Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Fan-actics “X-Mendis”

Thanks to Ceci Masters

Source - theflyslip

Mendis is not a threat for us: Dhoni


Playing down the threat from the new spin sensation of Sri Lanka Ajantha Mendis, Indian cricket team captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni said on Monday his team is not wary of playing him.

Addressing the media in Colombo on the upcoming five One-day International series against Sri Lanka beginning on Wednesday in Dambulla, the Indian skipper, however, said it is always "tough to beat Sri Lanka in Sri Lanka".

Asked how his team was going to face Mendis, who ran though their batting order in the Test series in Colombo last year, Dhoni said they had a measure of the spinner during the subsequent ODI series, which India won.

"We did well against him in ODIs, so there is no need for us to worry too much about him or any individuals. Our boys are ready to face the challenges ahead," said the Indian skipper.

Dhoni said although the weather conditions may look the same in the neighbouring countries, but it is not so.

"The conditions are not the same. The pitches in Sri Lanka perform differently as the match progresses. A lot depends on the toss," he said, indicating that India won all the matches against Sri Lanka last year after winning the toss.

Dhoni said although the team was missing Harbhajan Singh, the senior member of the team's spin department, it has given a golden opportunity for the upcoming youngsters to perform and prove their talents.

According to the rescheduled tournament itinerary, only the first one-day international (ODI) will be played at Dambulla Rangiri Stadium while the remaining games will be held in Colombo (January 30, February 2, 5 and 8).

The only Twenty20 International will be played in Colombo February 10. Three ODIs will be played under lights at R Premadasa Stadium while the fifth one-dayer will be a day game at the Sinhalese Sports Club, also in Colombo.

The series was hastily scheduled after India cancelled its tour to Pakistan in January-February following the Mumbai terror attacks.

Sri Lanka, which is boosted by its two emphatic back-to-back wins over Pakistan last week, will fly back to Pakistan in February to play two Tests after hosting India.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

I will have no problems against Mendis, says Sehwag


On the eve of the Indian cricket team's departure for Sri Lanka for a one-day series, dashing opener Virender Sehwag has sought to put the rivals on the backfoot, saying he had done his homework against mystery spinner Ajantha Mendis and would not hesitate to attack him.
Sehwag said his knowledge of the nuances of the game made it easy for him to deal with mystery bowlers like Mendis.

"I am exceptionally aware of the nuances of the game. I know what's happening, who is where and how to take advantage of him in the field. I studied him (Mendis) during the Asia Cup in Pakistan. Even at non-striker's end, I kept following his methods. His style when he is bowling off-spin, googly, or pushing it through middle finger.

"So I have no problem in attacking him. A bowler is demoralised if he knows that a batsman has read him completely", Sehwag told in an interview.

He said a bowler like Mendis preferred to keep three or four fielders close to bat. "It means there are open spaces in the field. Even a mis-hit can give you boundaries," he explained.

"Unlike the accepted norm, I find hitting against the spin more profitable. It allows one to free one's arms," he said.

The explosive right-hander, who claimed that he never looks back in regret, said his big knocks won't count anything for him if the team had not won ultimately.

"I never look back. I have never looked back on those innings. What is gone is gone, it's over," he asserted.

Can Ajantha Mendis calm Dhoni and company this time?


The high riding Indians on a crest of a wave of their recent success against the World Champions Australia and England will take Mahela Jayawardena’s Sri Lankan one day cricket status to the acid test when they arrive in the Island tomorrow (Monday) to play 5 One-Day Internationals.


Ajantha Mendis will give the Indian cricketers all the problems...

Sri Lanka who won the Test series 2-1, but was roundly beaten 3/2 in the ODI series by Dhoni’s men back home last August, will find the Indians led by the exemplary young captain a huge stumbling block in trying to redress things when they meet again. While Jayawardena and Co. will enjoy a big home advantage, the Indian dominance bringing down Ricky Ponting’s Aussies and Kevin Pietersen’s Englishmen speaks very tall of a team that has found the winning formula with a combination of all his units.

Dhoni who had declared himself out of the Test series against the Lankans last year, played an important role as captain and batsman in the limited overs, helping to outwit Sri Lanka when they last met in Sri Lanka less than a year ago. The strong point of the Indian team is that the batting department has improved tremendously with the likes of Yuvaraj Singh contributing enormously to a side that has been consistently held together by the big hitting opener Virender Sehwag who had a fine stint against Australia and England.

Then add the inform Gautham Gambhir, ‘little master’ Sachin Tendulkar and the skipper Dhoni himself, it will be a huge proportion to the Sri Lankan bowlers.

