Sri Lanka, WI begin new era with fresh talent

Published October 14, 2015
GALLE: West Indies cricketers are engaged in stretching exercises during a training session at the Galle International Cricket Stadium on Tuesday.—AFP
GALLE: West Indies cricketers are engaged in stretching exercises during a training session at the Galle International Cricket Stadium on Tuesday.—AFP

GALLE: Sri Lanka and the West Indies will look to offload past baggage and begin a new era with fresh young talent when their two-Test series starts here on Wednesday.

Sri Lanka are rebuilding following the retirement of their batting greats, Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara, within the space of a year.

The West Indies, already hit by the reluctance of senior pros like Chris Gayle and Dwayne Bravo to play Test cricket, faced further turmoil when coach Phil Simmons was stood down for the tour for speaking out against his board’s selection policies.

Former fast bowler and selector Eldine Baptiste, who will serve as interim coach for the tour, will try to ease newly-appointed Test captain Jason Holder into the role.

Holder, a 23-year-old all-rounder who has played just eight Tests, was a surprise choice to replace Denesh Ramdin as captain. “We have a very young team and a young captain,” Baptiste said. “My job is to keep the team focused for the Test matches.”

The West Indies are searching for their maiden Test win on Sri Lankan soil, where they have played nine matches since 1993 — losing five and drawing the other four.

Both teams will look to bounce back after a lacklustre year. The West Indians lost to South Africa and Australia, while the home series against England was drawn 1-1.

Angelo Mathews’ Sri Lanka crashed to a 2-0 series defeat in New Zealand and lost home series to Pakistan and India by identical 2-1 margins.

Like their rivals, Sri Lanka too have an interim coach in Jerome Jayaratne, who was given charge after Marvan Atapattu resigned in the wake of the defeat against India.

DINESH Chandimal bats during a net practice session.—AFP
DINESH Chandimal bats during a net practice session.—AFP

Jayaratne, who did not play international cricket but made his mark as head of Sri Lankan board’s coaching department, has described Mathews’ boys as the ‘worst fielding side in Asia’.

Only two players from either side have played more than 50 Tests — Mathews and Rangana Herath for Sri Lanka and batsman Marlon Samuels and Ramdin for the West Indies.

Herath could prove to be the difference when the first Test starts at the Galle International Stadium, a venue that traditionally favours spin.

In the absence of star spinner Sunil Narine, who was not picked for the Tests, the West Indies will rely on leg-break bowler Devendra Bishoo.

Teams (from):

SRI LANKA: Angelo Mathews (captain), Lahiru Thirimanne, Dimuth Karunaratne, Kaushal Silva, Dinesh Chandimal, Rangana Herath, Dhammika Prasad, Kusal Perera, Dushmantha Chameera, Nuwan Pradeep, Tharindu Kaushal, Suranga Lakmal, Dilruwan Perera, Milinda Siriwardena, Kusal Mendis.

WEST INDIES: Jason Holder (captain), Kraigg Brathwaite, Jermaine Blackwood, Carlos Brathwaite, Devendra Bishoo, Darren Bravo, Rajendra Chandrika, Shane Dowrich, Shannon Gabriel, Shai Hope, Denesh Ramdin, Kemar Roach, Marlon Samuels, Jerome Taylor, Jomel Warrican.

Umpires: Marais Erasmus (South Africa) and Richard Illingworth (England).

TV umpire: Simon Fry (Australia).

Match referee: David Boon (Australia).

Published in Dawn, October 14th, 2015

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