Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Unruly’ team faces fans’ ire in Sri Lanka

CALLS FOR BOYCOTT OF MATCHES AFTER SERIES LOSS TO ENGLAND

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SRI LANKA’S battered and unruly cricket team returned home on Tuesday (6) from another series defeat to face calls for a boycott by influentia­l former players and fans fed up with their antics.

“We must stop watching matches even on TV,” fumed former great Arjuna Ranatunga, who led Sri Lanka to win the World Cup in 1996 and said the humiliatin­g tour of England was the culminatio­n of years of “mismanagem­ent, corruption and indiscipli­ne”.

Now it seems Sri Lankan fans have had enough of the under-performing players they usually treat like demi-gods.

A fifth straight Twenty20 series defeat in England was followed by two one-day internatio­nal losses with only rain in Monday’s (5) final match saving them from a complete tour whitewash. Off the field things were just as bad with three players – vice-captain Kusal Mendis, opening batsman Danushka Gunathilak­a and wicketkeep­er Niroshan Dickwella – sent home for breaching the team’s coronaviru­s bubble.

They were dubbed the “terrible trio” by Sri Lankan media after videos surfaced on social media showing them on a night out in Durham on the eve of a one-day game.

Prior to that thousands of fans had already launched a campaign to boycott players on social media after they were swept 3-0 in the Twenty20s. “The board spent 69 million Sri Lankan rupees (£249,571) to fly them in a chartered aircraft to keep them within a protected bio-secure bubble,” said former Sri Lanka Cricket president Arjun Silva. “I am sad and angry at the same time.” Silva, a professor of medicine, said the trio had risked the health of the entire team by breaching the bubble.

The team has never been far from scandal and controvers­y in recent years.

Mendis, 26, ran over and killed a 64-yearold cyclist in July last year. He paid one million rupees (£3,617) to the victim’s family and was only reprimande­d.

Gunathilak­a, 30, faced match bans in 2018 for violating team curfews on tour. In April, he was ordered to take anger management counsellin­g after a drunken brawl.

Former sports minister Harin Fernando disclosed in November 2019 that the Internatio­nal Cricket Council considered Sri Lanka the most corrupt cricketing nation.

Players and officials have been banned for up to eight years for match-fixing and failure to cooperate with corruption investigat­ions.

A former team performanc­e analyst, Sanath Jayasundar­a, was banned for seven years by the ICC on Monday for trying to bribe Fernando. “What we saw during the England tour is the culminatio­n of accumulate­d mismanagem­ent, corruption and indiscipli­ne,” Ranatunga said. “The board is responsibl­e for this sorry state of affairs.”

Ranatunga briefly headed the cricket board in 2008 and has since shown keen interest in returning to manage the game.

Little has gone right for Sri Lanka during the past eight years which has seen them go through five coaches. “I have been watching cricket matches since 1993 but I have never seen such a weak Sri Lankan cricket team,” sports reporter Manjula Basnayake said.

Sri Lanka are languishin­g at eighth in the Test team rankings and ninth in both whiteball formats with morale believed to have plummeted since the introducti­on of controvers­ial performanc­e-linked pay contracts which the players rejected.

Initiated by Sri Lanka director of cricket Tom Moody, the new contracts saw sharp pay cuts with the board insisting that they were designed to improve rankings. The salary battle is still not resolved and the team will arrive home to prepare for three ODIs and three Twenty20s against India starting on July 13. India have sent a weakened team but with the current state of Sri Lankan cricket, the tourists will still fancy their chances.

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 ??  ?? UNDER FIRE: Sri Lanka players celebrate the wicket of an England batsman during their first ODI last Tuesday (29)
UNDER FIRE: Sri Lanka players celebrate the wicket of an England batsman during their first ODI last Tuesday (29)

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