It is interesting to see as to how the Indians will cope up with Ajantha Mendis who mesmerised them in the Asia Cup final, which the Lankans won. Then the subsequent home Test series July-August 2008 where Mendis inflicted irreparable damage to the Indian side to take the Test series 2-1. India’s ace spinner Harbhajan Singh will miss the series due to a hamstring injury and his place will be taken by left-handed allrounder Ravindra Jadeja who has been enjoying a fairly successful Ranji Trophy season, taking 42 wickets in 9 matches and scoring 739 runs.

The Sri Lankans will be mindful that the Indian batting machinery had the fire power to destroy Australia and England and it will require a gigantic effort from the Lankan bowlers to address that area.

However, Sri Lankan skipper Mahela Jayawardena is fully focused in the on - going ODI series against Pakistan which both teams have won a match each and the final to be played on Saturday.

Itinerary

January 26 Monday: arrival of Indian team. Jan. 27 Rest and practice. January 28 First: ODI Dambulla-Day match January: 29 and 30 rest and practice. 31st Sat. 2nd ODI at R. Premadasa Stadium D/N. Feb. 1st and 2nd rest and practice. Feb. 3: 3rd ODI R. Premadasa Stadium D/N. Feb. 4 rest. Feb. 5: 4th ODI R. Premadasa Stadium D/N. Feb. 6 and 7 rest and practice. Feb. 8: 5th ODI SSC Day match. Feb. 9 rest. Feb.10 Twenty20 game at R.Premadasa Stadium D/N.

Teams:

India. Mahendra Singh Dhoni (Captain), Virender Sehwag, Gautham Gambhir, Sachin Tendulkar, Yuvaraj Singh, Rohith Sharma, Suresh Raina, R.Jadeja, Yusuf Pathan, Zaheer Khan, Ishant Sharma, Munaf Patel, Pragyan Ojha, Irfan Pathan, Preveen Kumar, Coach. Gary Kirsten.

Sri Lanka: Mahela Jayawardena (Captain), Sanath Jayasuriya, T.M. Dilshan, Kumar Sangakkara, Thilina Kandamby, Chamara Kapugedera, Farveez Maharoof, Thilina Thushara, Jehan Mubarak, Angelo Mathew, Muthiah Muralidharan, Ajantha Mendis, Dilhara Fernando, Dammika Prasad.

Mendis, Hodge sign longer contracts | IPL 2009


Calcutta: Kolkata Knight Riders signed two of their replacement players from the last season — Sri Lankan spin sensation Ajantha Mendis and seasoned Australian batsman Brad Hodge — on longer contracts.

Mendis has arguably been the best bowler in the world in recent months and is sure to be a big attraction when the second season of the Indian Premier League (IPL) kicks off April 10.

Delhi DareDevils have bought Australian batting sensation David Warner and allrounder Andrew MacDonald while Deccan Chargers have roped in Ryan Harris, also of Australia, for the second edition of the IPL.

The closure of the month-long trading window on Thursday saw a total of seven players being traded, according to a media release.

The Mumbai Indians signed the West Indian Dwayne Bravo, while the Chennai Super Kings inked a long-term contract with Sri Lankan Chamara Kapugedera, the release added.

Royal Challengers Bangalore swapped Zaheer Khan for Karnataka Ranji Trophy captain Robin Uthappa (Mumbai Indians). In another exchange, Ashish Nehra of the Mumbai Indians was swapped for left-handed batsman Shikhar Dhawan of the Delhi DareDevils.

Jaydev Shah of the Rajasthan Royals — captain of the Saurashtra Ranji team — will play for the Mumbai Indians.

Batsman Gaurav Dhiman of the Mumbai Indians will turn out for Royal Challengers Bangalore and Rajasthan pacer Pankaj Singh, of the Rajasthan Royals, will don the colours of the team from Bangalore in the coming IPL season.

Australian MacDonald featured in his country’s consolation Test win in Sydney, whilst Warner made a sensational Twenty20 debut — both against South Africa.

Amrit Mathur, chief operating officer of the Delhi DareDevils, was excited about his new addition.

“We are really delighted to have signed David. “His debut game for Australia the other day has been sensational and we are hoping he will carry forward this brilliance into season two of the IPL,” he said.

The IPL player auction for the second season will take place in Goa on February 6, where franchises will have the opportunity to purchase current international players to fill the remaining slots for overseas players in their squads.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Pakistan brace for record-breaking Muralitharan, Mendis


Sri Lankan spin magicians Muttiah Muralitharan and Ajantha Mendis loom as major threats for Pakistan in their three-match one-day series which opens here Tuesday.

The 36-year-old Muralitharan, already the highest wicket-taker in Test cricket with 769, will have the extra motivation of overhauling the tally of one-day wickets, currently held by Pakistan's Wasim Akram with 502.

