Sri Lanka V England

England send for Croft

England have called up Robert Croft for the Test series against Sri Lanka. He will be the 16th member of the squad and gives England extra support in the spin department, alongside Ashley Giles and Gareth Batty.

England arrived in Sri Lanka with worries about their spin attack, with Giles low on confidence and Batty still in his early days. Hence calling for another spinner was always on the cards, and Croft was the automatic choice, especially as he took nine wickets during the 2001 series in Sri Lanka.

David Graveney, the chairman of selectors, said: "The selectors feel the need to have an extra spinner present in Sri Lanka as past history indicates that spin might have a bigger part to play than in Bangladesh.

“Ashley Giles and Gareth Batty were the original picked for the tour and they played their part in the success in Bangladesh. Selection for the first Test match in Galle will be based, as you would expect, on form and fitness.”

Croft, who has played 21 Tests and taken 49 wickets, made no secret of his desire to play in Sri Lanka. “If I get selected, I’ll be excited about the opportunity and go out there and give my best,” he told the BBC Sport website.

“Like any professional sportsman, when you’ve tasted what it’s like at the highest level, you always want it back. I enjoyed myself in Sri Lanka last time. It was tremendous to be in a winning environment.”

The first of three Tests starts on December 2 at Galle.

© Wisden Cricinfo Ltd *


Tour Match:

Sri Lanka Cricket President’s XI v England XI at Moratuwa, 15 Nov 2003 * **

scorecard!!!](http://uk.cricinfo.com/db/NEW/LIVE/frames/ENG_SLCP-XI_15NOV2003.html)

Sri Lanka Cricket President’s XI v England XI

Strauss puts the pressure on Solanki

The Wisden Bulletin by Andrew Miller

November 15, 2003

[thumb=D]strauu.JPG[/thumb]

** *Andy Strauss: one step closer to an England debut * **

England XI 237 for 8 from 38 overs (Strauss 83, Blackwell 63) v Sri Lanka Cricket President’s XI 76 for 1 - Match abandoned

England are getting rather used to soggy arrivals. After landing in Bangladesh last month in the middle of a tropical storm, today at Moratuwa they were treated to rather more familiar conditions.

Persistent drizzle caused a two-hour delay to the start of their opening fixture against a Sri Lanka Cricket President’s XI, and the clouds rolled over late in the day as well to curtail an intriguingly poised match.

Nevertheless England, who fielded a much-weakened side, will have gained plenty insight from the 45 overs available. Andrew Strauss in particular is becoming increasingly hard to ignore.

Strauss’s second innings of the winter, 83 from 88 balls, was much more of a statement than his 51 in Bangladesh last week. As England’s bowlers later discovered to their cost, today’s opposition was considerably stiffer than the Under-Development team that they faced at Dhaka, and with Vikram Solanki’s miserable tour continuing, Strauss is suddenly in line for an international debut at Moratuwa on Tuesday.

Solanki, who managed just 11 runs in the three matches against Bangladesh, added a fifth-ball duck to his tally, although he did appear to be struck outside the line by Nandika Ranjith.

In the absence of a host of senior players, England’s captain for the day was Anthony McGrath, who made a successful start by winning the toss and choosing to bat first.

McGrath’s own contribution was minimal – he made 9 from 14 balls as England clattered to an imposing total of 237 for 8 in their 38 alloted overs. The bulk of the work was done by Strauss and Ian Blackwell, who continued his beefy form with a heavy-batted 63 from 52 balls, to help add 110 in 15 overs for the fourth wicket.

Chris Read, opening in the place of Marcus Trescothick, added to his cannon of feisty innings with a brisk 34, but Rikki Clarke missed out when he was bowled through the gate by the left-arm spinner Dinuk Hettiarachchi. Gareth Batty splattered a brace of sixes to lift the tempo towards the end of the innings, but when it was England’s turn to bowl, they swiftly discovered that the whole team will need to lift their game to another level in the coming weeks.

