| Sri Lanka | |
| Test status granted | 1982 |
|---|---|
| First Test match | v England at Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu Stadium, Colombo, 17-21st February 1982 |
| Captain | Mahela Jayawardene |
| Coach | Trevor Bayliss |
| Official ICC Test and ODI ranking | 5th (Test), 6th (ODI) [1] |
| Test matches - This year |
175 0 |
| Last Test match | v India at Galle International Stadium, Galle, 18-22nd Dec 2007 |
| Wins/losses - This year |
51/65 0/0 |
| As of 19th January2008 [2] | |
The Sri Lankan cricket team is a national cricket team representing Sri Lanka. The team first played international cricket in 1975, and were later awarded Test status in 1981, which made Sri Lanka the eighth Test playing nation. The Sri Lankan team transformed themselves from the underdog status to a major cricketing nation during the 1990s. The team went on to take 1996 Cricket World Cup beating Australia in the finals, and becoming the World Champions. Since then, the team continued as a major force in international cricket, with ups and downs in certain periods. The Sri Lanka team did well to reach the finals of 2007 Cricket World Cup but lost to Australia in a rain affected match to become the runners up. The batting of Sanath Jayasuriya and Aravinda de Silva (retired), backed up by the bowling of Muttiah Muralitharan and Chaminda Vaas among many other talented cricketers has led to the successes of Sri Lankan cricket during the last 15 years. It is administrated by Sri Lanka Cricket.
As of October 2007, the Sri Lankan team has played 170 Test matches, winning 29.41%, losing 37.05% and drawing 33.52% of its games.[1]
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Ceylon, as the country was known before 1972, played its first first-class match under that name against MCC at Nomads Ground, Victoria Park, Colombo in 1926-27, losing by an innings. [2] The team's first win came against Patiala at Dhruve Pandove Stadium in 1932-33. [3] The Ceylonese side competed in the M. J. Gopalan Trophy games from the 1950s, through the change of name to Sri Lanka, well into the 1970s.
Sri Lankan cricket's greatest moment undoubtedly came during the aforementioned 1996 World Cup, when they defeated the top-ranked Australian team in the Final. Sri Lanka's game style over the course of the series revolutionized One Day International Cricket, and was characterized by highly aggressive batting in the first fifteen overs of the innings in order to take advantage of the fielding restrictions imposed during this period. This strategy has since become a hallmark of One Day International cricket.
Sri Lankan cricket supporters were once again overwhelmed with the team's tremendous performance at the NatWest Series, 2006. Although as a whole it missed its captain Marvan Atapattu and Muttiah Muralitharan; Sanath together with Upul Tharanga, Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sangakkara, Russel Arnold, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Chaminda Vaas, Lasith Malinga, Dilhara Fernando and Farveez Maharoof played some fantastic innings.
Sri Lanka's performance during the 5-0 whitewash, England's heaviest home defeat in 13 years, was, some sloppy fielding in a couple of games aside, consistently excellent. Sanath Jayasuriya was both the Man of the Match and Man of the Series. They also made the highest score in One Day International Cricket of 443 against The Netherlands in the following series.
| World Cup | ICC Champions Trophy | Asia Cup | Australasia Cup | Asian Test Championship | Commonwealth Games | ICC Trophy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Player Name | Batting Style | Bowling Style | Shirt Numbers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ishara Amerasinghe | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast medium | 54 |
| Malinga Bandara | Right-hand Bat | Legbreak | 72 |
| Tillakaratne Dilshan | Right-hand Bat | Right-arm offbreak | 23 |
| Dilhara Fernando | Right-hand Bat | Right-arm fast medium | 26 |
| Sanath Jayasuriya (Retired from Test cricket) | Left-hand bat | Slow Left-arm Orthodox | 7 |
| Mahela Jayawardene - Captain | Right-hand bat | Right-arm medium/ Legbreak | 27 |
| Prasanna Jayawardene | Right-hand bat | Wicketkeeper (Usually Tests) | 3 |
| Chamara Kapugedera | Right-hand bat | Right-arm medium | 16 |
| Nuwan Kulasekara | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast medium | 92 |
| Kaushal Lokuarachchi | Right-hand bat | Legbreak | 77 |
| Farveez Maharoof | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast medium | 28 |
| Lasith Malinga | Right-hand bat | Right-arm fast | 99 |
| Ajantha Mendis | Right-hand bat | Right-arm offbreak | 40 |
| Jehan Mubarak | Left-Hand Bat | Right-arm offbreak | 42 |
| Muttiah Muralitharan | Right-hand bat | Right-arm offbreak | 8 |
| Dilruwan Perera | Right-hand bat | Right-arm offbreak | 15 |
| Thilan Samaraweera | Right-hand bat | Right-arm offbreak | 96 |
| Kumar Sangakkara | Left-hand bat | Left-arm offbreak Wicketkeeper | 11 |
| Chamara Silva | Right-hand bat | Legbreak | 5 |
| Upul Tharanga | Left-hand bat | Occasional Wicketkeeper | 14 |
| Thilan Thushara | Left-hand bat | Left-arm fast medium | 97 |
| Mahela Udawatte | Left-hand bat | Right-arm offbreak | 6 |
| Chaminda Vaas | Left-hand bat | Left-arm fast medium | 22 |
| Michael Vandort | Left-hand bat | Right-arm medium | 19 |
| Malinda Warnapura | Left-hand bat | Right-arm offbreak | 10 |
Records are bold if it is a World Record.
Test Matches
ODI Matches
Twenty20 Matches
Test Matches
ODI Matches
- 183 for the third wicket by Asanka Gurusinha (84) and Aravinda de Silva (145) against Kenya in 1996.
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