The wily off-spinner needs just nine wickets to become the highest wicket-taker in both forms of the game.

But the unorthodox Mendis holds more challenges for the home team.

The 23-year-old army officer is not a big turner of the ball like his more illustrious partner Muralitharan, but the key to his success is the way he grips the ball with his fingers and flicks it to bowl a variety of deliveries.

Last week he became the quickest bowler to get 50 wickets in one-day cricket, having made his debut only last year.

In his only match against Pakistan, Mendis took four wickets. He then took six wickets in the very next match against India to help Sri Lanka win the Asia Cup here in July last year.


Pakistan's first plan is to outwit Sri Lanka with pace as they named six fast bowlers in their squad of 15 with fit-again Shoaib Akhtar leading the pack.

Akhtar, 33, missed all matches in Pakistan's 3-0 win against the West Indies at Abu Dhabi in November last year.

The home team can also take heart from Sri Lanka's unimpressive batting despite winning the tri-series in Bangladesh last week.

Pakistan hastily arranged the one-day series with Sri Lanka after India pulled out of a planned tour amid hightened political tension in the wake of the Mumbai attacks.

The second match will be played here on Wednesday, while the final match is in Lahore on Saturday.

Mendis an extra special blend


There seems to be no stopping Ajantha Mendis that off-spinning sensation from the Army from breaking records and getting statisticians to rewrite the books.

First he erased former England's medium pacer ,Alex BedserAlex Bedser's record. Bedser had taken 24 wickets in a three Test debut series against India and that epic feat stood for over 51 years until Mendis came along and struck Bedser's name off the books and put him to second best by capturing 25 wickets.

Not satisfied with that, Mendis has now pocketed another record, that of getting to 50 wickets in one-day Internationals in just 19 matches. The earlier record stood to the name of India's Ajith Agakar who captured 50 wickets in 23 matches.

Incredible is the best way to describe Mendis' feats with the ball. If these two achievements are an indication, then he is on the way to more records.

Mendis, emerging from a little known school where he did not have the best facilities to ply his trade and improve, showed his capabilities once joining the Army.

There he was nursed and nurtured and allowed to blossom with his mentor in the Army Major General V.R. Silva a former Maliyadeva cricketer and hockey player showing him how. Somewhat of a freak like, the West Indian of old Sonny Ramadhin, he got into the wicket taking act playing in the Premier League.

Batsmen who fronted up to him, were non-plussed as to how to read and play him. He seemed to have six different deliveries, bowled with an off break action and once it pitched, batsmen did not know which way the ball was going and they were lured to their demise.

Apparently the most vicious of all his deliveries is the `carrom ball' delivered with the style of a carrom player, where he flicks the ball at the last moment.

Mendis could not play in the first match of the triangular series in Bangladesh. Had he done so, he would have obtained the record much earlier. Recovering from an ankle injury, he made his presence felt in the game against Zimbabwe to grab the record.

Mendis first made it to the Sri Lanka team when he toured the Caribbean for the one-day series. There, former West Indian greats and the knowledgeable who saw him told me that in this guy they see Ramadhin reborn and predicted a great future for him.

He has since not let his admirers down and is continuing to mesmerise batsmen who come up against him. Most batsmen seem to be just prodding at his deliveries not knowing which way the ball is turning and hoping against hope that they would connect.

Unassuming and the likeable Mendis first showed his mystic powers in Test cricket when he bamboozled the Indian batsmen when they came up against him early last year.

None of the Indian batsmen, which included willow wielders of the class of Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, V. Laxman and V. Shewag were comfortable against him and were undone by his wiles.

Test wicket record holder Muttiah Muralitharan is also in line to add another record to his career, needing 10 more wickets to go past former Pakistan Captain Wasim Arkam who holds the record for the most number of wickets in one-day Internationals.

Akram called it a day with 512 wickets. Muralitharan now has 492. The record should spin Muralitharan's way when the Indians tour here soon for five one-day Internationals.

Pakistan doing homework to tackle Mendis: Intikhab Alam


Pakistan cricket coach Intikhab Alam on Saturday said spinner Ajantha Mendis was the biggest threat for them in the upcoming one-day series against Sri Lanka and they were preparing well to tackle him.

Pointing out that Muttiah Muralitharan and Mendis were best spinners in the world, he said the Pakistan team knew Murlai's bowling style well, having played him a lot, but was working on ways to counter Mendis.

"We have been watching videos of both of them specially Mendis and we will be ready for him. We have collected information but that is not for public consumption.

"We have seen videos of all his (Mendis') recent matches and we will go out and be positive against him," he said.

Alam said that the team was using unorthodox methods to prepare for Mendis but said he could not disclose details.

