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Sri Lanka look to hit their straps ahead of the World Cup
Full throttle
Kumar
Sangakkara
February 6,
2007
The Sri
Lanka team has undergone a big change in attitude since the last time we toured
India for a bilateral series, nearly 15 months ago. The focus of the team has
become more honed and we have made great progress in terms of fitness, mental
aptitude and diversifying our skills repertoire.
The laws of
the game have also changed since we last toured. Gone are the Super Sub
regulations, an innovation that ensured sides were picked in the hope of winning
the toss and maximising the advantage of the one Super Sub. The Power Plays,
though, which have added to the pace of the game, remain.
The Super
Sub and Power Play rules had just come into ODI cricket during that tour and we
were then in the process of experimenting and actually getting used to them.
What was confusing then has become much clearer now as we embark on the final
series before the much-awaited World Cup.
The first
two ODIs of this series promise to burden the teams with a bit more pressure
than actually winning the games. This is because these are the last two games
that either side has to try out players for the one or two spots up for grabs
before the ICC deadline of February 13 for the announcement of the final squads.
The
selectors, coaches and captains will all be focused on making sure that the
playing combinations are those that will be taken to the World Cup. The players
will carry into the games that much more anticipation and hope of performing to
be included in the final 15s. Add to this the intense scrutiny of the media
analysing and picking apart the pros and cons of the various combinations that
are played and there is definitely heightened pressure in the build-up.
But the main
responsibility of the Sri Lanka team is to make sure that we always try and
maintain control of our core processes. Our physical preparation in terms of
fitness and skill work should be practiced with the same excellent standards
that we have set for ourselves.
Indeed, one
factor behind our recent resurgence has been the acceptance by all individual
players of the need to be constantly challenged at practice. Each practice
session has been an exercise in purpose. There is something specific to be
achieved from each and every fielding, batting or bowling drill. Each task is
approached with the specific objective of getting better.
Our focus
mentally has to be on making sure that we think of this series as a separate
entity to the World Cup: a series that we are here to win, a series which gives
us another opportunity to build confidence on and progress onwards towards
building a winning team.
The Indians
are always a tough side to play at home. Yet, of late, they have been a little
unsettled and have lacked a unified, collective focus. The form of their core
players has been in question and has provided opposition sides a chink in the
armour to exploit.
And yet in
the past month they have shown that they are prepared to put in match-winning
performances when asked of them, as was seen in their recent series versus the
West Indies. The fanatical crowd support that they enjoy at home seems to fuel
the enthusiasm and ego, propelling them to score a full 40-50 runs more than
they gather overseas.
Our sole
practice match - even though not against the best opposition - was one in which
we made sure that we kept our winning ways intact. Against a young, raw,
opposition we stuck to our strategies and focused on our processes. Once in
control, we made sure that there was never a moment in which we relaxed or
relented.
The new
additions to our side, Nuwan Kulasekera and Nuwan Zoysa, showed that they were
hungry for international cricket by putting in strong bowling performances, the
kind they will need to maintain consistently to be pushing for selection from
here on.
In the
absence of Muttiah Muralitharan the responsibility of being the main spinner
falls on Malinga Bandara. The fact that we have on tour his main competition for
a place in the form of the returning Upul Chandana creates an interesting
situation that promises to spur both players to put in improved performances.
Bandara has
the attitude, variation and belief that is often seen in players that have been
exposed to intense levels of competition both in domestic and international
cricket. His year on the sidelines of this side has hardened his resolve and his
exposure to county cricket with Gloucestershire has broadened his thinking.
Chandana,
through his performances in domestic cricket and with the A team, has shown that
he is determined to not accept half measures in his quest to regain his place in
the national side. His value lies not only in his bowling but in his batting.
Chandana has streamlined his batting technique. The flamboyance and risk-taking
of his early days has been compartmentalised to be drawn upon only in times of
dire need. Instead, he is a player who now puts value on his wicket and has
accepted the need of spending proper time at the crease in order to accumulate
runs. Both Bandara and Chandana will become key in balancing our bowling and
batting line-ups.
Our core
batting lie-up has remained intact for a while but the first two games will
offer up the opportunity for Tillakaratne Dilshan, Russel Arnold and Chamara
Silva to, once and for all, put to rest the doubts over their ability in the
middle and late middle order. Theirs is the hardest position to bat in ODI
cricket. It requires players to continually adapt to different game situations
and asks of them a steely resolve and an absolute belief in their own abilities
to finish and win matches.
I have no
doubt that they are the three most capable players in Sri Lanka to do that. The
only thing they are short of is the confidence that comes with spending quality
time in the middle in a match situation. There is no better situation then than
the one offered in India on turning tracks, in the heat of the game, with a
packed stadium full of screaming India fans wishing you nothing but ill.
As a side,
we take pride in having built a culture of enjoyment, commitment and belief in
which to grow. We expect nothing short of maintaining our own high standards.
For us as a team these four games are not about the World Cup, they are not
about the atmosphere of the grounds in India, they are not about the Indian team
or its devoted legions of fans. For us, these four games are about ourselves. It
is about our preparation, our own individual abilities and our firm belief that
we are building towards a side capable of being the best it can be.
© Cricinfo
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