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Prasanna in doubt for first Test

Sri Lankan wicketkeeper Prasanna Jayawardene is likely to miss the first Test against Pakistan starting on Saturday in Galle after picking up a finger injury during a practice game. The team's physiotherapist Ranjith Nanayakkarawasam indicated that the injury might need at least two weeks to heal.

"We are going to have a review on him on Monday and will take a final decision whether he could play or not," Nanayakkarawasam told the Daily Mirror. "Some players get healed rather quickly, and he might be fit by Monday."

If the 29-year-old specialist wicket keeper is deemed unfit on Monday, the selectors would call up either Kaushal Silva or Chamara Kapugedera, depending on captain Kumar Sangakkara's willingness to don the wicketkeeping gloves.

If Sangakkara does agree, Kapugedera is likely to get the nod as an extra batsman, otherwise Silva, the 23-year old Sinhalese Sports Club wicketkeeper-batsman, is likely to earn his maiden Test cap.
 
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Mathews earns Test call-up

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Angelo Mathews, the Sri Lankan allrounder who impressed during the ICC World Twenty20, is among three new players named in a 15-man squad for the first Test against Pakistan. Mathews has been picked ahead of Chaminda Vaas, while wicketkeeper-batsman Kaushal Silva and fast bowler Suranga Lakmal are also in the squad for the Galle Test starting June 4.

Silva has been included in place of the injured Prasanna Jayawardene, ruled out of the first Test with a damaged finger sustained at practice, while young Lakmal replaces erratic fast bowler Dilhara Fernando. Middle-order batsman Chamara Kapugedera has been recalled after being overlooked for the World Twenty20.

The future of Vaas, 35, looks bleak. He figured in the aborted Test series in Pakistan in March this year but the national selectors have gambled with 22-year-old Lakmal despite a first-class career tally of 57 wickets at 29.29 in 16 matches. Silva, 23, has been a regular run-getter in the domestic circuit and has put up consistent performances with the A team.

Whether he get an opportunity to make his Test debut in Galle will solely depend on how new captain Kumar Sangakkara views his team's balance. Sangakkara himself is an established Test wicketkeeper and it was the emergence of Prasanna Jayawardene that allowed him to forego that position and concentrate on his batting at No. 3.

"In the Sri Lankan context of cricket a specialist wicketkeeper is important but then again we have two other wicketkeepers in the squad, myself and Tillakaratne Dilshan," said Sangakkara. "No other team has that luxury.

"I do believe that the best wicketkeeper for the job is important. But at the same time just being a sole wicketkeeper is not going to be enough going forward from here. A wicketkeeper has the responsibility to develop his batting and become a true run scoring member of the seven batsmen.

"It's a great blow not to have Prasanna. He's done a fantastic job with the side and he's done really well with the bat. Kaushal Silva has done very well for SSC and for the A side in his first-class career. We still have to wait and see how we can manage and how best to balance the team to give us the best advantage to go and win the Test match. It could be a case of Kaushal making a debut or myself or Dilshan taking up the gloves."

Sri Lanka squad: Kumar Sangakkara (capt), Malinda Warnapura, Tharanga Paranavitana, Mahela Jayawardene, Thilan Samaraweera, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Angelo Mathews, Chamara Kapugedera, Muthiah Muralitharan, Ajantha Mendis, Thilan Thushara, Nuwan Kulasekera, Dhammika Prasad, Kaushal Silva, Suranga Lakmal.
 
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Vaughan confirms immediate retirement

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Michael Vaughan has confirmed at a press conference in Edgbaston that he is to retire from all forms of professional cricket with immediate effect. He departs the international scene as England's most successful Test captain of all time - with 26 wins from his 51 matches in charge.

His achievements also include leading England to their first Ashes victory against Australia for 18 years in 2005; a first Test series win in South Africa for forty years - also in 2005 - and presiding over eight consecutive Test wins in 2004.

As a batsman, he scored 18 Test hundreds for England following his debut in 1999 and was ranked the number one batsman in the world following the 2002-03 Ashes in Australia in which he made 633 runs including three centuries.

Vaughan said: "After a great deal of consideration, I've decided that now is the right time to retire from cricket. It has been an enormous privilege to have played for and captained my country and this is one of the hardest decisions I have had to make."

Vaughan added that he reached his decision two weeks ago during Yorkshire's County Championship fixture against Worcestershire at New Road, when he realised that he was starting to hold back the younger players in the Yorkshire dressing-room. "Senior players have to be enthusiastic and I wasn't that passing on," he said. "I want to give them the chance to play first-class cricket and go on to play for their country."