Alam is impressed by Mendis, who he feels adds to the charm of the game which can be used in popularising Test cricket.

"I think when you have players like Mendis around it adds to the charm of the game and unconventional players like him can help boost the popularity of Test cricket," Alam said on Saturday.

Alam said Mendis was not a conventional and orthodox spinner and that is why he had gained success in such a short period of time.

"In the past there have been some bowlers like him Sonny Ramadin of West Indies, Gleeson from Australia and they always were a mystery for the batsmen because of their unusual bowling grip and variations," he said.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Ajantha Mendis becomes the Fastest to take 50 wickets in One-Day Internationals



The sensational Sri Lankan cricket star Ajantha Mendis of the Sri Lanka Army was adjudged the fastest wicket taker in One-Day Internationals with 50 wickets taken in 19 matches.

Ajantha Mendis achieved this historic attainment breaking the record of Ajith Agarkar of India who took the same number of wickets in 23 matches.

Ajantha Mendis contributed with three wickets as Sri Lanka demolished Zimbabwe by 130 runs in the second match of the Grameenphone tri-nation tournament at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium in Mirpur

It was a match to remember for the mystery spinner as he became the fastest bowler to take 50 one-day international wickets achieving the milestone in just 19 matches.

The 23-year-old Sri Lanka Army officer, who already hogged the spotlight in international cricket with his 'carrom ball' to flummox the batsmen, had Ray Price stumped by Kumar Sangakkara to beat Indian pacer Ajit Agarkar's record in 23 games.

"We are quite happy and no doubt it's a good achievement. Ajantha is something special and we definitely celebrate his success," said an excited Sri Lanka skipper Mahela Jayawardene, who also reached a milestone as he took two catches yesterday to secure most one-day catches (156) as a fielder. Jayawardene achieved it in 289 matches while former Indian skipper Mohammad Azharuddin has same number of catches to his belt in 334 games.



Fastest to 50 wickets - Cricinfo

Monday, January 12, 2009

Ajantha Mendis, Kulasekara crush Zimbabwe

Sri Lanka v Zimbabwe, Tri-Series, 2nd match, Mirpur



Nuwan Kulasekara and Ajantha Mendis executed the perfect demolition job to not only complete the win against Zimbabwe in the second match of the Tri-Nation Tournament in Bangladesh, but also ensure a bonus point. In the process, Mendis became the fastest to 50 ODI wickets when he had Ray Price stumped by Kumar Sangakkara, as Zimbabwe surrendered tamely during their chase.

Kulasekara was on fire right from the start as Sri Lanka looked to defend the 210 they put up earlier in the day on a difficult pitch. The Zimbabwe openers lasted just six overs - Kulasekara castling Vusi Sibanda for 6 and then trapping Hamilton Masakadza leg before in the next over.

Tatenda Taibu may have been dropped by captain Mahela Jayawardene off Thilan Thushara, but his luck lasted only a little while more as he played on to a Kulasekara in-cutter the next over. Thushara was rewarded though, sneaking through Sean Williams' defences as Zimbabwe were left reeling at 47 for 4 in the 17th over.

Jayawardene then unleashed spin at one end and Mendis, predictably, struck in his first over bowling Stuart Matsikenyeri. Matsikenyeri's 15 was to be the highest score in a dismal-looking scorecard, as captain Prosper Utseya and Keith Dabengwa exited in a hurry as well. Dabengwa was caught by Jayawardene, who drew level with Mohammad Azharuddin for the most number catches as a fielder, with 156.

Price was completely outfoxed by Mendis when he charged out, as the bowler, in his 19th match, broke Ajit Agarkar's record of 50 ODI wickets in 23 games.

A fine display from Ed Rainsford and a disciplined performance from the spinners earlier in the day had helped Zimbabwe restrict Sri Lanka to 210. Rainsford struck thrice to cripple Sri Lanka's top order, while Utseya and Ray Price tightened the noose by checking the run-flow in the middle overs.

After being put in by Zimbabwe under hazy conditions, the Sri Lankan openers made a solid start. Sanath Jayasuriya signalled his intent with two fours off Rainsford in the first over.

The run-rate never dipped below five as the partnership neared fifty, but having lifted Elton Chigumbura for a six over long-on the previous ball, Jayasuriya fell chasing a wide delivery, caught by Masakadza at first slip.

Zimbabwe took their second Powerplay as Rainsford came back for a second spell and struck immediately, trapping Sangakkara leg before. Jayawardene's miserable run against Zimbabwe continued as he was dismissed in Rainsford's next over, caught behind for a duck by Taibu off a thickish outside edge. Rainsford continued strongly, and when Chamara Kapugedera was caught plumb in front, Sri Lanka had slipped to 89 for 4.