In the 17.1 overs available to the Sri Lankans, Michael Vandort and Saman Jayantha rattled along to 76 for 1, taking advantage of some radars that had not quite adjusted to the improved techniques of the Sri Lankan batsmen. Johnson, whose short ball had been dismissing Bangladeshi batsmen for fun, suffered the indignity of being thumped clean out of the ground by Jayantha, while Vandort’s 6ft 3in frame was equally untroubled by the confused lengths. It took a smart catch in the gully from Solanki to remove Jayantha for a well-compiled 24 (63 for 1), but the heavens soon had the last say.***

Looking forward to it..

Bangladesh was easy - Sri Lanka is a completely different story. But i think with Andrew Flintoff, Graham Thrope and Mark Butcher in good form- England can win both the One Dayers and The Test Series - but it will be a lot tougher and they may get a serious kick up the ass in their first match or 2.

Watch out Pomps for Muttiah - he could be really ruthless!

Flintoff v Murali: the main event?

I have developed great respect for Flintoff as an allrounder this summer,(In the past i always thought of him as English version of Afridi) i have seen him play against Pak and Sa with great authority, his bowling is more accurate now. To me he is one the best thing happening at international level now.....

I think he has the heart, and the talent to take Murali On what do you think of him?


It has already been a winter of hard work for England's cricketers, and that was just to get past the easy bit. But now, with Bangladesh successfully put to one side, and the West Indies tour still a dot on the horizon, it is time to get stuck into arguably the toughest six weeks of England's three-pronged campaign.

The heat and humidity of Dhaka and Chittagong might have seemed oppressive, but it is as nothing compared to the furnace that awaits England at Dambulla tomorrow, where their tour of Sri Lanka will begin in earnest. Up till now, England's gravest threat has come from the elements (and their own fears of an upset). Tomorrow, however, they face a side that is brimful of talent, and more importantly, one that is gunning for vengeance after the last, fractious, tour early in 2001.

On that occasion, England had already wrapped up an historic 2-1 Test series win by the time the one-day circus came to town, and they treated the three matches as something of an afterthought. Nasser Hussain had already flown home early to reap the plaudits of back-to-back series victories in the subcontinent, and in his absence, England were led to a 3-0 defeat by Graham Thorpe. But the current England squad takes its one-day cricket far more seriously than it did back then. A repeat performance would be a massive disappointment.

England were the opponents in Dambulla's inaugural fixture, on March 23, 2001, and for the second time in two tours they will be facing an unknown quantity at the venue. A belated decision was taken this month to install floodlights at the ground - they only received the OK on Thursday - and, after Sri Lanka had tested the conditions in a warm-up game on Saturday, their captain Marvan Atapattu gave them a guarded thumbs-up.

"The floodlights were OK," said Atapattu. "But personally, I did not feel they were as bright as the ones at the Premadasa [in Colombo]. There was also a bit of dew later on, which will be a factor. My feeling is that the ball will move around a bit more in the early evening." The toss, in other words, will be crucial. The match starts at 0830 GMT.

With the onus on seam bowling, Sri Lanka have already indicated that they will be giving a debut to their 21-year-old quickie, Nuwan Kulasekara, as back-up to the established new-ball pairing of Chaminda Vaas and Nuwan Zoysa. England, on the other hand, are unlikely to jeopardise the balance of their batting by including James Kirtley at the expense of one of the spinners, but one change that is highly likely is a new opening partner for Marcus Trescothick.

Vikram Solanki looked to have cracked international cricket when he laced a wonderful century at The Oval last summer, but he was all at sea against Bangladesh last week, scoring only 11 runs in his three innings. He followed that up with a fifth-ball duck in Saturday's warm-up game, and it cannot be long before Andrew Strauss is given an opportunity to prove his mettle. By his own admission, Strauss will never be a big hitter in the mould of Trescothick or Andrew Flintoff, but his 83 from 88 balls on Saturday was not the effort of a sluggard.

No series against Sri Lanka, however, can be contemplated without due deference to Muttiah Muralitharan. "He is the best spinner in the world today," said Trescothick, one of a posse of left-handers who got the better of him last time around. "We have our game-plans for combatting him, and without giving too much away, it's about countering his spin, not nullifying him completely."

