|
![Angelo Mathews receives the series trophy, Ireland v Sri Lanka, 2nd ODI, Clontarf, May 8, 2014](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_vkzWwHz1OrAjHJNkT54Psip6fJ4AWIrOiOk5icuY5yCR5lsiIW2qusVnATgdMZaWq2FK2hGWV5vPntGVh56HkxDuoScZZzpEqxNAX75JVFxN16cwxiwJN2-4tOUqmWd6TL=s0-d)
Angelo Mathews was playing a straight bat as Sri Lanka prepared for their first match of tour in England
© AFP
|
Enlarge
|
|
|
Sri Lanka may have their best chance of winning a Test series in England
for many years. A schedule more sympathetic to their needs, an
opposition in transitional mode and confidence gained from success in
Bangladesh has given Sri Lanka an optimism not always shared by some of
their predecessors.
The English leg of their tour begins on Tuesday. Sri Lanka will take on
an Essex side including Alastair Cook in a 50-over game in Chelmsford,
with further warm-up matches scheduled against Kent and Sussex ahead of
the international fixtures which start in a week.
But while Sri Lanka's record in England is not encouraging - they have not won a Test in England
since 2006
and have never won a series of more than one match in the country -
circumstances are a bit different this time. On both their 2006 and 2011
tours Sri Lanka played the Test section of the tour ahead of the
limited-overs section.
This time, however, they will have had a far greater chance to
acclimatise to conditions. They will have been in Ireland or England for
more than a month before the first Test and will have the opportunity
to play their stronger suit - the limited-overs games - ahead of the
Test series.
They also find an opposition lacking some of the pillars of its success
in recent years - the likes of Andy Flower, Graeme Swann, Kevin
Pietersen and Jonathan Trott - and having just enjoyed a memorable
double-success in Bangladesh, where they followed victory in the Asia
Cup by winning the World T20.
"We have started training a bit earlier than usual because we know the English conditions are not going to be easy for us,"
Angelo Mathews,
the Sri Lanka captain, said on Monday. "If we can adapt ourselves as
soon as possible, I am pretty sure the team will come good. The
conditions and the weather are the main challenge we face.
"We are not trying to be complacent against an England team having made
all of those decisions. Yes, they might be missing star players like
Kevin Pietersen, but they still have enough potential to beat any team
on any day, especially playing under English conditions. They will be
very hard to beat.
"You know what happened in Bangladesh: they beat us quite easily in the
sub-continent conditions, so you cannot be complacent and just have to
go hard at them."
"The confidence levels are very high," the coach,
Marvan Atapattu agreed. "This team comes with confidence and success."
Certainly if the batsmen play as straight as the tour management did when deflecting questions about
Paul Farbrace's
departure, they should fare well. Mathews did not believe the
suggestion that Farbrace, who resigned the Sri Lankan coaching role to
take the assistant coach's job with England just weeks before the tour,
had any team secrets to impart and dismissed the idea that any of his
squad resented the decision.
"We respect his decision," Mathews said. "He is a good coach and was
part of our success. He was with us for a short period of time, not a
very long period of time, but in those few months, he was pretty good.
Everyone has his own choices. He has made his choice and we wish him all
the very best.
"When it comes to an international cricket team, there are no secrets.
You have so many videos of all the players, of the support staff as
well. We had guys like Ajantha Mendis and Lasith Malinga come into the
team, but you cannot really hide them from playing international
cricket.
"Everyone knows a little bit about the opposition, so I don't really think he has all the inside information."
But Sri Lanka hope that the appointment of
Chris Adams,
the former Surrey coach, might provide an insight into England's
players and tactics. Adams joined up with the team on Monday and will
spend the rest of the tour with them. Kumar Sangakkara will also join up
with the squad on Wednesday or Thursday, having completed his short
stint with Durham.
"Chris Adams is to give me the information I need to know, about venues
and players, during this tour," Atapattu explained. "We will try to pick
his brains to improve our game and lend our support to the players.
Yes, we will try to get inside information from him."
Sri Lanka's record in English conditions probably still leaves them as
underdogs going into the Test series. But Peter Moores and Co face a far
from straightforward test at the start of England's new era.