Tharanga moved steadily towards his half-century, but another bowling change in the 21st over, with Utseya bringing himself on, did the trick, as he trapped Tharanga lbw for 42.

Price was then brought on as Zimbabwe switched to spin at both ends, looking to make further inroads. However, Jehan Mubarak and Mathews battled bravely to get Sri Lanka back in the game. They were slow, aiming primarily to consolidate. Their fifty stand took 14 overs but was brought up in emphatic fashion, Mathews hitting Tawanda Mupariwa for a six straight down the ground.

But having taken the third Powerplay in the 42nd over, Mubarak took his chances against Price and ended up holing out to Williams at mid-on, bringing an end to the sixth-wicket partnership of 69. Thushara hit two sixes in a Dabengwa over but Sri Lanka could manage just 22 runs in the Powerplay. Mathews brought up his fifty in the 49th over, and his workmanlike innings ensured Sri Lanka at least had a reasonable total to defend.

Zimbabwe can still make the finals, unless Bangladesh manage a major upset against Sri Lanka in the final match of the tri-series on Wednesday.


Friday, January 9, 2009

Ajantha Mendis, among the best cricketers of 2008

Ajantha Mendis has been nominated as one of the top players for the 2008 cricinfo awards.

Among the nominees for the best performance are players Sachin Tendulkar, Graeme Smith, James Anderson, Harbhajan Singh, Andrew Flintoff etc,


Ajantha Mendis’s name was nominated as he displayed magnificent performance in the final match against India in the Asian Cup.

The jury consisting of Ian Chapel, Tony Greig, David Loid, Ramiz Raja and 11 other persons will announce the winners according to their performance next week.

The Cricinfo awards were introduced in the year 2007 and Sri Lankan batsman and wicket keeper Kumar Sangakkara and Zaheer Khan won the awards for the best batsman and for the best bowling in test cricket while Adam Gilchrist and Lasith Malinga were awarded for the best one day performance.

Mendis spins magic to rout Bangladesh


SPIN sensation Ajantha Mendis picked up three wickets as Sri Lanka closed in on an emphatic win over Bangladesh on the fourth day of the second and final Test in Chittagong yesterday.

Mendis took 3-23 off 10 overs as the host struggled to 62-5 at tea in its second innings after being set a massive 624 to win the match and level the series.

The home side, which made 208 in its first innings, lost its openers with just 22 on the scoreboard.

Mendis triggered the slide when he removed Imrul Kayes (5) in his first over, caught at first slip by skipper Mahela Jayawardene.

Veteran paceman Chaminda Vaas removed Kayes's opening partner Tamim Iqbal (17), having him caught behind, before Mendis returned to dismiss Junaid Siddique and Mohammad Ashraful.

Siddique was trapped leg before wicket while Ashraful edged to wicketkeeper Prasanna Jayawardene after failing to read a googly from the unorthodox spinner.

Raqibul Hasan saw his middle stump uprooted by a reverse-swinging ball from fast bowler Dilhara Fernando and Bangladesh slipped to a precarious 5-52.

Earlier, Tillakaratne Dilshan notched his second century of the match.

Dilshan, 32, hit 14 fours and a six in his sparkling innings of 143 off 175 balls to steer the visiting side to a declaration at 6-447 in its second innings.

Dilshan, who top-scored with 162 in Sri Lanka's first-innings 384, became the fourth Sri Lankan to score two hundreds in a match after Duleep Mendis, Asanka Gurusinha and Aravinda de Silva.

Ajantha Mendis is the sorcerer's apprentice


IF you observe Balapuwaduge Ajantha Winslo Mendis at a press conference, you can almost imagine Alice in Wonderland.

Along with the enigmatic smiles as his captain or manager translates his answers from Sinhala to English, there is a sense of wide-eyed wonder, almost as if he's asking himself: “What am I doing here and how did it happen?”

Just three years ago, Mendis, then 20, was trying to figure out what to do with his life. His academic career had been undistinguished, and he was playing for a local club when a chance encounter changed his life.

The Sri Lankan Army provided the opposition, and they liked what they saw of the youngster. After learning that Mendis was unemployed, the army made their move. His mother, a pious Catholic who raised her sister's children alongside her own, was reluctant, but the army's coaches managed to convince her that her son wouldn't be sent to the war front in Jaffna.

When he got to the army, Saman Hewavitharana, his coach, was amazed by what he saw.

“When he joined the army, he had only the off-break and leg-break,” he said recently. “But on his own, he started developing other deliveries at practice.”

The army had no great cricketing tradition and played in Tier B of the championship. In tandem with Seekuge Prasanna, a leg-spinner who dismissed Sachin Tendulkar in India's tour opener, Mendis inspired the army's run to the title. His contribution was 68 wickets at 10.51, and though there was little media coverage of the second rung, the buzz around the grounds where he played forced the selectors to take notice.

