Jayasuriya was forced to retire from Tests – de Mel

Ashantha de Mel has reason to believe Sanath Jayasuriya was forced to cut his farewell cake © Getty Images

Ashantha de Mel, the newly appointed Sri Lankan chairman of national selectors, has alleged that Sanath Jayasuriya was forced to retire from Test cricket. He has also blamed his country’s cricket establishment for the “mess” that the national side is in. Sri Lanka’s fortunes have dipped significantly since an interim committee took over last year – they slipped from second to sixth in the ICC’s one-day rankings and from fourth to seventh in Tests – and de Mel has criticised Tom Moody, the national coach, for failing to deliver.Speaking to the , de Mel, 46, claimed that Jayasuriya’s surprise decision to quit Test cricket was a result of pressure from Lalith Kaluperuma, a former selection head. “I have very reliable information that he was forced to retire,” de Mel said. “I was surprised when I heard that he was going to retire. If a player wants to retire he does that before a series, but on this instance he was forced to retire and for me it’s totally wrong. They should have at least respected the man because he has done so much for the country, but on this instance he was basically asked to pack his bags and go home.”De Mel backed Jayasuriya’s ability to perform in the national side even at the age of 36. “I can tell you that he’s undoubtedly the fittest in the team and if you take the current crop of players and ask them to do a 100-meter sprint he will come first,” he said. “When the selectors knew that Marvan [Atapattu] is not going to make it to England with his back problem they should have continued with Jayasuriya. He just played a county season in England last year and knows the conditions well and is the only Sri Lankan to have scored a double hundred in England. What more credentials do you want?”De Mel hinted at a possible request to Jayasuriya to return to the Test fold if Sri Lanka’s inexperienced openers failed in the first Test against England at Lord’s on Thursday. “Sri Lanka now has two inexperienced openers in Upul Tharanga and Michael Van Dort and any bowling attack would love to bowl at them instead of Jayasuriya, even when he is out of form. All I can say is that the selectors got their onions mixed up,” he said. “If these guys don’t do well in the first Test it’s prudent to send Sanath to play the remainder of the series. He’s a proven player and still has a lot of cricket in him.”On Moody’s role as coach, de Mel said the Australian – who is paid more than his predecessors Dav Whatmore and John Dyson – had failed to come up with results. “I wonder whether Tom is the right candidate. He’s basically a coach who speaks of strategy,” he said. “Things like field placing, weakness and strengths of the opposition. Someone like Mahela [Jayawardene] has a problem with his foot movement at times and I wonder whether Tom Moody can correct that. Look at Dilhara Fernando; he has a no ball problem. The answer is to drop him from the side and ask him to rectify the problem on his own and come back to the side.”If we take John Dyson he was very professional. As chairman of selectors I had a lot of arguments and disagreements with him but he provided the results,” de Mel added. “You’ve got to face the fact that during John’s time we were number two in the world. His only blemish came against Australia, the number one team in the world. I can’t understand why a man who had produced results was sent home.”