"Playing cricket has been my life for 16-17 years, so to hand it over without a chance to play again is hard," he said. "I've given it my best shot, I wanted to give it one last hard effort to get into the Ashes squad, but I haven't been playing well enough and my body hasn't been holding up. But this is where my life starts, so it's an exciting time for me."

"I'd like to record my sincere thanks to the England fans and the ECB and the members and supporters of Yorkshire County Cricket Club for their unstinting backing throughout my career as well as my wife Nicola and the rest of my family who have been equally supportive."

"I'm also extremely grateful to all of the players, managers, coaches, media and administrators I've worked with, who have all contributed to making my career so enjoyable and fulfilling.

"I'd also like to wish Andrew Strauss and the current England team success in this Ashes series. I know they have the drive, ambition and abilities to repeat the success from 2005. Winning that series was most definitely the highpoint of my career, because we not only won the series, but captured the nation, which cricket hasn't done for a long, long time."

"I want to be remembered as a nice player on the eye to watch, and as someone who gave my all. I leave with no regrets. I captained with an instinctive nature and I was fortunate to lead a determined team that played with an aggressive style."

Commenting on his decision, ECB chief executive David Collier said: "Everyone associated with cricket in England and Wales will be forever grateful to Michael Vaughan for his immense contribution to the England team's success. His achievement in leading England to victory against the number one ranked team in the world, Australia in 2005, was arguably the finest by any England captain in the modern era."

Hugh Morris, the managing director of England cricket, said: "As an international captain Michael ranks among the very best and the way in which he and Duncan Fletcher forged a team capable of winning six consecutive Test series stands as testament to his ability to inspire and motivate those around him.

"He was also a marvelous ambassador for England cricket off-the-field as well as on it and someone who genuinely appreciated the generous support he received from the thousands of England supporters who follow the team at home and abroad. No-one who saw his magnificent hundreds in Australia in 2002-03 will forget the contribution he made to the team as a batsman either - he will be rightly remembered as a player of the highest class."

England's captain, Andrew Strauss said: "I count Michael as a good friend as well as a team-mate and I know what a tough decision this will have been for him as he took so much pleasure and pride in representing his country.

"I learned a great deal from watching him captain the side for five years at close hand and his ability to identify a new strategy for outwitting the opposition or bring the best out of his own players was a priceless asset.

"But more than anything we as players will miss the enormous sense of fun and enjoyment that Michael brought to the dressing room. He will be missed by everyone connected with the team and we wish him every success in his future career."

Yorkshire's chief executive, Stewart Regan, said: "Michael Vaughan is a class act and will be remembered by Yorkshire members and supporters around the world for his beautiful stroke play and of course his success in leading England to Ashes glory in 2005.

"It has been a pleasure and a privilege for me to get to know Michael over the past three years and his presence around the club has been hugely motivational, particularly the younger players.

"I wish him every success in the future and hope that he continues to take more than a passing interest in the fortunes of Yorkshire CCC. On behalf of the Board of Directors, I would like to personally thank him for his magnificent contribution not only to Yorkshire but to the game of cricket as a whole."
 
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ICC chief suggests four-day Tests


David Morgan, the ICC president, has hinted that Test cricket may be reduced to four days to protect and enrich the game's oldest format in the face of lucrative Twenty20 leagues like the IPL. The suggestion comes in the wake of a few other changes that are being mooted, including a two-tier format and day-night Tests to attract more crowds.

"Another thought that many people have, that we are examining is whether Test match cricket can be played over four days rather than five," Morgan told the India Today magazine. "I would be very surprised if within a year you haven't seen some significant changes in Test match cricket."

Morgan felt it wouldn't be too difficult for players to make a mental shift from five days to four. He added that Test cricket needed many more adjustments, and that special cricket balls would have to be made to facilitate night Tests in white clothing.

"We need better over-rates, better pitches that give a good balance between bat and ball and we need to consider day-night Test cricket," Morgan said. "There is great support for it, the issue is the color of the ball and the quality of the ball. It would be a pity if Test match cricket - day-night - had to be played with a white ball and therefore colored clothing.

"We are looking very closely at ball manufacturing design that replicates a red ball, maybe an orange ball, a ball that could still allow us to play in white clothing and still at night."

The two-tier structure was recently mooted by Dave Richardson, the ICC general manager for cricket, to divide the stronger and weaker teams and make the format more competitive. The ICC has also given the go ahead for the Umpire Decision Review System (UDRS) from October following trials in specific series over the last year. Umpires will have greater scope to decide on bad-light interruptions and the penalties for slow over-rates have also been increased.

