Injury blow for Wrexham! Red Dragons defender Aaron Hayden forced off after just 15 minutes in FA Cup clash against Yeovil

Wrexham are looking to enjoy another FA Cup run in 2023-24, but that competition has cost them Aaron Hayden after losing the defender to injury.

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Welsh outfit in cup actionDefender forced off earlyParkinson changing plansWHAT HAPPENED?

Hayden, who has endured his fair share of misfortune on the fitness front in recent times, lasted less than 15 minutes of a second-round tie with Yeovil at SToK Racecourse. The sight of him slumping to the turf left Phil Parkinson with an early tactical tweak on his hands.

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Hayden went down after seeing Ollie Palmer net the opening goal of the game. While delighted to hit the front, the Red Dragons were left frustrated at seeing an important part of their defensive plans forced from the field.

DID YOU KNOW?

Hayden was replaced by James Jones, as Parkinson tinkered with the approach that had been drawn up prior to kick-off. With Jones more at home in the middle of the park, George Evans was asked to put his versatility to good use by slipping into the back four.

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GettyWHAT NEXT FOR HAYDEN?

Wrexham will be hoping that Hayden’s injury is not too serious, allowing him to return to action in the not too distant future, but they will have the January transfer window to work with – as co-owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney make more funds available – if reinforcements are required at the turn of the year.

Bell stages grand recovery

Ian Bell proved his talents remain unimpaired after the Ashes but Jonathan Trott’s start for Warwickshire has yet to convince the sceptics