Gone with the wind … the end of an era

The TCA ground might not have satisfied everyone as a first-classvenue in recent years, but there must be an element of regretamong members that a 105-year occupation of a small piece of theQueen’s Domain is about to end, as far as inter-State andinternational cricket is concerned.The ground has had a fascinating history, and it seems appropriate to reflect on someof the events that it has witnessed in its time. As the Annual Report for 1981-82 revealed, the ground was opened in 1882 after the best part of ten years intermittent development. A gameagainst a Melbourne Cricket Club Eleven was arranged tocommemorate the event, the match ending in a particularly heavydefeat for the local Association. Tasmania, of course, haslearned to live with such reverses over the years, and in asimilar way, local administrators have had to accept the factthat the finances of the Association have not always allowed thedevelopment of the ground to proceed in a satisfactory way; manyof the Annual Reports often bemoaned the fact that variousprojects designed to improve the ground, even as basic aspainting and general maintenance, were not possible to implementbecause of the lack of funds.One of the early problems was the surface of the ground itself.Unsympathetically dry weather in those first few years resultedin the ground cutting up badly, allowing on one occasion EHButler to take 6 for 1 for the South against the North. Alliedto the this problem, which was only partially solved by importingmany yards of topsoil, was the one concerning the supply of waterto the ground. Initially, a windmill was tried, but this wasfound wanting, which might come as a surprise to the members ofthe 1979-80 English team, who had one day’s play abandonedbecause of a Force 10 gale in their match against Tasmania. Inthe 1885-86 season, the windmill was replaced by a hand-forcedpump system, which by definition seems to have been a ratherlabour-intensive device. Nevertheless no further complaints ofthe water supply reached the Annual Reports until after World WarOne, when a total prohibition of the use of water fornon-essential purposes resulted in the death of most of theground’s grass. Reference was made in 1947 to an improvement inthe water supply to the ground, but even so, the water pressurehas never been considered really satisfactory.The provision of suitable accommomdation for members and thepaying public has exercised the minds of many committees over theyears, and in its time, the ground has seen the coming and goingof many forms of seating. Curiously, two of the original standshave withstood the rigours of the elements and time, and surviveto the present day, albeit in modified form. The originalmembers’ stand was in place when the ground was opened in 1882,and in 1906, at a total cost of 1066/18/1, was pushed back toallow the construction of the brick structure at the front whichis familiar to all today as the HC Smith Stand. Gas was laid onat the same time as a concession to modernity;in 1926 electricitywas installed, the committee of the day expressing the hope thatthis would lead to sufficient lighting to allow “eveningtraining”. In 1940, the two ends of the stand were glassed in,but unfortunately the designers of this were inhibited by eithera lack of funds or imagination and failed to glass in the sidewhere it was really needed, namely, the front. In 1946, theoutside stairway on the southern side of the stand first gaveaccess to the top deck, and in 1950, the players’ viewing areasin the front of the dressing rooms were provided. The press,originally accommodated under the old scoreboard (which was builtin 1907), were relocated on the top deck of the stand in 1977,the year of Tasmania’s admission to the Sheffield Shield.The Ladies Stand was originally located on the southern side ofthe Members’ Stand, and was a slightly more grandiose affair thanit is now. In 1946, it was proposed to move it to its presentlocation, a scheme whose execution was accelerated by theintervention of the elements: a series of gales in May and June,1947 unroofed the structure, thus forcing the committee’s handsomewhat. A new cantilever roof was designed, but thenon-arrival of some of the materials meant that it was notcompleted until the 1948-49 season. The two concrete stands thatare now sited in its place were completed for the 1954-55 season,along with the entrance gates, turnstile houses and ticket boxes.The original turnstiles were acquired in 1885, more as a statussymbol than anything else, since the committee was moved to writein its Annual Report that “we have imported from England two ofNorton’s self-registering turnstiles, similar to those in use onthe Sydney Cricket Ground”! The suggested motivation for thepurchase is confirmed by the fact that they were not installedfor use for another five years.Up to World War One, the ground was more than just a cricketground. Two tennis courts (one grass, one asphalt) were openedwith the ground in 1882, and for many years, a memberschampionship was contested and faithfully reported in the AnnualReport. In 1887, the old pavilion that had been sited on theoriginal ground further down the hill, was dragged up to itspresent position and converted into a Skittle Alley for themembers’ pleasure. The novelty of this sport was evidentlyshortlived, for in 1898, it was then converted into changeroomsfor a cycling club. The latter group was originally catered forin 1891, when the committee were moved to report the expenditureof 46/14/0 on a new bicycle track, but added their “regret thatthey have not met with the good faith they expected from theRamblers’ Bicycle Club at whose request the work was undertaken -only three members of the Club have joined the Association of the15 who undertook the responsibility when negotiating with yourcommittee. “Football was tolerated at an early stage, despite this sportbeing the reason why the cricketers were keen to escape from theLower Ground in the first place. By the 1890s, winter Saturdayafternoons were taken up with baseball, and the 1896 AnnualReport announced that the “quoit pitch has been well patronisedon Wednesdays and Saturdays”. The ground even witnessed a”Japanese Sports Day” in 1902, on the occasion of the visit oftwo Japanese warships to Hobart. The gathering at the groundwere treated to the “novelty of Japanese wrestling, single-stickexecises (?) and other feats which proved very interesting to thepublic”. This was a year after, incidentally, the Association’sacquistion of a stone roller and a horse “with a view to economiclabour and making the work on the ground easier for the curator”.Bowls was the fad in the first decade of this century, and aconsiderable amount was spent on the bowling green and pavilionwhich were opened in November, 1911. The impending war, however,seemed to put a stop to all this frenetic activity and thingswere never quite the same afterwards. In 1932 the by-now disusedbowling green was converted into the present practice-wicketarea. The only other major sporting liaison since those far-offtimes has been with the Hobart Speed Coursing Club, which in 1935commenced a long and harmonious relationship with the cricketingfraternity. The greyhounds disappeared a few years ago, however,and now first class cricket is to follow suit. It is theAssociation’s hope that the ground can be retained for clubgames, but nonetheless, 1987 marks the end of an era for cricketin Hobart.

