The Sri Lankans have been in England at the start of two of the last
three summers, but Mathews noticed the difference. "It's colder in
Ireland than the UK," he grinned. "A bit of sunshine would be nice."
The most popular man in the Sri Lankan party was the liaison officer who
arrived shortly before training with a large carrier bag from a Dublin
city sports store. Inside were the sporting equivalent of long johns,
the thermal underclothing that the Irish swear by to keep the winter
chills at bay.
Even the local players were well wrapped up as they went through their
drills with coach Phil Simmons, and the grey clouds and weather forecast
was the main topic of conversation among players and groundstaff.
The Ireland captain, William Porterfield, knows that the conditions will
assist his team as they seek their first big scalp at the venue. "The
last few one-dayers we played here we've been able to utilise the
conditions, especially by taking early wickets", he said. "Early in the
season the ball will do a bit and the seamers are looking forward to it.
"What we have to do now is to keep taking wickets in the middle overs to
set ourselves up. We've been looking at our death bowling - over the
two Pakistan games and against England last year we let ourselves down."
In each of those games Ireland got themselves into winning positions only for it to slip from their grasp.
"We were disappointed with the second Pakistan game not to get over the
line from position we were in. There were times when we slackened off
but we need to be able to nail teams," said Porterfield.
His batsmen have been in excellent form, none less than Ed Joyce, who
made 482 first-class runs in April for Sussex. "Ed has been one of the
stand-out players in England, and Nobby [Niall O'Brien] also got a big
hundred last week. I've had a couple of good starts myself, and guys
like Kevin O'Brien have had good innings at home. I hope now we can all
bring that out into the middle for Ireland."
Less encouraging has been the form of the bowlers. Spinner George
Dockrell has been out of favour at Somerset and in a bid for some
practice he turned out for Leinster Lightning at the weekend in the
Newstalk Interprovincial Championship. The three Ireland bowlers on the
Leinster side - Dockrell, Kevin O'Brien and Max Sorensen - returned
combined figures of 29-2-150-0.
Sri Lanka arrive as newly-crowned World Twenty20 Champions, but also on a
nine match winning streak in ODIs, including victory in the Asia Cup in
March. Of that squad, five have been rested - Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar
Sangakkara, Lasith Malinga, Tillakaratne Dilshan and Thisara Perera,
the latter because his visa was not sorted in time.
"We wanted to give the opportunity to the younger guys", explained
Mathews. "They have been in and around the team for a while and they
haven't had enough opportunities, so that was the main idea. I believe
they can step in and do the job for us. All the younger guys are
extremely talented and have enough potential to beat any team."
Porterfield had mixed feelings about facing a squad that, for all
Mathews positivity, is undeniably weaker. "I can't say I'm too
disappointed that Lasith Malinga didn't get on the plane," he grinned,
"but they have a lot of good young cricketers with quite a bit of
experience and they'll be champing at the bit to get going. We'd be
foolish to take them lightly."
The Sri Lankans arrive in Clontarf just as the suburb celebrates the
1000th anniversary of a famous battle in which the Irish king, Brian
Boru, repelled an invasion of Vikings led by Sitric Silkenbeard. That
bloody Battle of Clontarf is still remembered in songs and stories, and
while it's hard to imagine William Porterfield's name being revered a
thousand years from now, victory over the invaders this week will ensure
he finds his name in the cricket history books.
© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.
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