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Sri Lanka in England, May/Jul 1979 - Tour Summary
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Sri Lanka in England, 1979
Note: Sri Lanka were at this time still associate members of the
ICC. These tour matches were part of Sri Lanka's visit to England
for the 1979 World Cup.
Managed by Major-General Russell Heyn, the team despatched from
the capable cricket organisation of Sri Lanka reinforced the
country's claim for promotion from associate ICC membership with
their achievements both in and outside the Prudential World Cup
competition. Highlights of Sri Lanka's participation in this
tournament were winning the ICC trophy in the final of the asso-
ciate members qualifying competition, and then, in the Prudential
Cup itself, the spirited victory over India at Old Trafford.
The Sri Lankan's tour of England, Scotland and Ireland had been
given little advance publicity in the British Isles, yet at Trent
Bridge, prior to the Prudential Cup, they served early notice of
their potential with a creditable 286 in their first innings
against Nottinghamshire. Later, their bowlers found Todd in de-
vastating form, and the home team's pace attack of Rice and
Hadlee was too much in the second innings.
After the Prudential Cup, the team's performances in five matches
against counties were never less than first-class in both batting
and bowling, and the latter was supported by enthusiastic field-
ing. A feature was the team's consistency, with no individual
pre-eminent. Although some high team totals were compiled, there
was only one century against a first-class county - by the cap-
tain, A.P.B. Tennekoon, against Kent in the imposing total of 400
for nine declared. Not often opening the innings, Tennekoon
did this time and displayed an array of all-round strokes befit-
ting a player who participated in the Sri Lankan record partner-
ship of 426. As short as the rest of a uniformly small team,
he, like many of the batsmen, was capable of playing a forcing
innings and was also a competent, calm leader. At the age of
32, Tennekoon made a distinctive contribution to Sri Lanka's
performances, both as captain and batsman.
The younger co-holder of that 426 partnership, B. Warnapura, was
not so prominent except in the defeat of Oxford University and in
the important first innings against Worcestershire. Opening
bats- man S.R. de S. Wettimuny, leading scorer in the win over
India, was rather overshadowed for the remainder of the tour,
whereas R.S. Madugalle, aged 20 and primarily an off-spinner,
made an im- pact with batting of spirit and skill - 86 against
Derbyshire, followed straightaway by 88 against Kent.
Throughout R.L. Dias provided steadiness and elegance, while in a
contigent containing four wicket-keepers the principal one, S.A.
Jayasinghe, batted with vigour and the second one, R.S.A.
Jayasekera, played important innings against Worcestershire and
Glamorgan. Most consistent batsman of all, arguably with Ten-
nekoon, was R.D. Mendis, a reserve wicket-keeper who had been
prominent in the Prudential Cup and was Man of the Match against
India. Against Susex he hit four boundaries in one over from Ar-
nold.
There was probably no surprise at the depth of the batting,
remembering Sri Lanka's 276 for 4 against Australia at The Oval
in 1975, but there was at the quality of the bowling. This was
almost monopolised by two unrelated de Silvas - G.R.A., left-arm,
and D.S., both bowling accurate, flighted spinners. Their respec-
tive match figures of seven for 97 (including six for 30) and
twelve for 59 (including eight for 46) demolished Oxford Univer-
sity and represented the best bowling perofmrances of the tour.
D.S. de Silva, benefitting from four year's experience in English
league cricket, was also the leading all-rounder. He batted con-
fidently for 76 against both Kent and Glamorgan, and in almost
each match approached, or took, five wickets (five in each in-
nings against Sussex) with his medium-pace leg-spinners.
An all-rounder of promise was S.P. Pasqual, who scored the only
other century of the tour, against Ireland. D.L.S. de Silva sup-
ported the bowling with medium pace; A.R.M. Opatha, of similar
style, and another with English league experience, was rather
more effective. To have been even more penetrative, Sri Lanka
needed a genuinely fast bowler, but nevertheless Tennekoon's team
was one of indubitable talent and temperament.
This and other reports on this tour are from the 1980 Wisden.
Contributed by cp (help@cricinfo.com)
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