Katich to replace Hayden for Sydney clash


Matthew Hayden: will miss out on the action at Sydney
© Getty Images

Matthew Hayden is to be rested from Thursday’s VB Series match against India at the Sydney Cricket Ground. Simon Katich will be his replacement.Instead Hayden will remain in Brisbane, before rejoining the squad in the lead-up to Australia’s match against Zimbabwe in Adelaide on January 26.Trevor Hohns, Australia’s chairman of selectors, explained: “The selectors believe that this short layoff should help Matthew as he prepares for the remainder of the VB Series and all other cricket that lies ahead. It gives him the chance to manage a range of minor injuries that he has endured, including knee soreness which is a common problem amongst top-order batsmen.”He also commented on Katich: “Simon’s form has been irresistible this summer and although his selection in the squad is just for one match at this stage, we are keen to see how he performs at one-day international level.”Katich was pleasantly surprised when he received the news. “It was a nice surprise to get the call-up, and I’m absolutely thrilled to get this opportunity. I love playing at the SCG so if the chance presents itself I’m keen to grab it with both hands.”Australia (from): 1 Adam Gilchrist (wk), 2 Simon Katich, 3 Ricky Ponting (capt), 4 Damien Martyn, 5 Andrew Symonds, 6 Michael Clarke, 7 Michael Bevan, 8 Brad Hogg, 9 Brett Lee, 10 Jason Gillespie, 11 Brad Williams, 12 Andy Bichel.

One-day internationals becoming a tamasha

There is first of all the injury to Shane Warne that may keep him out of the World Cup. If that should happen, it would upset all the plans of the Australian team.Warne is Australia’s key player, more than just the world’s best leg-spinner. He is the team’s standard-bearer and cheer leader.I have always believed that matches are won and lost in the dressing-room as much as on the field. Warne has been an integral part of the Australian machine. I also feel that the game of cricket would be poorer without larger than life characters like him.Those were wonderful shots that television captured of his young daughter looking somewhat lost as her father was carried out on a stretcher. I wish Warne a speedy recovery.The World Cup is a few weeks away. The entire cricketing world seems to be revolving around this event. It was not always like this. The first three World Cups were played in England and there was no disruption to the cricket season. It was when the World Cup came to the subcontinent that national pride reared its head and when it went to Australia and New Zealand that it was seen as a marketing bonanza.Thereafter, the World Cup has becomes cricket’s biggest prize. A combination of national pride and marketing is a heady mix and Test cricket has been elbowed out. When the World Cup in South Africa is finally over, cricket will find itself at a cross-road. Which way will the game go?The amount of money being invested in cricket is unreal. The world’s economy is not in the best health. Sponsors may not be all that forthcoming. There will be cut-backs. Consider the obscene sums of money that South Korea and Japan invested in infrastructure for the Soccer World Cup. As investments go, any banker will tell you, there will be no return on that investment. Ultimately, cricket too will have to be governed by economics.The next World Cup will be played in the West Indies and the countries that make up the West Indies do not have the kind of money that South Africa has. Cricket has been financially sustained by the one-day game, which in turn has been sustained by television.Not many people watch Test cricket either at the ground or on television. Yet the future of this game is Test cricket. The one-day version is becoming to much of a tamasha and with variations like Max Cricket, even this tamasha will become something like a circus. The ICC should be looking seriously at the future of cricket.Pakistan had started the one-day series with a flawed selection. That is to say by playing only five bowlers. The drubbing that Pakistan got at Durban should have taught us that a second chance does not mean a chance to repeat the mistake. This is what happened precisely at Paarl, in a game that was of crucial importance, one that Pakistan had to win to keep the series alive.It was sheer bad luck that Wasim Akram has an injured hand. No prizes would have been offered to guess who would replace him. It should have been Mohammad Sami. It wasn’t Wasim was replaced by Faisal Iqbal!But having selected him, Faisal Iqbal was then sent number 7 to bat. It made sense to play Kamran Akmal but no sense at all for him to open the innings. If a pinch hitter was needed, there was Shahid Afridi already in the team.The South Africans, on the other hand, learnt from every match they played. They may have made few mistakes. They did not repeat mistakes. The selection of Gary Kirsten was an inspired choice. Against a quality attack like Pakistan, South Africa called back one of their most experienced batsman. And to prove the point, Kirsten made a hundred.It is not the loss of the series that I regret. It is the fact that these were the last One-day Internationals we would be playing before the World Cup and we appear not to have learnt anything from them. We should have got a stable batting order. Taufiq Umar was not picked after the first ODI. Yet he had gone to South Africa as the main opener.There are some positives. The fielding has improved though not the running between wickets. The run-outs at Paarl were not only needless but foolish. I don’t want to seem harsh but I am disappointed. A great opportunity had been provided to the Pakistan team to tour South Africa just before the World Cup. And we appear to have squandered the opportunity.My heartiest congratulation to Pakistan’s Blind team winning the World Cup at Chennai. During its preparations, the team was desperately short of cash. The PCB did help but many others who were asked to help, proved to be blind in heart. I hope someone will come forward to reward the team. It was a stupendous achievement against great odds.

