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.Sri Lanka's veteran stars Angelo Mathews
and Dinesh Chandimal are critical to the young side's hopes at the 2019
World Cup despite poor form and recent injuries, said former captain
and world cup winner Aravinda de Silva.
The islanders failed to make the final
of the ongoing Twenty20 tri-series in Colombo, but their recent
performances have raised hopes of a resurgence after a lacklustre 2017,
in which they lost 40 of 57 international matches.
"I think Angelo is probably the most
capable allrounder of the side and also has a good cricketing brain
along with Chandimal," said de Silva, who was a star batsman in the Sri
Lankan side that won the World Cup in 1996.
"It doesn't matter (if) you are captain or a normal player as you put in the same kind of effort."
Mathews, 30, returned to lead Sri
Lanka's limited-overs sides earlier this year after quitting as captain
last July, but has played only one international match because of
injury. Test skipper Chandimal has led the one-day and T20 teams in his absence.
An improved Sri Lanka won the recent ODI tri-series in Bangladesh and also beat the Tigers in the Test and T20 series.
The resurgence has been credited to new
coach Chandika Hathurusingha, who moved back to his native Sri Lanka
after coaching Bangladesh for nearly three years.
De Silva believes Hathurusingha's ease of communication with players gives him an advantage over a foreign coach.
"He is probably the best... plainly
because of the fact that he can relate to the players far better and the
players can also relate to him," de Silva said.
"There is no language or a culture barrier and... it helps because they can voice their opinion."
Sri Lankan players were accused of being
"too fat" by the country's sports minister last year as the defeats
piled up, and were told to get fit or get out.
But de Silva, who resigned as head of
the cricket committee of the island's board last year, believes the
players look fit and improvements are visible.
"I think they are playing better cricket
now. I hope with a little more exposure and experience they will start
doing well as a young new team," said the 52-year-old veteran.
An attacking batsman during his
illustrious career between 1984 and 2002, de Silva singled out
wicketkeeper-batsman Kusal Perera as a future star.
"I see a lot of Sanath (Jayasuriya) in
him and I think it is a crime to leave a guy like him out of the Test
team," he said, referring to his former teammate and explosive opener
whose whirlwind style revolutionised top-order batting in the 1990s.
Perera has smashed three fifties in four
matches of the ongoing T20 tri-series. He has represented Sri Lanka in
73 ODIs and 34 T20s, but has played only 10 Tests since his debut in the
format in 2015.
De Silva said that T20 cricket, instead of hampering the skills of upcoming players, has helped improve modern batters.
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