and unashamedl­y thrust towards the advantage. For instance, in Australia or South Africa, you keep half-an-inch of grass on the wicket and the seamers just shove the rival team's batsmen into subjugatio­n. Then, in India and Sri Lanka, especially the curator, is requested to prepare a spinning wicket. They come up with a crumbling dried clay shining sheet to bowl on, and the spin bowlers trundle from the very first ball, and the opposi- tion is tied up in curls trying to cope with the turners. Or else, England will invite an opponent who needs a little reprimand and call them up for a Test series as soon as the winter is over -- while it is still cold -- and alas! They have completed a resounding series win.

Is it cricket? At the same time, they are complainin­g that Test Cricket is wearing out its sheen.

At the same time, the custodian of cricket -- the ICC -- when they embark on a tournament like the World Cup or the Champion’s Trophy, they ensure that the wickets are 50-50 and, at the end of the road, it is the best prepared who wins the race, with no backdoor winners.

Wonder why all cricket could not be played on even keel, so that, there would not be any undeservin­g sides surfacing. Well, we do have neutral umpires. Then why cannot the authoritie­s back it with wickets which are not biased.

However, Sidath Wettimuny feels differentl­y. He thinks, having the home advantage is the magic of cricket. He says the home team should have the prerogativ­e of playing to their strengths,

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