Sri Lankan Cricket Team in Training in Melbourne Now

 Dhammika Ratnaweera, in Daily News, 6 October 2022

The Sri Lankan cricket team has already started their preparation for the T20 World Cup in Melbourne. They reached Australia on October 3 and are training to adjust to their new conditions. “We had a four-day training session at Pallekele before the Australian tour and now we reached Melbourne and had our first training session on last Sunday (4th) at Junction Oval grounds”, said Sri Lanka cricket Manager Mahinda Halangoda in an interview with the Aus-News Lanka which conducted by presenter Sahan Weerasekera.

“The Sri Lanka team will hopefully be ready for the big event in the next two-three days. This climate in Melbourne is cooler (15c-16c) than the Sri Lankan conditions and the first three days are very useful to adjust to the conditions. The recent Asia Cup victory gave a good boost and motivated the players. The important thing is they are young blood and working as a team with commitment. We don’t have big stars on the team and everyone has to make contributions. Two-three players have performed well and got successful results”.

“We were informed by the SLC, on October 11 that it is going to be the only official function to take part in the gala dinner. We like to invite all Sri Lankans to wish our team and meet their heroes and enjoy themselves with them. Fans will be allowed to get selfies and encourage them. We appreciate their support. We knew when the Australia cricket team play in Sri Lanka last March, the crowd gave good support and it was a good boost ad we hope for the same support from here to encourage our team. We beat Australia in Sri Lanka in the ODI series and drew with them in the Test series and the crowd support really boosted the Sri Lanka team.

The first qualifying round match against Namibia will be held on October 16 at Geelong in Melbourne. Sahan Weerasekera based in Melbourne at “Aus-News Sri Lanka “said Sri Lankans who live in Melbourne are very keen to see the World Cup matches from October 16 and they have already planned to go to Geelong to see the qualifying matches first. Geelong is a hunting ground for Sri Lanka where they excelled at the T20 games against Australia on the last occasion.

Sahan Weerasekera, the former St Benedict’s Kotahena cricketer who is also a present cricket umpire in Victoria cricket in Melbourne said the young blood in the Sri Lanka cricket team gives more hope and our team is well motivated. Malic Xavier Liaison Officer of the Sri Lanka team in Victoria is leading the team and plans to participate in the gala dinner to support the lions on October 11 which is going to be the only official event collaboration with the SLC during this tour.

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A NOTE

Sri Lanka have to qualify by facing up to several lower-ranked teams. In Aussie conditons this trial will NOT bea cake-walk.