An Australian with fond memories of the subcontinent also played his part. In 1969-70, Ashley Mallett took 28 Indian wickets with his off-spin as Bill Lawry's side triumphed 3-1. Four decades on, he holds spin clinics twice a year in Sri Lanka.

Ruwan Kalpage, who played 11 Tests for Sri Lanka in the 1990s, was the chief coach at the spinners' clinic, and Mallett recommended Mendis get some special attention.


While they watched him, they did nothing to tamper with his unique style and repertoire. It's rare enough to find someone who bowls off-breaks, leg-breaks, flippers and googlies with a measure of control, but what Mendis has is a special delivery comparable to Coca Cola's secret 7X ingredient. Like the soft drink, there's real fizz off the pitch, but it's only when you watch the replays that you can marvel at the method behind it.


Holding the ball along the seam between forefinger and thumb, with the seam then pointed in the direction of gully, Mendis propels the ball with the knuckle and nail of his middle finger. If you try it at home, the chances are that the ball will drop somewhere near your feet. He manages to land it perfectly time after time, and after pitching, it zips away from the batsman like a leg-cutter.

Some have named it the “carrom ball” because of the manner in which the leather is flicked towards the batsman, and along with a loopy googly that he disguises beautifully, it remains the most potent weapon in his armoury.

When he made his one-day debut against West Indies a few months ago, commentators such as Colin Croft struggled to classify him. Hewavitharana, his former coach, calls him a “spin mix bowler”, while a Sri Lankan journalist who asked Mendis himself was astonished when he answered: “I'm an off-cutter bowler.”

His variations were far too much for both Pakistan and India at the Asia Cup in June-July, with the Indian humiliation in the final especially acute. The cream of a young batting line-up that had beaten Australia earlier in the year was rendered clueless, and commentators back in India were left to console themselves with the thought that the middle-order legends would all be back for the Test series in Sri Lanka.

After his 6-13 in that Asia Cup final, the hype surrounding Mendis was similar to the fame that David Beckham found with his 50-yard goal against Wimbledon more than a decade earlier.

India tried to play down the threat, with Rahul Dravid saying: “It will be a mistake to focus just on Mendis. We have come up against a lot of bowlers in our time and have succeeded against them.”

Prophetic words, as it turned out. Originally considered a one-day prospect, Mendis began to befuddle batsmen of the quality of Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene in the Sri Lankan nets. After his Asia Cup feats, the urge to throw him in at the deep end was irresistible.

That it would be a dream debut was seldom in doubt once Sri Lanka's batsmen had piled up 600 against a listless Indian attack. Mendis planted seeds of doubt in his first four overs, and then reaped the reward with the first delivery of his fifth. The carrom ball on middle stump forced Dravid back in his crease, but by the time the bat arced down, the ball had crashed into the top of off stump. Anil Kumble and Zaheer Khan were then bamboozled by his variations before a magnificent over fetched him the prize wicket.

At his best, VVS Laxman is a master against the turning ball, the man who demoralised Shane Warne by flicking against the spin through midwicket, and driving inside out through extra-cover. Mendis set him up with two carrom balls that barely missed the edge before a superb googly sneaked through bat and pad.

In the second innings, he took out Laxman and Dravid again to finish with match figures of 8-132 as Sri Lanka romped him by an innings and 238 runs.

“It's hard enough to pick him from the hand,” said an Indian batsman later. “But the way he gets it to spit off the pitch makes him even harder to play.”

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Ajantha Mendis puts Bangladesh in a spin | 2nd Test Vs Bangladesh 2008


Sri Lanka bowled themselves to a position of strength despite a rearguard rally by Bangladesh tailender Mashrafe Mortaza on the second day of the second and final Test here on Sunday.

Spinners Ajantha Mendis and Muttiah Muralitharan shared seven wickets to bowl out the hosts for 208 in their first innings in reply to Sri Lanka's strong 384.

It was Mortaza who spared Bangladesh the ignominy of following on, adding 63 for the last wicket with Shahadat Hossain (five not out) after they were reeling at 145-9.

Mortaza hit eight fours and two sixes, one each off Mendis and Muralitharan, in his 89-ball 63. The only other player to offer some resistance was skipper Mohammad Ashraful who made 45 off 100 balls with five fours and a six.

Sri Lankan openers Malinda Warnapura (seven) and Prasanna Jayawardene (six) took their team to 13-0 in their second innings at close for an overall lead of 189.

Mendis, playing only his fourth Test and his first away from home after missing the opening game in Dhaka due to an ankle injury, rattled the home team with his guiles.

