Postcard from Sri Lanka: Craig Smith
Craig Smith - 8 August 2000
The Fizz from the treatment table
Well, what can you say? Phew! Wow! Man! just about sums it up.
I've been in a few close finishes during my 10 years with this
cricket team and yesterday's one in Kandy was just as nerve
racking as Sydney in '94 or Faisalabad, Pakistan in '97.
When test matches go to the wire, like it did yesterday, the
dressing room is often the place not to be! I used to think that
it was great to be involved in a team like this one or say Man
United, as you get the inside stuff on what is happening behind
the scenes. Well, believe me, a few more of these matches and you
can keep the tension on the inside.
We all knew that the test wouldn't go 5 days. Hell, even the
groundsman said before the start of the match that it would be
over on the 4th day.
I prefer us trying to bowl the opposition out to win as its not
as tense as chasing, especially if it is a low total. But what
happens to us guys off the field while the boys on the field are
dying for their country is something unique to most dressing
rooms around the cricketing world.
There are many ways to get a wicket. You can either catch the guy
out, bowl him out, run him out or pressurize him into handling
the ball, to name a few ways. But off the field there are a few
other ways to take a wicket. For example.
Just before the third wicket fell, I said to the boys "I'll go
and send my e-mails and this will get us a wicket. Lo and behold,
while I'm busy sending, Jayawardene nicks off. That brought
Ranatunga and Arnold together and before lunch they struggled to
score as we bowled nice and tight to them.
I castigated Andrew Hall and Boeta as to why they were lying down
and not outside egging the boys on and they replied "this is how
we got a few poles yesterday"!
After lunch it was a different story. Ranatunga went after us and
he and Arnold put on over 100 runs and almost took the game away
from us. During this period, we were all thinking of ways to
break up this partnership for the boys out there. Finally Fordie
decided that I needed to treat his sore back, as this was how we
had got a wicket the previous day. So I treated Fordie's back and
again it worked, Arnold got out, we were back in the game and
naturally the physio was taking some of the credit.
Thereafter, it was a matter of Polly and the boys keeping the
pressure on. Sure enough, Ranatunga was caught by Jonty at short
leg trying to force it, a brilliant run-out sequence by Jacques
and Zulu (one which we practice often) led to Vaas's demise and
from then on I knew it was our match to be lost.
We off the field can never feel the elation of winning
experienced by the boys on the field. However, when you become so
involved in a match, off the field you feel like you're working
just as hard as those are on the field to get a wicket, only in a
different manner. You can thus understand why I (we) sprinted
onto the field when the 10th wicket fell. To share that winning
feeling with the fellas knowing that you've practically lived all
the high and low moments on the field back in the dressing room.
Needless to say, we had a few carsies together back at the hotel
and most of the boys had a few rocks in the head when we woke up
on Thursday morning.
Onward to Colombo and hello to Greer my love, on Saturday night.
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