George Dobell at Edgbaston14-Apr-2014
ScorecardIan Bell proved his talents remain unimpaired after the Ashes•Getty ImagesSo, bit by bit, little by little, the shape of the new England team becomes just a little clearer.This was a day on which Sam Robson all but nailed down the role of opening batsman, the day that Moeen Ali emerged as the most credible spin option – or the least incredible, anyway – and the day that Chris Jordan reasserted his claims for one of the seam bowling positions. Indeed, in this form, it will prove hard to deny him the new ball.While there was little doubt that Ian Bell or Alastair Cook would retain their places, both they and the England selectors will sleep just a little easier knowing they have centuries under their belts. Indeed, in the case of Cook, it was only his second century since May. If only a wicketkeeper would emerge, or remain fit, the selectors’ job would largely be done.Here, in front of the watching national selector James Whitaker, Bell provided a reminder, if any was required, of his undoubted class. He left the ball well, defended stoutly, concentrated almost without aberration and, as ever, put away the poor ball with a grace granted to very few. This was the 46th first-class century of his career, his 20th for Warwickshire and his fourth against Sussex.Just as was the case against Australia last summer, Bell delivered when his side were under pressure. True, the Sussex attack – impressive though it is – might lack the potency of the Australian attack and true, the level of pressure on a quiet day at Edgbaston might not be comparable to that of an Ashes Test. But, on a pitch that continues to offer assistance to the bowlers and in a situation where his side’s reliance upon him was absolute, Bell provided an innings of character, class, composure and substance. His driving was a delight and the late cut he played off Jon Lewis was a thing of beauty.”In my early days, maybe I scored a lot of nice runs that looked good on the eye but really didn’t change the course of the game,” Bell said afterwards. “But in the last two, three or four years, I’ve started to score those [important] runs a lot more often.”The way last summer went against Australia really gave me a lot of confidence – I came in at 20 for 3 a lot – so it was nice to get back into that rhythm.”For Jonathan Trott, the future is less certain. While a thorough examination of the facts does not really support the theory that he was undone by the short ball in Australia, the line between perception and reality is sometimes blurred to the point of irrelevance.It will not be remembered that, in this game, he played the moving ball in Warwickshire’s first innings better than anyone, but it will be remembered that he was, in the second innings, struck twice by short balls from Jordan – once on the helmet, once on the shoulder – and that he fell when pulling another short ball directly to the man positioned for the shot at backward square leg. These are early days in the comeback, but this was not a performance that will have had Whitaker pencilling his name down on any team sheets.It would be cruel fortune if, in a match that has been enriched by Sussex’s excellent catching in the cordon, it was one of their missed chances that proved crucial. But the fact is that Bell was reprieved on 23 when Ed Joyce, at gully, was unable to cling on to a tough, low chance offered off the bowling of Jimmy Anyon. Had it been held, the match might well have been completed within two days.Joyce also put down a sharp chance offered by Jeetan Patel, on 28, off the deserving Jordan. It allowed Warwickshire’s eighth-wicket partnership to graduate, in the eyes of Sussex, from irritation to genuine threat with the bucolic Patel dominating a unbroken stand of 69. With a lead approaching 250 and two days to go, Warwickshire are right back in this game. Sussex looked weary, both with the ball and in the field, some time before the end.While the Sussex seam attack is excellent, their spin attack is modest and threatens to derail any aspirations they have on the Championship title. Ashar Zaidi may yet emerge as a good quality batsman who bowls useful spin in limited-overs cricket, but his low, slingy left-arm action will surely have little joy in the Championship. Luke Wells and Rory Hamilton-Brown, who were also pressed into service as spinners, are not the answer, either.When Bell came to the crease, Warwickshire were two wickets down and still 98-runs in arrears. Varun Chopra, who has not enjoyed a distinguished game, left one that swung back at him and Laurie Evans, his weight perhaps falling to the offside, edged a decent delivery that may have left him. Later Chris Woakes and Tim Ambrose were also beaten by deliveries that bounced and left them just a fraction. It was fine bowling.But with Rikki Clarke, Bell added 132 in 40 overs for the sixth wicket. Clarke, who has now added responsibility to his array of natural talents, resisted with admirable patience and waited for the over-pitched delivery before launching into those flowing drives.He sustained one sharp blow to the right hand off Jordan when on 49 that clearly caused him great pain and reduced him to something approaching a one-handed batsman afterwards. He went for an X-ray after play and may well have sustained a broken finger. His absence in the Warwickshire slip cordon, and with the ball, could yet prove crucial in this game.So, too, might be the absence of the heavy roller. Both sides have used their allocation in this game – Warwickshire before play on day two; Sussex at lunch on day one – and without its deadening effects, it may be that the pitch offers increasing help to spinners and seamers alike.”I always thought 200 would be a tough chase at Edgbaston with some deterioration,” Bell said. “It does spin towards the end and there will be some help for Patel.”Despite a first innings score of just 87, Warwickshire might even have their noses in front at this stage.

Explained: Why Real Madrid are bizarrely wearing their away kit from LAST SEASON for Valencia clash – it's an incredible coincidence

Real Madrid have been forced to wear last season's away kit for their clash with Valencia on Saturday – here's why.

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Real to wear last season's away kitPlaying Valencia on the roadCan extend lead at top of La LigaWHAT HAPPENED?

Real face Valencia on Saturday night and will hope to extend their lead at the top of La Liga to nine points with a victory. However, they have been forced to raid the wardrobe and find last season's away kit to wear during the game, due to a bizarre coincidence.

AdvertisementTHE EXPLANATION

Real are wearing their purple away kit because both their away and third kits this season match the black Valencia shorts and socks. As a result, because their home kit is white, as is Valencia's, they have been forced into the remarkable step of wearing last season's strip instead.

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Real won the reverse fixture in thumping fashion, as they ran out 5-1 winners at the Bernabeu, thanks to a pair of braces from Vinicius Junior and Rodrygo, and a strike from Dani Carvajal. They will be out to repeat the trick this weekend.

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After facing Valencia, Real are back in Champions League action against RB Leipzig on Wednesday in the second leg of their round of 16 tie. Real have a 1-0 lead from the first leg.

