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Future Stars:
Rangana Herath |
Rangana Herath :
Spinning the balls of Success
- Venkat
The story of this man goes that he was picked by
the Sri Lankan team out of nowhere during the
1999 home series against the Aussies due to
their weakness against some quality spin
bowling. Rangana Herath was discovered by the
Sri Lankan selectors when he was playing for
Kurunegala CC, a not-so-fancied first class
team, in the Premier League (as they call it in
Sri Lanka) and decided to invest in this young
man who was then aged 18. Today, five years
after making his test debut for Sri Lanka,
Rangana Herath has ascended himself to take up
the challenge of being Sri Lanka's premier
spinner in the absence of the great Muttiah
Muralitharan. In fact, Rangana is the first and
only player to have represented Sri Lanka from
the town of Kurunegala, which is on the way
between Colombo and Anuradhapura.
After making his first class debut for
Kurunegala Youth Cricket Club in 1996, this
talented left arm spinner has made rapid strides
in his
cricketing career. After tasting some success in
Kurunegala, Herath decided to get going and made
a decisive career move to Moors Cricket Club,
which boasts of producing Chaminda Vaas. Since
his arrival at Moors, his career took off from
nowhere to being one of the finest second rung
spinners in the country. Rangana, like many
other modern day left arm spinners uses flight
and loop as a weapon to deceive and then defeat
the batsmen. Besides, he has a mystery ball
which he bowls with an unorthodox bent finger
grip sending the ball spinning in the opposite
direction, something that for sure bamboozled
the Aussies to a large extent in 1999. He also
has a distinct version of the arm ball, which
makes him more effective and potent on any
wicket. After his debut against Australia in
1999, he was reduced to playing first class
cricket for the Moors and became a regular in
the Sri Lanka 'A' team.
Rangana Herath even toured India in 2003 with
the Sri Lanka A team and this is where he
rediscovered himself, spinning the Lankans to
victory at Mumbai. Following his good
performances against India 'A' and New Zealand
'A', Rangana got a national recall for the
series against Australia, where he played an
inconsequential third test. Rangana made his ODI
debut against Zimbabwe and he returned home with
2 wickets in his maiden ODI outing. The
Zimbabwean tour provided the right impetus for
Rangana to establish his place in both the squad
and the team. He was made an active member of
the Sri Lankan ODI team during the home series
against South Africa where the hosts played
without Murali, and Rangana was one of the
emerging stars for the Lankans and he was the
one who did not make them feel Murali's absence.
He was one of the best performers in the Sri
Lankan Twenty20 with 4 wickets at 9.50 a piece.
His recent performance for Sri Lanka in the Test
Match against Pakistan at Faisalabad was in a
way special as it was rare to see the return of
the classical form of left arm spin bowling,
going back to the days of greats like Bedi.
Although we shower a lot of praises on his
bowling abilities, Rangana is a useful lower
order bat too. He can play both aggressively as
well as hold one end up for the other senior
batsman and this proves the fact that Rangana is
an upcoming bowling all rounder for Sri Lankan
cricket. Besides his effective batting, Rangana
also possesses athleticism in the field, where
he fields mostly in the boundary.
In these days of purple patches, where Sri Lanka
have re-emerged as a force to reckon with in
both forms of the game, players like Rangana
Herath have a huge role to play. One could
easily question Sri Lanka's depth in producing
quality spinners after Murali few months back,
but for the moment Rangana is one of the answers
to that question. One sincerely hopes that he
doesn't fall prey to the not-so-good team
management in Sri Lanka, something that the
Chairman of Selectors recently pointed out. It
is important for the Sri Lankans to give
opportunities to young and upcoming players like
Herath during the absence of Murali, so that the
real potential can be tapped.
We at Cricketfundas.com would like to wish
Rangana Herath all the very best for the future
and hope that his unorthodox deliveries could
fox many a batsmen in the days to come !
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