With so much emphasis on Twenty20 and the enrichment of Test cricket, Morgan was very confident of the survival of the 50-over game in its current form, now with batting Powerplays and free-hits added to spice it up. He also defended the presence of the Champions Trophy in an already crowded calendar, despite calls for it to be scrapped.

The Champions Trophy, in South Africa in September, now features only the top eight teams and is a shorter tournament compared to previous editions.

"It will be played over a shorter period and we are certain it will rejuvenate the Champions Trophy brand," he said. "The brand needed polishing, rejuvenating, it needed remodeling and this event will be a very, very exciting and successful event I'm sure. It will be the event that will give fifty overs cricket its profile back, give it a boost without a doubt."
 
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Playing as a batsman a bigger challenge - Jayawardene

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Mahela Jayawardene has said Sri Lanka's home series against Pakistan from Saturday will be a bigger challenge for him after giving up the team's captaincy early this year because he now wants to push himself "to the limit" as a batsman. Jayawardene has discussed his new role with Kumar Sangakkara, his successor, and will focus on holding Sri Lanka's batting together and improve its disappointing home record against Pakistan.

The former Sri Lanka captain admitted that leading a subcontinent team, with all the passion involved, was not an easy job and hoped to emulate the manner in which Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid have managed the transition after giving up the captain's role to contribute better as batsmen for India.

"I always knew that everything [captaincy] was going to be over some day," Jayawardene told Cricinfo. "For me, cricket is all about enjoyment and trying to do my best. I am sure I still have that hunger to do well and be a better cricketer than I am right now. In that perspective, it is a much bigger challenge for me, to push myself to the limit."

Jayawardene's last Test as captain was also against Pakistan in March but that series was cut short by the terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan team in Lahore. This time, he said, he was confident of easing into his new role for the home series, which starts on July 4. "When I captained the side, I made sure I had two different roles, as a captain and as a batsman. Now the captaincy has gone to somebody else but the batting role is going to be the same. My focus, my concentration, everything will be on that. So that's not going to change because I am not the captain any more."

Jayawardene, who captained Sri Lanka from 2006, said Sangakkara, a close friend, understands and agrees with his views on how he should be contributing to the team. "Sanga just asked me to be the batsman that I am and probably be better than what I am right now. That's what I want to be as well, and Sanga understands that. I enjoyed working with him when he was my deputy and now it is my duty to try and help him out in any way that I can to make his job easier.

"We have already had lots of discussions about combinations, compositions and different things like tactics. I just give him different inputs and then it's easier for him to play around with those. As for my role in the team, it is important for me to be the middle order batsman who will hold things together, and I just want to continue to do that."

Jayawardene has notched up four centuries, including a double against Pakistan in Karachi in February, in nine Tests over the last 12 months, scoring 773 runs at 70.27. His one-day batting dipped, however, during the same period and he scored just four fifties in 24 matches at 21.72, including three consecutive ducks against Zimbabwe and another against Bangladesh.

On reflection, he said, he empathises with Tendulkar and Dravid who had also decided that captaincy was getting in the way of their batting. "It's not an easy job, especially when you are captaining a sub-continent team. There are a lot of responsibilities, a lot of hope and joy because everyone is cricket-crazy. That's something you get into when you get to be the captain. So you try and do your best and then leave it and go back and concentrate on your own performance and try and help the team in a different way. I have seen the way Sachin and Rahul have gone about things and it has been amazing. Hopefully, like them, I can do the job."

Jayawardene also revealed that he had a "light discussion" with Dravid on the issue when they met during the IPL in South Africa. "Rahul called me 'skip' and I said I am no longer that. We had a quiet joke about it during the IPL, [talking] about the captaincy and how much of a difference it makes when you leave it and come back into the team as a batsman. It's all about prioritising your responsibilities; then the job becomes much easier."

It also helped, he said, that Sangakkara had emerged as a "capable" leader. "I knew I was leaving it to somebody capable of handling that pressure and of becoming a great captain for our country. I had no doubt in my mind about that."

The next step, Jayawardene said, was to work with Sangakkara and rectify their home record against the current visitors. Pakistan possess an overwhelming record in Sri Lanka, having lost just one Test to the hosts in 12 meetings since 1986. In fact, Pakistan have claimed three series wins out of five in Sri Lanka, including a 1-0 win in their previous meeting in 2006. This time, they are scheduled to play three Tests, five ODIs and a Twenty20 international.