Cutting half-century rescues Queensland

Ben Cutting’s highest first-class score rescued Queensland from a potential debacle on the first day against Tasmania in Hobart, where he finished the day unbeaten on 72

ESPNcricinfo staff17-Feb-2012
ScorecardBen Cutting showed his skills with the bat•Getty ImagesBen Cutting’s highest first-class score rescued Queensland from a potential debacle on the first day against Tasmania in Hobart, where he finished the day unbeaten on 72. Jackson Bird took five wickets to reduce the Bulls to 8 for 89 shortly after Cutting came to the crease but by stumps they had reached 9 for 195, with Alister McDermott also not out on 10.Cutting and Steve Magoffin (17) had put together a 54-run partnership for the ninth wicket as Cutting went after the Tasmania bowlers, having decided that attack was the only way to survive on a difficult pitch. He scored his 72 off 74 balls, including four sixes, and he went past his previous highest score of 58 with consecutive sixes off Jason Krejza.Queensland had been in early trouble having been sent in when Wade Townsend was caught behind in the first over of the match and his opening partner Ryan Broad was lbw to Bird with the total on 13. Joe Burns dug in with 43 either side of a rain delay, but the only other specialist batsmen to reach double figures were Andrew Robinson with 19 and Chris Lynn with 16.Bird ran through the middle order and finished with 5 for 56, his third five-wicket haul in an outstanding debut season in which he has collected 28 victims at 16.85. His work was all the more important because the Tigers had lost James Faulkner to a back injury before the start of play, while the Queensland captain James Hopes was also ruled out due to a knee problem.

Karachi Dolphins seal place in semis

A round-up of the latest round of the Faysal Bank Super Eight T-20 Cup

ESPNcricinfo staff31-Mar-2012Karachi Dolphins won what was essentially a must-win game for them against Lahore Eagles by five wickets, at the Rawalpindi Cricket Stadium, to secure their spot in the semi-finals of the Faysal Bank Super Eight T-20 Cup. Karachi put Lahore in to bat and kept them to 148 for 8, as all of their bowlers shared the wickets around. Imran Farhat with 41 was the top-scorer for Lahore, and the innings was built around his two sizeable stands with Taufeeq Umar and then Azhar Ali. The Lahore bowlers made early inroads in the chase, before two rapid half-century stands among Khalid Latif, Asad Shafiq and Sheharyar Ghani put the team on course. Eventually Karachi got home with 11 balls to spare, despite a tidy spell from left-arm spinner Mustafa Iqbal, in which he took 3 for 26.Karachi will play Lahore Lions in the first semi-final on Saturday.Sialkot Stallions finished on top of Group B, ensuring a spot in the semis, with a convincing seven-wicket win against hosts Rawalpindi Rams. After Rawalpindi chose to bat, their batsmen struggled to build on starts and score at a rapid pace. Though four batsmen got into the 20s, Rawalpindi only managed to edge past 120 because of a last-over six from No. 10 Mohammad Nawaz. Left-arm spinner Raza Hasan was the most effective of the Sialkot bowlers, claiming 3 for 20 in his four. Chasing 122, Sialkot’s top three batsmen all but closed out the game with partnerships of 50 and 55 at almost ten an over. Imran Nazir ended up the top-scorer, hitting four sixes in his knock of 59 off 34 balls, as Sialkot powered to a win with all of 27 balls to spare.Sialkot will play Peshawar Panthers in the second semi-final on Saturday.

'Disappointed to settle for draw' – Mushfiqur

The first Test in Chittagong was only Bangladesh’s second instance of drawing a match against New Zealand but home captain Mushfiqur Rahim was not satisfied with the result

