Sri Lanka chief selector Sanath Jayasuriya made a resounding endorsement of Lahiru Thirimanne's
 temperament and talent, one day after his panel had appointed the 
24-year-old batsman vice-captain across all formats. Thirimanne replaced
 Dinesh Chandimal
 as vice-captain of the ODI and Test teams, and Jayasuriya confirmed 
Chandimal's removal from those positions, and from the T20 captaincy, 
had been driven by their desire to see him focus on snapping a poor run 
of returns with the bat.
"Thirimanne is a different kind of a player," he said. "He has batted 
all over the place and performed when we have given him the opportunity.
 When somebody is injured in the top of the order, he opens. When 
someone is being rested at No. 3 or 4, he bats there. In some 
situations, he bats at No. 5 or 6. He has the mentality to adjust to any
 situation. Everyone has seen that. There's no doubt that he can take 
the vice-captaincy as just another experience, so he's the best choice. 
His technique, the way he works - everything up to date is very good."
Though Thirimanne has played fewer matches than Chandimal in the past 
year, he has made the more telling contributions, particularly in 
limited-overs cricket. He had struck two hundreds in the Asia Cup - 
including one in the final - and had also made an important 44 in the World T20 semi-final against West Indies.
"Thirimanne has been able to adapt his game to Tests, ODIs and T20s, and
 bat like an experienced player under pressure," Jayasuriya said. "There
 are very few players like that."
Jayasuriya said he had been in contact with Chandimal when he left 
himself out of the side for the World T20 semi-final and final in Mirpur
 but, ultimately, Chandimal's inability to make meaningful contributions
 had sealed his demotion.
"We had talked at length as a selection committee before making that 
decision. We had tried to get the most out of him as a captain with a 
long-term view, but after some time passed, we realised that bearing the
 captaincy had put some added pressure on him. We knew his talent, so we
 gave him the support to keep leading the team. We thought he would come
 out of that pressure at some stage. But unfortunately he wasn't able to
 do that, so we decided, with his consent, that we would give Lasith 
Malinga the captaincy during the World T20.
"I talked with Chandimal in Bangladesh, and the decision to relieve him 
of leadership was taken in light of those conversations. I think he had 
some idea of what we were about to do. As a selection committee we'll 
need to sit with him soon and talk about the future."
Chandimal had been perhaps the most promising young batsman upon his 
arrival in the national side, and had had encouraging innings in ODIs, 
as well as Tests, in his first 12 months. Though his Test form has 
largely been satisfactory, it has been his decline in limited-overs 
matches that has been most worrisome for the selectors.
"We need to take pressure off him and help him play like he used to," Jayasuriya said.
Andrew Fidel Fernando is ESPNcricinfo's Sri Lanka correspondent. @andrewffernando
 






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