News from the Physio's bench

Richard Johnson is undergoing tests on Monday and Tuesday and if he comes though these then he will play at The Oval on Wednesday.Keith Parsons is still suffering with his knee, and played in the second XI match against Surrey at The County Ground last week. However he has still not recovered and he is now having tests for a torn cartilage.Graham Rose is also still suffering with his knee.

Celtic have played Liel Abada blinder

Celtic’s appointment at Parkhead of Ange Postecoglou has been an inspired one for the Bhoys since he arrived before the start of the 2021/22 campaign.

The former Australian national team head coach has already won a domestic honour with Celtic and the Hoops are currently top of the league table after 31 matches.

He has also guided the team through to the semi-finals of the Scottish Cup and this means that he is in with a shot of sealing the domestic treble.

Blinder

Part of his success so far has been down to how he has handled his players and one gem he has played a blinder with is Liel Abada.

He brought the 20-year-old to the club from Maccabi Petah Tikva as his third signing and the winger has been brilliant in green and white. Abada was valued by Transfermarkt at £1.44m at the start of 2021 and rose to £2.7m in May, just before his move to Scotland.

Postecoglou spotted a player on his way up and has been able to get the best out of him this season to make the most of his development.

In the Premiership this term, the winger has produced nine goals and six assists in 23 starts whilst averaging an impressive SofaScore rating of 7.08. He has created an incredible 13 ‘big chances’ and this suggests that he has been let down by his teammates as he only has six assists to show for his superb playmaking.

Ex-Hoops player Frank McAvennie showered the winger with praise earlier this season, telling Football Insider: “He looks a wonderful player and when he first arrived he wanted everything. There was an early game where he took the ball off Edouard for a penalty and Edouard just went ‘no, that’s mine’.

“That was brilliant and it’s what you want to see from a young player. You can’t buy that desire and hunger. He probably didn’t expect to play as much as he has so he will be delighted.”

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On the 31st of December, Transfermarkt updated Abada’s market value to £4.05m. This is a 181% increase on the £1.44m he was valued at during the opening months of 2021, which shows that the £15k-per-week gem has been developing at a phenomenal rate over the last 15 months or so.

Postecoglou has been able to help him progress as a player, with his value going up £1.35m in less than a season under the Australian’s management. This, along with his sublime performances on the pitch, shows that the head coach has played a blinder with the Israel international and, hopefully, he will be able to kick on and continue to improve in the coming years.

