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News

England gear up to battle with Sri Lanka - and the weather

England go into the second ODI without the injured James Anderson and up against a condifent Sri Lanka team, and the uncertain weather



James Kirtley: set to replace James Anderson
© Getty Images
In every sense, except the one that matters most, Colombo's weather has been regular as clockwork. At three o'clock this afternoon, with the groundstaff hovering expectantly between two practice nets in the middle of the Premadasa Stadium, the clouds rolled over and the rain came pouring down. It was the same story yesterday afternoon, and in all probability, it will be the same tomorrow as well, when the second one-day international is due to get underway.
As things stand, the rain may be regular, but, in fact, it shouldn't be raining at all. The current weather pattern has got the locals stumped. Sri Lanka's captain, Marvan Atapattu, was at a loss to explain the conditions, which are usually dry and sunny by this time of the year, with the monsoon left long behind. "It is pretty unusual," he said. "I can't remember it raining this consistently in the past."
"We can't control the weather, so we leave it well alone," said John Dyson, Sri Lanka's new coach, who was still beaming at the facile nature of his first match in charge. Nevertheless, as an Australian, Dyson was far more bullish about his homeland's prospects in Saturday's rugby World Cup final, than he was about Sri Lanka's chances of a clean sweep in this series. Strange really, seeing as he shares his name with a vacuum-cleaner manufacturer.
"I would expect England to come back strongly," warned Dyson. "After the Bangladesh series, maybe they were finding their cricket a little too easy. Tuesday's game will have been a useful wake-up call, if that is what they needed. It is clear that they are starting to gel into a good unit, so I'd be surprised if they play like that again."
They were magnanimous words, but the gloomy weather has been the only appropriate reflection of England's current mood. Just about everything that could go wrong in the last 48 hours, has gone wrong. As if the massacre in Dambulla wasn't bad enough, England are now facing up to the probable loss of half their strike force for the first Test at Galle. Only minutes after Steve Harmison's withdrawal had been confirmed last night, James Anderson twisted his ankle playing squash, and now faces a two-week lay-off.
"The injury is less than 24 hours old and we will need a few days to assess it," said Dean Conway, England's physio. "We are quite optimistic at this stage that he will be back in 10 days to two weeks, but that is based on a quick judgment." With Richard Johnson staying out in Harmison's place, and Matthew Hoggard already flying out to join the squad, no decision has yet been taken on whether a replacement will be required for Anderson.
But it just so happens that the next cab off the rank - to use the Australian vernacular - is the man against whom Anderson was playing when he suffered his injury. "We were just trying to get a bit of a sweat on," protested James Kirtley, who is sure to take Anderson's place tomorrow. "It seemed like a good idea at the time.
"I was actually at the other side of the court, attempting a return," he added, disassociating himself from the injury as far as he possibly could, "when I heard a thud. We immediately feared the worst."
Kirtley is well aware of the success that another skiddy English paceman enjoyed in the 2001 series: "Darren Gough and I are not dissimilar in style." It remains to be seen whether Kirtley would be as able and willing to go through his full repertoire of slower balls and legcutters to make an impact, although, it has to be said, the conditions are far more favourable than they were for Gough's tour.
For the time being, however, England's chances of a swift revenge are very much in the hands of the elements. The most recent match to be held at the Premadasa Stadium was the Champions' Trophy final between Sri Lanka and India, in September last year. That match really was scheduled slap-bang in the middle of the rainy season, and the upshot was a two-day farce in which no Champion could be determined, and no Trophy could be awarded outright.
Once again, a reserve day has been scheduled - just in case - although that is unlikely to find much favour with either England's players or their punters. Saturday's rugby final might just ensure that the ground would be devoid of travelling supporters, long before the rains had their say.
Sri Lanka (probable) 1 Sanath Jayasuriya, 2 Romesh Kaluwitharana (wk), 3 Marvan Atapattu (capt), 4 Kumar Sangakkara, 5 Mahela Jayawardene, 6 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 7 Upul Chandana, 8 Chaminda Vaas, 9 Dinusha Fernando, 10 Muttiah Muralitharan, 11 Nuwan Kulasekara.
England (probable) 1 Marcus Trescothick, 2 Andrew Strauss, 3 Michael Vaughan (capt), 4 Paul Collingwood, 5 Andrew Flintoff, 6 Rikki Clarke, 7 Ian Blackwell, 8 Chris Read (wk), 9 Ashley Giles, 10 Richard Johnson, 11 James Kirtley.
Andrew Miller is assistant editor of Wisden Cricinfo. He will be accompanying England throughout their travels in Sri Lanka.