He removed Mehrab Hossain (18) and the in-form Shakib Al Hasan for a first-ball duck off successive balls besides taking the wickets of Mushfiqur Rahim (21) and Raqibul Hasan to finish with figures of 4-71.

Mendis, who enjoyed a sensational debut against India last year picking 26 wickets from three Tests, also got able support from Muralitharan (3-62).

The veteran bowler brought to an end a spirited knock by Ashraful, who flayed him for a six and two fours in an over, by having him caught behind.

Earlier Chaminda Vaas dismissed both the openers to deny Bangladesh a strong start in their first innings.

The fast bowler removed Tamim Iqbal for a duck in the opening over and trapped Imrul Kayes leg before for six, Bangladesh slipping to a precarious 26-2.

Mendis picked the third Bangladeshi wicket to fall in the morning when Raqibul Hasan failed to read a straighter one from the bowler and was adjudged leg before.

Bangladesh's batsmen failed to build on the good work of their bowlers who dismissed the visitors after they had added just 13 runs to their overnight total of 371-6.

Shakib picked three of the four remaining wickets to finish with 4-109.

Sri Lanka lead the two-Test series 1-0 after winning the opening Test in Dhaka by 107 runs.

And then there was Mendis | Srilanka Cricket 2008 Review



January 3, 2009

A new dawn: Mendis has already almost taken over the mantle of main match-winner for Sri Lanka

Two thousand eight, according to Chinese astrology, was the Year of the Rat. For Sri Lanka cricket, it was the year of Ajantha Mendis.

The 23-year-old burst into the limelight in the Caribbean in April, bemusing the best of West Indies batsmen, who were at sea against the five varieties of spin he bowled. When Sri Lanka captain Mahela Jayawardene threw the ball to Mendis in the
first one-day international, in Port-of-Spain, little did anyone realise that it would herald a new genre of spin.

Shane Warne and Muttiah Muralitharan came into the limelight at a time when the art of spin bowling was dying. In the next 15 years or so they raised it to a level it had never attained before. But nothing lasts forever. Warne left the game in 2007 and Muralitharan is nearing the end of the road. The old fears were back that spin would become a dying art.

Then came Mendis.

Dwayne Bravo, the West Indies allrounder, recalled his first sighting: "[Ramnaresh] Sarwan had problems picking him, and from the time we saw this, most of the batsmen retreated to the dressing room and had a close look at his hand on the TV monitor." However, the best quote came from Rob Steen, on Cricinfo: "I have just seen the future of spin bowling - and his name is Ajantha Mendis."

Mendis really came into the limelight in his second ODI series, the
Asia Cup in Pakistan, where he spun his team to a remarkable 100-run victory over favourites India in the final in Lahore.

He continued to torment the Indian batting when they toured Sri Lanka for a
three-Test series and lost it 2-1. The difference was Mendis, who broke a 62-year-old record, held by England fast bowler Alec Bedser, by taking the most wickets in a debut series - 26.

The strong Indian batting line-up of Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly, and VVS Laxman was left so bemused by the mystics of Mendis' spin that they managed only three fifties between them.
With Mendis catching so much world attention it was no surprise when he won the ICC's Emerging Player of the Year award.

New kid on the block Ajantha Mendis, who promises to become Sri Lankan cricket's new chief match-winner, succeeding Muttiah Muralitharan, who has held the mantle for many years.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Bangladesh prepare for Mendis threat


Bangladesh's brave attempt at pulling off a record-breaking chase of 521 in Mirpur rounded off one of the most memorable months of Test cricket in recent memory. It also dispelled the notion that anything over 450 is unattainable in the fourth innings, even if it involves the weakest Test nation. Though the result didn't go their way, Bangladesh's effort has sparked some life and anticipation into the short series, which Sri Lanka were overwhelming favourites to sweep.

Now, though, Bangladesh find the bar raised much higher. The talking point in Chittagong has been the return of Ajantha Mendis to the Sri Lankan squad from an ankle injury. Should he play, the home side will find it that much harder to square the series. Mendis left the Indians clueless in the home series last year and, if he has his way on a slow turner here, Bangladesh could suffer equally. The two-day gap between Tests wouldn't have given Bangladesh enough time to prepare for Mendis. They may have handled Muttiah Muralitharan creditably on a fifth day pitch in Mirpur but Mendis, as recent history will tell you, is a different proposition.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Butt claims to have broken the Mendis code


Pakistan opener Salman Butt claims to have found the key to success against Sri Lankan mystery spinner Ajantha Mendis after watching him bowl during the Indian Premier League trials for Kolkata Knight Riders. "He bowls like the typical finger tape tennis bowlers you find playing on the streets of Pakistan and his success comes from the fact that he has a very good faster ball without any visible change to his bowling action or grip on the ball," Butt told.