AND in other news, Forget Giako: Celtic’s 74-pass “easy target” proved his true worth to Ange vs County…

Kidderminster deal puts club on flood standby

Worcestershire have signed a deal which will allow county cricket to be transferred to Kidderminster Victoria CC at 48 hours notice in the event of a repeat of last summer’s floods at New Road.The county will invest a total of £50,000 into the Chester Road ground over a five-year period which will initially be invested in improving facilities for players and umpires.”Our relationship with Kidderminster goes back many years and last summer they really helped us out when we needed it most,” Mark Newton, Worcestershire’s CEO, explained. “By the end of the summer it became clear that we needed to develop a robust contingency plan to deal with any repeat in future years and a key part of this plan is to secure an alternative venue at short notice in an emergency.”This agreement is initially for five years and will mean we can transfer 1st XI cricket at 48 hours notice if necessary.”

Clinical South Africa dispatch hosts

Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentary
How they were out

AB de Villiers got his maiden one-day century and set up South Africa’s massive total with a 170-run partnership with Jacques Kallis and a 70-run one with Herschelle Gibbs © AFP

South Africa buried West Indies and with it the ghosts of their shock defeat to Bangladesh. A batting performance, at once clinical and brutal, helped them amass a huge 356 and left the West Indian bowlers battered, the captain bewildered, and their fans devastated; the hosts had been all but unceremoniously evicted from their own party, as South Africa sealed a 67-run win.The game might be remembered most for the flurry of sixes in the final quarter of the South African innings, but it was made possible by a maiden century from AB de Villiers, grinning impishly as he almost apologetically took apart the West Indian bowlers on one good leg, and an uncharacteristically purposeful and authoritative innings from Jacques Kallis. These two built the platform whereon Mark Boucher and Herschelle Gibbs took off with relish.The game will also be remembered for some surprising choices from Brian Lara. Jerome Taylor continued to miss out, Marlon Samuels warmed the bench and Kieron Pollard made his ODI debut in a high-stakes game. Devon Smith, the local boy, got his first match of the tournament. If those changes didn’t stump you, then the fact that Ian Bradshaw, who has bowled so well with the new ball in the recent past, was kept for the death, and believe it or not, the third powerplay was taken from overs 45-49.But the way the game began gave little indication of what was to follow. Lara chose to field, another debatable decision, and after 9 overs, with South Africa on 27 for 1, there seemed to be some merit in his choice at the toss. But Kallis soon cleared that debate. He signalled his intentions early on, picking three fours and a six off a single Dwayne Bravo over, creating the opportunities to play big shots by shuffling across the crease or making room. Kallis had come out to make a point, and there was little West Indies’ attack – a modest one with no real pace, swing or spin, that was having an ordinary day – could do about it.de Villiers hits the ball so well and so long, runs so hard between the wickets, and is such a fluent allround batsman that it was only a matter of time before he played a defining innings. Whether he chose the day, or the day chose him, is irrelevant. When he was batting normally, attacking only when he could and defending when he should, the runs still came easily – 50 off 58 balls. It’s slightly odd to say so, but the 170-run partnership between Kallis and de Villiers broke at just the right time for South Africa.

In a crunch match nothing quite worked for West Indies: Shivnarine Chanderpaul tried to force the pace early on but perished to Shaun Pollock © Getty Images