That is just as well, because Flintoff, England's man of the moment, doesn't know the meaning of the word "nullify". Flintoff and Murali are two good friends from their days at Lancashire, and when they come across each other in the middle, it promises to be a contest to savour. It might even be the defining contest. For years, Sri Lanka have been accused of being a one-man side. In Bangladesh last week, so were England. If one or other gets the upper hand in the coming days, it will serve as a potent marker for the rest of the tour.

Sri Lanka (probable): 1 Sanath Jayasuriya, 2 Romesh Kaluwitharana (wk), 3 Marvan Atapattu (capt), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Kumar Sangakkara, 6 Russel Arnold, 7 Upul Chandana, 8 Chaminda Vaas, 9 Nuwan Zoysa, 10 Muttiah Muralitharan, 11 Nuwan Kulasekara.

England (probable): 1 Marcus Trescothick, 2 Andrew Strauss, 3 Michael Vaughan (capt), 4 Paul Collingwood, 5 Andrew Flintoff, 6 Rikki Clarke, 7 Chris Read (wk), 8 Ashley Giles, 9 Gareth Batty, 10 Richard Johnson, 11 James Anderson.

© Wisden Cricinfo Ltd

Flintoff is becoming a better allrounder everytime I see him, I have never seen him play quality spin so I can't predict the outcome of that contest but its going to be an entertaining series, with 2 very equal teams.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by UMAIR316: *
Flintoff is becoming a better allrounder everytime I see him, I have never seen him play quality spin so I can't predict the outcome of that contest but its going to be an entertaining series, with 2 very equal teams.
[/QUOTE]

Correct!!! he does not have great footwork against spinners...but so far spinners he has batted against were the people who dont realy throw the ball in the air as mush as Muralli...which encourages Flintoff to try to get under the ball and hit it...now another crucial poit is that Flintoff is going through a high period in his career...when a player is going through such a phase..he normally gets away with the weeknesses that he has..
But none the less it will be an intersting dual to watch him bat against Muralli.

54/7

No it is not BD's score against England.

It is Englands score against S/L in the first ODI.

They are waking up and smelling the coffee. Suddenly the game of cricket is a different ball game for the English players.

England 88 all out.

:rotfl: 88 :rotfl: 88

and Andy Flintoff was about to receive “Best All Rounder” title/recognition?

Recent Overs: . . Y. 4 . 4 . | Y. 4 2 4 . . 6 | . 1 . 2 3

England 88 (46.1 ov)
Sri Lanka 89/0 (13.5 ov)

and it was not "Murli" to destroy English batting.... he only took one wicket for 15 runs in 10 overs.

S/L 89 /0 off 13.5 overs.

Well played SL.

Thsi is what you call a ROUT

**1st ODI: Sri Lanka v England at Dambulla, 18 Nov 2003 **

England 88 (46.1 ov) (vaas 3 / 15, fernando 2 /15, kulasekara 2 /19)

Sri Lanka 89/0 (13.5 ov) (jays’ 46* & kala 36*)

Sri Lanka won by 10 wickets

scorecard

someone post these results to SADI SOBI :D

:hehe: she is busy brushing her teeth :wink:

a taste of their own medicine. ;) beating BNG cheaply in every match, ENG thought they are the best TEAM in the world. after now this. must be a shocker for the whole team :p

England stumble to ten-wicket defeat

The Wisden Bulletin by Steven Lynch

November 18, 2003

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All at sea: Dinusha Fernando celebrates dismissing Michael Vaughan
© Getty Images

What a difference six days and 1300 miles makes. Last week England were casually duffing up Bangladesh, the smallest boy in the playground. Today it was their turn to be on the receiving end of a sound thrashing by a more skilful and determined opponent. :hehe: England were shot out for 88 – only just scraping past their lowest in ODIs, 86 against Australia at Old Trafford in 2001 – then Sri Lanka made a mockery of that by knocking off the runs in just 13.5 overs to go one-up in this three-match series.

After their collapse England needed quick wickets when play resumed under the floodlights, the questionable quality of which had helped Michael Vaughan to decide to bat first after winning the toss. In the event, though, it was lights out for England.

