Sri Lankan Cricket Tour of England: Andrew in Q & A with Sanath
Sanath Jayasuriya is Sri Lanka’s coach only in an interim capacity, as they prepare for their biggest Test series of the year. He was appointed after former coach Chris Silverwood declined to renew his contract at the end of June. Jayasuriya has tasted some success in the job so far, with Sri Lanka beating India 2-0 in the ODI series earlier this month. He spoke to ESPNcricinfo about the challenges that England, and Bazball, will present over the next few weeks.
You get various styles depending on the time. Matthew Hayden and Adam Gilchrist did it too during our time. This is something similar to what we have had in the past. There has just been some media publicity that this is something new. They try to play attacking cricket from the outset, but the end goal is to get to those totals of 300 or 400.
It’s in the first ten overs that there will be the most pressure I think. If you look historically, they have been attacking in that first ten overs and getting runs on the board quickly. We have got some plans to counter that. And we know this is how they will play.
The fact that we have got a late-summer tour is great, because a lot of wickets have been used a lot, and there’s more sunshine at this time of year. It’s more similar to our conditions than the early summer tours. I have made sure the players know it’s a great opportunity.
When Chris Silverwood was still the coach, my job with the national team was to consult with Chris and decide the team, to address any communication gaps with the players, and to share my experience with Chris. After his contract ended I got the India tour and England tours as interim coach.
“The fact that we have got a late-summer tour is great, because a lot of wickets have been used a lot… It’s more similar to our conditions”We had a bit of responsibility during the India series, because they sent a full side. We backed our strengths and figured out our advantages, then played to those. I managed players and the coaches. On the coaching side, there was some fine-tuning to do, and the players also had to be motivated. I tried to create an environment of freedom, with the encouragement to play their natural games.
We have an experienced batting order. Dimuth Karunaratne, Kusal Mendis, Angelo Mathews, Dhananjaya de Silva, Dinesh Chandimal – they have all played a lot of cricket. We have the personnel there, but we need to fight hard. If you play six or seven batters, only two or three will perform for sure. If they get a start they need to play big innings. They know they have that responsibility on challenging wickets.
He is a very strong-minded player. He knows what his strengths and weaknesses are, and has worked on them. He can do something major on this tour.
I want to make sure there is that hunger. Playing three Tests like this, this is not an opportunity you will get easily again. So we have to take it while we can. Scoring runs here is challenging, because even if the pitches are flat, the ball can still start swinging, or seaming. We have to know how to adjust to that.
They have prepared well. Vishwa has played a lot of cricket, and the cricket he played in the last couple of months here in England would have been fantastic for him. He would have learned a lot and he will help the others with that. Asitha Fernando has played here a bit too. Lahiru Kumara is coming here after an injury and has a little bit of rustiness about him, but if we get his rhythm right, we will be in great shape. Others like Kasun Rajitha and Nisala Tharaka are there too.
That’s something that’s out of our control. The players and the physios and trainers are all doing their part in terms of strength and conditioning. We know that it will be colder here and what we need to do in those conditions. They are doing everything possible. But we have got all the bowlers that we wanted here.
Sri Lanka Cricket must be looking for a new coach. I think they have advertised and must be interviewing candidates now. I’m not involved in that process. I’m at the High Performance Centre. One thing I want to do is to give our batters long batting sessions, which is something that Zubin talked about. It’s important for batters to get batting for two-three hours. I want to take that process forward with the other coaches and improve our batting.
Andrew Fidel Fernando is a senior writer at ESPNcricinfo. @afidelf