Kallis (81) was bowled trying to carve Chris Gayle over the off-side, and as he hobbled off with a turned ankle that had hampered him, the fresh legs of Herschelle Gibbs joined de Villiers, who himself was soon to be severely impacted by a combination of cramps and hamstring hassles. The injury to de Villiers brought no respite. If anything, it made life more miserable for West Indies, as even the pretence of running between the wickets was dropped, and de Villiers dealt in boundaries. The schoolboy smile was replaced by a grimace, and it was near farcical as he clutched his hamstring in obvious pain after almost every ball, having just carted the ball over midwicket or threaded it through cover, down on one knee.de Villiers finally fell, trying to be a bit too cute, lapping the ball round the corner to be caught at short fine-leg, but by then had rattled off 146 (129 balls, 12 fours, 5 sixes) and taken South Africa to 261 for 3 with almost seven overs left to play. Gibbs, who would end the day completely overshadowed, despite biffing 61 off only 41 balls, and Boucher, watched almost in disbelief as the third Powerplay was taken in the 45th over. For the powerful pair the task proved simpler than picking off tranquilised ducks at low range with a double-barrelled shotgun. Seventy seven runs came from five overs, almost everything disappearing either into the stands, or at any rate to the fence after beating the infield as South Africa ended on 356, helped well along by 14 sixes and 24 fours.Although taller scores have been chased down in recent times in one-day cricket, not once has it been done by a confused team in disarray. West Indies needed to score at more than seven per over from the word go, and when the top three were dismissed with a mere 69 on the board, only a blinder from Lara could even keep them in the hunt. For a time Lara threatened, lithely striking the ball both sides of point to keep the run-rate up, but when he dragged an offcutter from Kallis back onto his stumps the writing was on the wall – he was gone for 21, and West Indies were reeling at 119 for 4.Ramnaresh Sarwan did what he could, playing some classy shots in a typically good, if lonely, performance in the course of his 92, but that was not enough. And that was the story of the day for West Indies – nothing they did was quite enough. Daren Powell, who averaged 2.66 before this game, and had scored 24 runs from 21 matches, gleefully bashed the ball around at the end for 48, but all that did was reduce the margin of defeat to 67 runs.

Jayasuriya to retire after 2007 World Cup

Sanath Jayasuriya’s swansong will be at the 2007 World Cup © AFP

Sanath Jayasuriya will retire from all forms of cricket after the 2007 World Cup in the West Indies. He had earlier announced that the ongoing match against Pakistan at Kandy would be his last Test.”Not playing Test cricket will help me keep fit and allow me to play on until next year’s World Cup,” Jayasuriya told Reuters. “I will definitely retire from all cricket after that tournament. We are building a really good side for that tournament and I feel we have a real chance of winning, although we’ll have to work extremely hard and perform in all three departments of the game.”He said that the lead-up to his final Test had been emotional but felt that he had picked the right time to end his Test career. “It is sad having played for so long and having enjoyed so many good times with the team, but I feel my decision is good for Sri Lankan cricket as now is the right time to go,” said Jayasuriya. “I had been thinking about it for a while but I made a sudden decision after the first Test, as I felt the time had come for a youngster to be given a chance like I was.”I am fit and I am still performing. Now is the right time to hand over to a player that deserves a chance – I hope the youngster will make use of that. The gap between international and domestic cricket in Sri Lanka is very big and they need to have lots of experience to develop properly.”

Home disadvantage

Younis Khan: made the highest score by an overseas batsman in India© Getty Images
  • Younis Khan’s 267 was his eighth Test century, and easily the highest of the lot, beating the 153 he scored against West Indies at Sharjah in 2001-02. Younis has now scored 821 runs from 13 innings this season at an average of 63.15. He also established a new record for the highest score by an overseas batsman in India, going past Rohan Kanhai’s 256. (Click here for Younis’s career summary.)
  • Harbhajan Singh’s haul of 6 for 152 was his 16th five-for, and his 14th at home. Quite surprisingly, as many as eight of those five-fors have come in the first innings. However, his second-innings stats are much better than his first-innings numbers, as you’d expect for a spinner – 92 wickets at 20.58 in the second, compared to 107 at 34.37 in the first. This haul also took Harbhajan’s career tally to 199 – one more wicket, and he’ll become the sixth Indian bowler to join the 200 club. (Click here for India’s leading Test wicket-takers.)
  • Harbhajan’s spin partner didn’t have such a good time, though. Anil Kumble’s figures of none for 159 are his worst bowling figures in a Test innings. In fact, this was only the third time he conceded more than 100 runs and went wicketless – the two previous occasions were both overseas – at Cape Town in 1996-97, and at Sydney in 1999-2000. (Click here for all the innings in which Kumble went wicketless.)
  • It was the first time in 25 Tests that Pakistan posted a total in excess of 500. The last time they did that was nearly three years back, against New Zealand in May 2002 at Lahore, when Inzamam-ul-Haq scored that triple-century to help Pakistan to 643. Shoaib Akhtar then blitzed through the New Zealand batsmen as Pakistan romped to victory by a whopping margin of an innings and 324 runs.
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