FIRST ROUND GROUP A
TEAM M W L PT
NED
SL
UAE
NAM

ANOTHER REPORT from Lanka before departure

Roughly around this time last year, Dasun Shanaka was gallantly bigging up his side’s chances at the T20 World Cup – though, in reality, it was a sentiment borne more out of hope than any real confidence. “If our guys perform to their strengths I feel they can go a long way in this tournament,” he had said back then. It didn’t end too well for them.
Just a month and a bit ago, Sri Lanka had been soundly beaten by Afghanistan in the 2022 men’s Asia Cup curtain raiser, and were on the verge of elimination. That story ended on a fairy-tale high. Fast forward to the present, and Shanaka’s words have scarcely changed, yet the sense of belief in them could hardly be more different.
“If we make the right decisions on the day and execute our plans, I’m certain we can come out victorious,” he told a packed media room at the Sri Lanka Cricket headquarters on Friday, in the final press interaction prior to the team’s departure to Australia for the 2022 T20 World Cup. “The confidence level is definitely higher [than at the last World Cup], but my concern has always been the process. Even at the last World Cup, I felt we had the talent to at least make the semi-finals. The important thing is your ability to play and deliver on the day.”
The Sri Lanka squad is heading out to Australia two weeks before their opening World Cup first-round game against Namibia on October 16. They were at a skills-intensive training camp in Kandy in the last week of September. Both point to the level of preparation this Sri Lanka side is undertaking.
This extra game time – crucial time – in Australian conditions can only help. Head coach Chris Silverwood, who could hardly have dreamt of a better start to his term in the job after taking charge some six months ago, outlined how he hoped to use this period to work on skills that would be of particular use in Australia.
“With the bowling we’re still working on yorkers, to make sure we can be successful on Australian wickets, to make sure we have the skills to back our plans up,” he said. “We have a couple of warm-up games before the Namibia game. We’ll play match scenarios amongst ourselves before that to make sure we can control the environment that we’re training in.
“Both Lahiru [Kumara] and Dushmantha [Chameera] were a part of our camp, and they both managed to complete their bowling quotas without an issue. I think they’re well prepared ahead of the World Cup”
Dasun Shanaka: “We’re actually very specific about what we’re trying to train. For example, we did a Super Over up in Kandy, which is all in good fun, but it highlights where it can be a bit chaotic in the Super Over. It happens very quickly, and we have to make sure we keep a level head.
“Then the dimensions of the grounds in Australia – they have some big grounds – we’ll have to learn to cope with them. We have to make sure we get the distance right off the boundary to cut the angles down and get the guys used to doing that.”
The first step to building on the Asia Cup success is identifying the areas that still need improvement. Much of Sri Lanka’s Asia Cup win was built on a platform of winning the toss and chasing, and despite setting a total and defending it in the final, it’s not quite in their comfort zone.
“There’s always going to be areas to improve – I think setting totals, something we did really well in the final [of the Asia Cup] but something we haven’t done a great deal of,” Silverwood said. “So it’s something we’re going to have to think of.”
While success leads to self-belief, it also brings expectation. And after a long time, a Sri Lankan team heads to a major tournament backed by genuine excitement and, whisper it quietly, optimism.
“I tend to look at it differently. There are expectations obviously back here at home in Sri Lanka. But I think the energy that we’re gaining off the fans is superb, and I think the boys are feeling it. I think we can use that as a real positive,” Silverwood said. “The fact that everybody’s behind us, the nation is behind us, and we’re out there trying to bring a smile back to everybody’s faces, for me it’s a positive. Something we can use as energy, and something we have used as energy in the dressing room already.”
For Shanaka, it’s a matter of resetting from the high of the Asia Cup win and refocusing on the fundamentals that got them there.
“Winning the Asia Cup was good, but it’s just one tournament,” he said. “We’re not thinking about that anymore, that’s in the past. Because if we keep focusing on that then we can’t look forward and perform as we need to.  In the camp [in Kandy] every player put in a good effort. I was worried that there would be some guys who’d be a bit relaxed after winning the Asia Cup, but it wasn’t like that. Everyone practiced with even more intensity than usual, and I’m confident that we can put in good performances at the World Cup.”
Among those present in the camp were fast bowlers Dushmantha Chameera and Lahiru Kumara, who along with the young Dilshan Madushanka make up the quickest trio of fast bowlers Sri Lanka have ever had at a major tournament, with each capable of speeds above 140kph. While the fitness of the first two had been of some concern, Shanaka confirmed the pair had come away from the camp in fine fettle.
“Both Lahiru and Dushmantha were a part of our camp, and they both managed to complete their bowling quotas without an issue,” he said. “I think they’re well prepared ahead of the World Cup.”
On the whole, the mood in the Sri Lankan camp is understandably as high as it’s been in quite some time, with Silverwood particularly pleased by the camaraderie between players, as well as their willingness to “learn, adapt and try new things”. “I hear a lot of people talking about how together the guys are and you can really feel that from the inside as well.”
And it’s that feeling that has made this Sri Lanka side heading out to Australia, while far from the finished article, one that seems to be gradually evolving into something more than the one that went to the UAE both last year and last month.

1 Comment

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One response to “Sri Lankan Cricket Team in Training in Melbourne Now

  1. Daya Wickramatunga.

    Let’s hope the weather keeps okay for cricket?

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