"We have always been very competitive, Pakistan and Sri Lanka," Jayawardene said. "But our record against Pakistan is not that great. That's something we need to improve on and that is added motivation for us. We need to make sure that we get it right because not many teams have beaten us at home but Pakistan have done that quite a bit. So that's something we want to rectify."

Muttiah Muralitharan and Ajantha Mendis will play a key role in the series, Jayawardene felt, and they will be helped by Lasith Maliga and a clutch of new fast bowlers. But he admitted that his own role will be under the scanner, too. "For me, from the first day that I played for my country, there has been pressure to do well. That's always going to be there."
 
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Herath spins SL to dramatic win

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Let's put this Sri Lankan win into perspective. Coming into this match, they had won three Tests in the absence of Muttiah Muralitharan since he made his debut. Coming into this Test Chaminda Vaas was overlooked, sparking rumours about the end of his Test career. Lasith Malinga was not deemed to be physically fit enough for five straight days of cricket. Dilhara Fernando had been his usual inconsistent self. That left a six-Test old Ajantha Mendis as the No. 1 bowler in what was arguably the most inexperienced attack Sri Lanka have fielded in a long time.

During this Test their batting led Kumar Sangakkara to suggest Sri Lanka needed to know the whereabouts of their off stumps better, get the mindsets right, and also try to read what a bowler was trying to do. Between them the most senior players in the team, Mahela Jayawardene and Sangakkara, managed 53 runs in four innings. Even Mendis was negotiated in the first innings without incident and in the second managed 2 for 27.

Yet Sri Lanka managed to win the Test. One freak session of exceptional bowling and Pakistan's nerves aside, that they had managed to compete thus far was down to the efforts of three inexperienced Test bowlers.

In the case of Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Thushara this was a repaying of the faith Sri Lanka have shown in them over the last couple of years. In the case of Rangana Herath, it was the hunger to cash in on the smallest of opportunity the two special incumbent spinners provided him.

"It is an inexperienced attack, but also a fresh attack," said Sangakkara. "The lack of experience is made up for by enthusiasm, and a real hunger to do well and stay in the side. It showed through all the guys. When opportunities are presented, a lot of people try to grab them and try too hard to do well, but our guys played quite well, and they managed to hold their disciplines."

Had the team waited any longer to call Herath from the minor counties in England, he would have gone to the gym, and who knows if he would have been able to make it here seeing the calls an hour or two later. It was a decision that acknowledged Herath as the third-best Test spinner in the country, no matter his age. It also had to do with the tendency of Pakistan to falter against left-arm spin.

Herath's introduction didn't come until the 48th over of Pakistan's first innings and he should have had Mohammad Yousuf, except the umpire Daryl Harper failed to spot an faint edge on a bat-pad appeal. But Herath had his man in the second, and how. Sangakkara started the fourth morning by gambling with Herath and it paid off first ball, with the left-armer dismissing Yousuf lbw. It was the fourth time Herath had dismissed Yousuf - he used to be called Yousuf Youhana in another time, but still fell to Herath thrice in two matches - and third lbw dismissal. Herath has made Yousuf into his bunny. And he was exactly what Sangakkara opted for, a gamble, having been called up from England hours before the match (although it showed in his bowling that he had been away from limited-overs cricket).

Kulasekara and Thushara, though, were anything but a gamble. Kulasekara, especially, has been persisted with ahead of a great fast bowler and other flashier ones. Thushara, too, has been identified as a prospect for the long term.

Thushara's spell today deserved to be a match-winning effort. Although it could have had to do with a helpful pitch, he moved the ball both ways. The natural inswinger proved lethal when mixed with deliveries that went away. Thushara hardly bowled a loose delivery, beating the batsmen almost every time he bowled. His eight overs went for 12 runs, included the wickets of Shoaib Malik and Kamran Akmal, and also led to the run-out of Misbah-ul-Haq. Improvement in Thushara's bowling showed over the two innings, in the discipline and in thinking batsmen out. Sometimes you grow years' worth in one Test; Thushara would hope this is that match.

That this win came through three largely uncelebrated players has to be the most pleasing aspect for the team, especially since they now have to realise Murali won't be for ever. "We have got to, at some time or the other, come to terms with the fact that we can't always have the legends winning the matches for us," said Sangakkara. "It happens to every team, we move on.

"You know things Murali and Vaasy have done, especially as a team, it's going to be very hard for anyone to come and match those performances. I think there are lots of people on the right track, maybe they won't reach the same standing as those two, but they will still win us a lot of games."

This game was one of them.