Mohammad Isam in Chittagong13-Oct-2013The first Test in Chittagong was only Bangladesh’s second drawn match against New Zealand but the home captain Mushfiqur Rahim was not satisfied with the result.”We are disappointed to settle for a draw,” he said. “It was an opportunity, and if the wicket was any different, it would have been a different ball game for our spinners. We could have lost, but at the same time we could have used our full strength. Credit goes to them also, they played well.”Five out of New Zealand’s eight wins against Bangladesh were by an innings and the only time the margin was tight was during the 2008 Chittagong Test, which New Zealand eventually won by three wickets. With a head-to-head like that, the expectation was on New Zealand to seize the initiative in the second innings, especially with a lead of 85 runs at the start of the final day.”On that wicket it was hard to generate a good strike-rate, ” McCullum, the New Zealand captain, said. “When we looked to go after the bowling, a couple of balls kept low, a couple turned. They made it difficult for us by picking up wickets. I certainly can’t fault our batting tactics. We are happy with 256 off 46 overs. We played some good cricket in this game. Bangladesh did well too. None of the teams gave away an inch. It is a nice way to start a tour.”McCullum’s calculations had not revolved around a total as much as protecting his fast bowlers on a pitch that had nothing for them. “The way we batted before lunch and just after lunch prior to the hat-trick, we set a target in mind. But it was about the number of overs we leave for our seamers to bowl. We didn’t want to leave too many overs.Mushfiqur hadn’t expected New Zealand to attack any more than they did in the one-and-a-half sessions they batted. “I wasn’t too surprised at their approach in the second innings. We pretty much knew that they wouldn’t attack us early. They always had to take a safe option from where they couldn’t lose. We knew that they wouldn’t want to lose wickets. We knew they’d attack after lunch, so Gazi’s spell was just amazing”Mushfiqur was pleased with the performances of his spinners Gazi and Abdur Razzak, who had to shoulder a greater share of the 247.1 overs bowled by Bangladesh, because Shakib-Al-Hasan and Robiul Islam were returning from injury.”We had to be careful managing the load of the bowlers,” he said. “Sohag and Razzak are good bowlers, and we had to make sure Shakib slowly comes back to full load. Robiul has also been injured for the last three months, so he too bowled less than Rubel, who took up the responsibility.”McCullum was content with his side’s batting after Kane Williamson and BJ Watling’s centuries set up a huge first-innings total and he saw encouraging signs from his spinners as well, who claimed five wickets between them. “Our batting was a positive. We got 469 batting first with couple of guys getting big scores. The second innings was positive too. We were behind the game but the guys still applied their processes and plans so that we could set a declaration. We need to improve our fielding. The pacers did well in trying conditions. The spinners did better as the game went on.”

Sublime Bopara downs Gloucs

Ravi Bopara confirmed his recovery from a leg injury with a brilliant 120 not out as Essex easily reached their target of 225 to beat Gloucestershire by eight wickets at Chelmsford and claim their first CB40 victory of the season.

04-Jun-2012
ScorecardRavi Bopara made his seventh List A hundred•Getty ImagesRavi Bopara confirmed his recovery from a leg injury with a brilliant 120 not out as Essex easily reached their target of 225 to beat Gloucestershire by eight wickets at Chelmsford and claim their first CB40 victory of the season.Bopara’s injury had ruled him out for three weeks but he was soon showing that his lay-off had not affected him. From the moment he walked out to open the innings, he took charge with a succession of superbly timed drives and with Tom Westley striking the ball equally well at the other end, it soon became clear that Gloucestershire’s total of 224 for 5 was not nearly enough.The pair had come together after Mark Pettini’s departure in the first over, when he was caught at slip off Ian Saxelby without a run on the board, and went on to put together a partnership of 185.That was broken when Westley’s enterprising knock of 82 from 99 balls, nine of which he dispatched to the boundary, ended as he was stumped off Will Gidman.But Bopara, who raised his 50 with a straight driven six against left-arm spinner Ed Young, went on to complete his century from 91 deliveries, with two sixes and eight fours, and he was to add another four boundaries as Essex secured victory with 19 balls to spare.Like Essex, the visitors had also seen their openers separated in the first over when Graham Napier breached the defences of Will Gidman, a dismissal that was to put them firmly on the back foot. It was not until the 14th over that the 50 was raised, before which Hamish Marshall was beaten for pace and bowled by Tymal Mills.So pedestrian was Gloucestershire’s progress that they needed 27 overs to send the total into three figures. But then Kane Williamson and Ian Cockbain were to inject much-needed life into the innings with a fifth-wicket partnership of 85 in 11 overs. It ended when Williamson was caught behind by James Foster off David Masters for 77, which came from 73 deliveries and contained seven fours and a six.Cockbain and Jack Taylor maintained the tempo over the remaining four overs, Cockbain finishing unbeaten on 52 from 44 balls with a six among his four boundaries. Taylor’s unbeaten 22 came off a dozen deliveries and ensured a respectable if not demanding total.

