World Cup team guide: Sri Lanka. Factions, frictions and a failure foretold
Sri Lankan cricket appears so dysfunctional at present that the 1996 champions may have sabotaged their chances of mounting any sort of World Cup challenge before a ball has even been bowled.
Cricket
Don't miss out on the headlines from Cricket. Followed categories will be added to My News.
- Buttler playing in a different gear to the rest
- Leverock and the catch that shook the world
- Rhodes on the photo that changed his life
- The murder of a cricket coach that never was
Sri Lanka has tasted victory in just one of its past 15 one-day internationals.
The record of the 1996 World Cup champs over the past two years is 10 wins, and 35 losses.
The bookies rate them a $101 chance this time around, ahead of only Afghanistan and Bangladesh, and they are such a rabble they should really be $1001.
When Sri Lanka named its 15-man squad, the man who captained the team to its most recent ODI victory, Dinesh Chandimal, wasn’t even included.
Chandimal had already been replaced as captain by Lasith Malinga, but he won’t lead Sri Lanka in England after failing to register a win as skipper in nine matches in charge.
Malinga was also at the centre of a Facebook squabble, not between players, but wives, and was called out by Thisara Perera. The pair will be teammates in England, but it hardly screams a unified changeroom.
Sri Lanka squad for ICC #CWC19 ðªðª pic.twitter.com/d0WGDzVqJ7
— Sri Lanka Cricket ð±ð° (@OfficialSLC) April 18, 2019
The man who will replace Malinga as captain, opening batsman Dimuth Karunaratne, hasn’t even played an ODI since the 2015 World Cup. But he has been a stand-out as Test captain, leading Sri Lanka to a stunning, and historic, series win against South Africa earlier this year.
It’s not that Sri Lankan selectors just picked names from a hat, but it does seem that way, or at least seems like the four-year planning most countries undertook for the World Cup, was more like four hours.
Four players who haven’t even played an ODI game since 2017 — batsman Lahiru Thirimanne, spin-bowling all rounders Milinda Siriwardana and Jeevan Mendis, and legspinner Jeffrey Vandersay — all got a ticket to England.
INDIA: Kohli a better chaser than lemon after tequila
ENGLAND: Great expectations, but danger lurks
SOUTH AFRICA: Chokes ‘a dark mist that hangs over us’
NEW ZEALAND: Dark horses or genuine thoroughbreds?
PAKISTAN: Chaos as ever, but beware the ‘wounded tigers’
AFGHANISTAN: Former minnows to challenge world order
There are so many moving parts in Sri Lankan cricket that they have undermined any chance of creating the stability needed to mount any sort of World Cup campaign.
Even on player power, the Sri Lankans look thin.
They don’t have a single batsmen ranked in the top 30 of the International Cricket Council’s ODI player rankings and their highest rated bowler, Akila Dananjaya, who is 13th, didn’t make the squad, having lost form after being reported for a suspect action last year.
Angelo Matthews looms as their best weapon, but is coming off a significant hamstring injury which forced him to miss Sri Lanka’s two-Test tour of Australia in January.
The former skipper has also had a testy relationship with cricket officials in Sri Lanka, a common theme among a playing group going to a World Cup at which the tag “long-shot” is probably something of an understatement.
PREDICTION
It is difficult to make a case for this Sri Lankan side achieving much in England other than damage limitation. The summit of their ambition may rest with trying to get ahead of Bangladesh to avoid finishing bottom of the pile.
FULL SQUAD
Dimuth Karunaratne (capt.), Lasith Malinga, Angelo Mathews, Thisara Perera, Kusal Perera, Dhananjaya de Silva, Kusal Mendis, Isuru Udana, Milinda Siriwardana, Avishka Fernando, Jeevan Mendis, Lahiru Thirimanne, Jeffrey Vandersay, Nuwan Pradeep, Suranga Lakmal
FIXTURES
Saturday, June 1: New Zealand (Cardiff, 7.30pm)
Wednesday, June 4: Afghanistan (Cardiff, 7.30pm)
Friday, June 7: Pakistan (Bristol, 7.30pm)
Tuesday, June 11: Bangladesh (Bristol, 7.30pm)
Saturday, June 15: Australia (The Oval, 7.30pm)
Friday, June 21: England (Headingley, 7.30pm)
Friday, June 28: South Africa (Chester-le-Street, 7.30pm)
Monday, July 1: West Indies (Chester-le-Street, 7.30pm)
Saturday, July 6: India (Headingley 7.30pm)