Sanath Jayasuriya, Sri Lanka’s former captain, spanked the first ball of the reply for four, and collected another boundary later in that same over from Jimmy Anderson. In all Jayasuriya sprinted to 46 from only 41 balls – there were four more fours too, and a scything six over cover off Rikki Clarke – while his old sparring partner Romesh Kaluwitharana was no slouch either, flailing 36 from 42 balls with seven punchy fours of his own. It was only England’s third 10-wicket defeat in ODIs – one of the others came in Sri Lanka, too (at the Sinhalese Sports Club in Colombo in 2000-01, in the previous match between these two sides in Sri Lanka), while the other was an equally speedy despatch by Australia, Adam Gilchrist to the fore, at Sydney last winter.

In Bangladesh England’s batsmen – with the exception of Vikram Solanki – scored runs with ease. But on a green and moist pitch at Dambulla they appeared to have forgotten how to get the ball off the square. That should not take anything away from Sri Lanka’s bowlers, who all exercised excellent control and accuracy – the intense pressure they applied in the first 15 overs undermined the whole England innings. Chaminda Vaas finished with the best figures, while Upul Chandana’s 2 for 23 were the most expensive … until England bowled, that is.

Andrew Strauss’s delight at being given his first cap was short-lived, and it was one of Sri Lanka’s own debutants who spoiled the moment. Strauss looked to drive a half-volley back past Dinusha Fernando, but the ball seamed back into him and Fernando took a good low return catch. Strauss, brought in to replace Solanki, had made 3 (8 for 1).

Nine balls earlier and it had been Fernando whose debut was starting poorly, as Marcus Trescothick smashed his first ball, a wide half-volley, to the cover boundary. But after that Trescothick was pegged back, and eventually frustration got the better of him. In the seventh over he came down the pitch to Chaminda Vaas and had a lucky escape as he edged to fine leg for four. But next ball he wasn’t so lucky, as he again gave Vaas the charge but only skyed the ball to Nuwan Kulasekara – another debutant – at mid-on. Trescothick made 9 (12 for 2).

It got worse for England, and even better for Fernando. Michael Vaughan, who had looked far from confident in making 2 from 19 balls, pushed defensively at Fernando, and inside-edged onto his leg stump (17 for 3). And then Andrew Flintoff, England’s hero in Bangladesh, aimed a loose, limp drive at Vaas, and only looped the ball to Kumar Sangakkara in the covers. Flintoff had made 3, and England had managed 13 scoring strokes in 15 overs as they limped to 26 for 4.

Clarke came and went, bowled for 2 by a delivery from Kulasekara which seamed back into him and kept marginally low (36 for 5). Ian Blackwell followed in Kulasekara’s next over, also for 2, his aggressive cut well held low down by TM Dilshan at point (44 for 6).

Thereafter it was damage limitation, and those who last week had moaned about Bangladesh’s pedestrian scoring and goal of simply batting out the full allocation of overs were made to swallow their words. Only Paul Collingwood, with a patient 31 from 96 balls, looked remotely comfortable but the damage had already been done. He eventually scooped a return catch to Chandana (59 for 8).

Ashley Giles was the only other man to reach double figures, managing 21 before a fine low catch by Mahela Jayawardene at first slip ended the struggle. Giles and Anderson scraped together 21 for the last wicket, but overall it was a forgettable display by England - and a commanding one by Sri Lanka.

© Wisden Cricinfo Ltd

http://www-usa.cricket.org/db/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2003/NOV/005604_SLENG2003-04_18NOV2003.html

serves them right for beating our younger brother, bangladesh :snooty:

:) @ england

someone tell them BD trip is over

What happened to three time "Man of the Match", Flintof. I though he is "the best" all-rounder.
Poor Englishmen, Bdesh ko hara kar hawa main urnay lagay thay.

England got well and truly hammered - Man that was hurtful - and that was even with almost the best side out - they needed Robert Croft in the side mind you with a batting performance like that, even the Australian attack would struggle somewhat! My my that was bad - it was always gonna be tough though - especially after having such an easy ride against Bangaldesh. Robert Croft has to be called into the side - don't hold it against him that he's Welsh - he's also quite normal.

Dambulla pitch has been a worry for visiting team - Micheal Vaughan again showed how immature he is when it comes to make decision - he should have elected to field first - anyhow it's gonna be a tough winter season for England unless they got something going on - Andrew Flintoff can't save Pomps alone everytime they collasped.