Yorkshire full of Bresnan beans

Tim Bresnan took 4 for 41 on his first outing since elbow surgery but Phil Mustard’s breezy 70 prevented Yorkshire taking full control

David Hopps at Chester-le-Street24-Apr-2013
ScorecardTim Bresnan celebrates the first of his four wickets on his first-class return from injury•Getty ImagesThe anticipation of an Ashes series can exhaust you before it has even begun. It is ten weeks before the first ball is bowled at Trent Bridge and already it is discussed on a daily basis. For Tim Bresnan, though, the attempt to force himself into Ashes contention really did start here. It has to be said it started rather well.After a second elbow operation in the close season, Bresnan’s opening first-class match of the season carried special significance. He spent much of his last year with England below par and needs to prove in the weeks ahead that injury will not reduce his impact for good; that – in his own words – he can bowl with beans again.Durham, as vulnerable as any batting side in the top division, were an appealing prospect so early in the season. As if to quicken Bresnan’s anticipation further, Australia had just named their Ashes squad. The announcement seems rather premature but presumably these days they have to allow several weeks to plan their way through Border Control.Bresnan sniffed the wind, muscled his way into the crease and, with his first Championship delivery of the season, sent Keaton Jennings’ off stump flying. It was some comeback and, as he leapt high into the air, some celebration. Figures of 4 for 47 as Durham’s first innings came to rest at 237 represented an impressive start. At the end of it all, the only possible conclusion was that he was in the category of ‘has beans’ rather than ‘has-beens’.”I had full beans,” he agreed. “No pain, decent rhythm. It felt good. That’s as close to 100 per cent as I’m probably going to get. I’m ready for England – I’ve just got to get my name on the sheet. It’s always nice conditions to bowl up here. There was a bit in the wicket and we were quite surprised when they batted.”Jennings is a 20-year-old South African, but his mother was born just up the road in Sunderland and in these parts that makes him local. His father is Ray Jennings, a former South Africa coach with a reputation as a bit of a stickler. If Keaton does not break his run of failures soon, Dad could be on the phone and it might not be pretty.Will Smith’s wicket was borne of desperation. Smith had added 86 with Dale Benkenstein and Bresnan felt he had suffered enough playing and missing for one day. He decided to bowl a bouncer and see what happened; Smith obligingly hooked it to Ryan Sidebottom at long leg. The wickets came in a rush, five within 10 overs with Bresnan removing Ben Stokes and Paul Collingwood for ducks.Not that it was an entirely satisfying day for Yorkshire. When the first day closed with Graham Onions’ successful lbw appeal, and the dismissal of Yorkshire’s captain Andrew Gale, Durham had three down for 57. A running mix-up had also cost Yorkshire the wicket of Phil Jaques as Onions, with one stump to aim at, threw down the wicket off his own bowling.When Durham were 112 for 7, Yorkshire had reason to expect something better, but while Bresnan, Ryan Sidebottom and Steve Patterson went for two runs an over, Liam Plunkett and Adil Rashid disappeared for more than six. Durham’s last three wickets added 125, with Phil Mustard hitting about him with a hearty glow before he was last out for 70. He clumped Bresnan over mid-on to bring up 200, he clumped Patterson in similar fashion for his fifty; he likes a clump more than most.Yorkshire will picture their seam attack without Bresnan in midsummer and feel a little queasy. Plunkett can most kindly be regarded as a work in progress. He can bowl a killer ball, as he underlined when he had Scott Borthwick lbw with the first ball of his second spell, but his return to his old Chester-le-Street stamping ground was not a happy one. His ten overs leaked 67 runs and Mustard at one stage took three boundaries from four balls. The triumphant homecoming will have to wait.