Butt said he would now be more comfortable while facing up to the unorthodox off-spin of Mendis during Pakistan's upcoming series against Sri Lanka.

"At the end of the season, Mendis had appeared in trials for the Kolkata Knight Riders and I got a chance to watch him bowl and also played him in the nets," Butt said.


"He uses his top finger to obtain speed off the surface and turn without changing his action," the opener added.


Bowlers who use just two fingers to obtain turn and speed from tennis balls covered with tape in street cricket in Pakistan are described as tape tennis specialists.


Mendis has been a runaway success since the Asia Cup held in Pakistan last year during which he bamboozled the batsmen with his variations taking six for 13 in the final against India in Karachi.

Mendis has taken 48 wickets at an average of 10.12 in 18 one-day internationals besides scalping 26 in three Tests against India.

Ajantha Mendis | Young Sri Lankan has world in a spin


The most vivid sporting memories are generally seen in the flesh, but there was little more memorable in 2008 than a glimpse on television of a match being played halfway around the world.

It was a one-day international between West Indies and Sri Lanka. Its sole novelty was a young Sri Lankan spin bowler named Ajantha Mendis.

The moment of revelation came when Mendis bowled Darren Sammy, a lower-order batsman but one not lacking in ability. Sammy could hardly have been more bemused if the ball had disappeared entirely in its flight. Something remarkable had just flitted into view. The rest of the year confirmed that first impression.

India's batsmen, brought up in conditions that favor slow bowling, generally cope well with cricketing legerdemain and deception. Shane Warne, Australia's spin magician, had only a modest record against India. Yet India's batsmen were utterly confounded by the variations in pace, flight and spin that Mendis, 23, can summon up from his immensely powerful fingers.

In the final of the Asian Cup, he took six wickets for 13 runs against India. It was one of the best sets of figures ever in a one-day international.

Mendis then took 26 wickets in three five-day tests, the most ever in a three-match debut series, against the Indians. By the end of the series, India regarded Muttiah Muralitharan, international cricket's all-time record wicket-taker, as the softer option.

Mendis's averages per wicket - 10.12 in one-day internationals and 18.38 in tests - look like something from another, much lower-scoring age.

Cricket goes into 2009 with many imponderables, some entirely off-field. None on the field is more fascinating than whether Mendis maintains that early promise.

For now, he is a "mystery spinner." Batsman cannot work out his method and predict what is coming toward them.

Where earlier generations had only the evidence of their own eyes, experience and instincts and the game's grapevine, the moderns have access to intensive video analysis and nobody will be examined more closely than Mendis.

Those early averages, particularly the one-day one, will be hard to maintain unless Mendis is truly freakish. Yet they do suggest that Mendis will be a force for years to come.

Three remarkable spinners - Warne, Muralitharan and India's Anil Kumble - have towered over the past two decades.

Batsmen learned their methods and went cross-eyed examining film. Yet they continued to take hundreds of wickets. Mendis appears to have the mix of subtlety in variation and robustness in method to do the same.

Unlike Muralitharan, Mendis does not have to face worries about the legality of his bowling action. He is absent with an ankle injury from Sri Lanka's current series against Bangladesh, but he should be back in January for the greater challenge of tests in Pakistan.

A controversial figure among Sri Lanka's Tamil minority because he plays domestic cricket for the army club, he may, nevertheless, prolong the career of the Tamil hero, Muralitharan, who no longer has to carry the burden of bowling opposing teams out by himself.

Mendis is not the only rising practitioner of what was once thought a dying art. Shakib al-Hasan, a 21-year-old, could be the match winner Bangladesh has been looking for since it entered test cricket and India has a new wrist-spinner in Amit Mishra.

Fit-again Mendis joins Sri Lanka squad in Bangladesh


Sri Lankan spinner Ajantha Mendis joined the squad in Bangladesh Monday after a quick recovery from an ankle injury that was expected to keep him out of the test series.

Mendis, 23, suffered severe soft tissue damage in his right ankle during a domestic game early this month and was replaced by left-arm spinner Rangana Herath for the two-test series.

"My ankle is alright now as I am feeling no pain," Mendis told reporters on his arrival in Dhaka Monday.

He is now expected to play in the second test starting in Chittagong Saturday.

Sri Lanka are in command in the first test in Dhaka after taking an overall lead of 406 runs after the third day. Monday is rest day due to parliamentary elections.

The unorthodox finger spinner was declared Man-of-the-Series on his test debut against India in July-August, taking 26 wickets at 18.38 runs apiece to help clinch the three-game series 2-1.

If he plays in Chittagong, it will only be his fourth test.