England's top order must respond – Bell

Ian Bell has acknowledged that England’s top-order batsmen will have to perform far better if they are regain a footing in the ODI series against India

George Dobell21-Jan-2013Ian Bell has acknowledged that England’s top-order batsmen will have to perform far better if they are regain a footing in the ODI series against India. England suffered their second crushing loss in succession in the third ODI on Saturday to allow India to take a 2-1 lead with two games to play and Bell knows that, with England having been bowled out for totals of 158 and 155, they will need to improve substantially if they are to prevent India securing a series victory in Wednesday’s game in Mohali.It is no coincidence that England won the first game of the series following a dominant performance from their top-order. Bell and Alastair Cook posted an opening stand of 158 within 28 overs to allow the middle-order to accelerate in the later stages of the innings.While Bell accepted that India’s opening bowlers had performed admirably in the last couple of games, he stressed the need for one of England’s top-order to bat through most of the innings to provide a platform for the middle-order. He hopes that the cooler conditions in Mohali might benefit England.”If we are going to get 150, that’s not going to challenge India at all in these conditions,” Bell said. “We need to get runs on the board and get a senior batsman batting for the majority of the overs.”We haven’t done that in the last two games and if we do that we can push India. In the final two games we need to get into a position to hurt India at the back end of the innings.”Their opening bowlers are very good,” he added. “They have plenty of skills and swing the ball both ways. They have made us work really hard. But we need a foundation for our big hitters in the middle to get us going.”It’s a little bit more familiar here than the last couple of games and obviously that’s nice. It’s been very nice here, very English really. That sure helps everyone.”The situation also presents the first significant test of Ashley Giles’ new career as an international coach. While Giles’ first series as England’s limited-overs coach was always likely to prove demanding – England’s limited-overs record in India offered little room for optimism – the extent of the last two defeats has been alarming.But, while Giles will consider changes to the England side ahead of the fourth match, he is also keen not to over-react. He knows, both from the ups and downs of his time as an international player and from his time as director of cricket at Warwickshire, that a calm appraisal of such adversity is infinitely preferable to any hint of panic or knee-jerk reaction.”I never, or probably only a couple of times, stamped my feet when I was at Warwickshire,” Giles said. “If the coach is on an emotional rollercoaster you end up with a team that is second guessing what your reaction will be if you win or lose. That’s not how I want to be.”Honesty is the important thing. You have to analyse where you’ve gone wrong, look at your personnel, pull those things together and ask ‘are we getting it right? Is this the right mix? Are they the right people?’ That’s the unemotional way of looking at it.”The hairdryer treatment works occasionally but not very often, not if you’re in it for the long term. If I did that after my third game, there would be a lot of worry.”However, Giles did provide the strongest hint yet that there may be changes to the England side. Concern over Craig Kieswetter’s form – though it has not been much worse than Eoin Morgan’s – has raised the possibility to him making way for his Somerset team-mate, Jos Buttler, though doubts about the latter’s wicketkeeping could count against him.While England’s batting has been their main downfall in the last couple of matches there will also be a temptation to make some changes to the bowling attack. Jade Dernbach has conceded his runs at a cost of an average cost of 7.79 an over in the series to date and, after 21 ODIs, concedes more runs per over than anyone to have bowled over 1,000 ODI deliveries: an average 6.28 runs per over. Mohali may provide an opportunity to take a look at Stuart Meaker.”That statistic is tough on Jade because he’s played a lot of cricket in India and it’s a hard place to come and play,” Giles said. “But again you have to adapt. What the Indians have done very well is hold lengths and lines, so you have to go at them to try to score. Really that’s what we’ve got to do.”Perhaps the most obvious message to England in the series to date is how much they miss Jonathan Trott. England won 12 out of 13 ODIs involving Trott in 2012 and, in that time, were never dismissed for under 200. In three out of four games without him, however, they have failed to reach 200 and been defeated in all three. Rested for this part of the tour, he returns to the side in New Zealand.In his absence, England might promote Joe Root to bat at No. 3. Root has faced more deliveries than any other England batsman in the last two games and might offer stability at the top of the order and provide Morgan and Kevin Pietersen with some protection from the newer balls. Long-term, though, Root is the only member of the top five unlikely to feature in England’s Champions Trophy side, so Giles is expecting more from his experienced players.”Changes are something that myself, Alastair Cook and the coaches will talk about,” Giles said. “We’ve got options and part of this trip is to look at those options, because we’re missing some senior players. This is where you find out about people, under pressure.”This group has been very refreshing and what we want to avoid is them just feeling beaten up. We have to pick the best team to win the next game of cricket. That will be a hot topic over the next day or two.”

Pressure on SL to end on high – Chandimal

Sri Lanka’s new Twenty20 captain Dinesh Chandimal has admitted there is significant pressure on the hosts to finish the home series against Bangladesh on a high note

Andrew Fernando in Pallekele30-Mar-2013Sri Lanka’s new Twenty20 captain Dinesh Chandimal has admitted there is significant pressure on the hosts to finish the home series against Bangladesh on a high note, ahead of the one-off Twenty20 in Pallekele on Sunday. The hosts had been expected to win each series comprehensively, but could only draw the ODI series 1-1, and allowed Bangladesh to draw a Test against Sri Lanka, for the first time.Chandimal is now set to lead a young, inexperienced side, which will feature at least one debutant, as six uncapped Twenty20 players have been named in the 16-man squad. They will likely play four top-order batsmen with less than 15 matches’ experience, and two specialist bowlers who have each played less than five Twenty20s.”Bangladesh won the last match and will be in a good mental state. But our players have got a big chance here and they will hopefully take that opportunity,” Chandimal said. “It’s a lot of pressure, but I like to play with that pressure. As a cricketer, there has to be pressure when we play, because that’s when we can truly overcome challenges. We never underestimated Bangladesh, because they are an improving side in world cricket.”I have to be content with this team, because as youngsters, this is the kind of tour that they should be given opportunities in. When you are playing your first or second match, it’s better if you play teams like Bangladesh and Zimbabwe and then get the confidence to play big matches against Australia and England. It’s good if they can learn from their time with the seniors and take their cricket forward.”Chandimal has never captained a national team at age-group level, but he had had a superlative season as captain of Ananda College, in Colombo, where he led his side to an unprecedented 13 outright wins in 2008. He was one of several candidates for Test captaincy as well, despite his youth, but eventually Angelo Mathews was given the role, and Chandimal made vice-captain.”I was captain in Under-19 and U-15 teams as well, in a few provincial matches. This is a great challenge, because captaining the national team is not something everyone can do. We need to talk to all our players, of every level of experience and figure out how we are going to improve and win more matches for our country.”We don’t have the experienced players like Kumar Sangakkara and Tillakaratne Dilshan, who played well in the last two series. But I think there are great young players like Dilshan Munaweera and Kusal Perera. This is a great opportunity for the young players.”Chandimal singled out Nasir Hossain as a particular threat among the opposition batsmen, and said Sri Lanka had grown wary of his strengths during the tour. Nasir walloped 33 runs from 27 deliveries in the third ODI, to propel his side to victory, and had struck 73 not out from 59 deliveries to close out the innings in the first ODI as well, in addition to the Test ton he scored in Galle.”Bangladesh’s batsmen have improved a lot from how they were before. Nasir Hossain has been the batsman who has batted the best in the ODI series, and he’s been consistent throughout the tour, so we’ve got a plan for him. We’ve got plans for all the others as well. We’re hoping that tomorrow we can come through in those situations, and showcase our talent.”

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