The carrom-ball : Giving 'em the finger

The newest addition to cricket's lexicon is derived from a non-contact sport



First and best: Dravid falls to the carrom-ball © AFP

What is carrom-ball?
"Carrom-ball" is the popular term for the middle-finger-flicked delivery bowled by the Sri Lankan spinner Ajantha Mendis. While bowling this delivery, he holds the ball along the seam - the seam usually facing gully - between thumb and index finger, and flicks it with the middle finger (much like the striker is flicked in the board game carrom).

How does the carrom-ball behave?
Most times it angles into the right-hand batsman on a low trajectory at high pace and then breaks away. At times it just straightens, as opposed to breaking away. The batsman, in both cases, is forced to try and cover the line, and then finds it too late to recover once the ball turns or straightens, leaving him vulnerable to many forms of dismissal: caught at slip or off the leading edge, bowled, lbw, and stumped.

How effective has the delivery been?
Mendis has been phenomenally successful, with 26 wickets in three Tests and 27 in 11 ODIs to date, and the carrom-ball is an important weapon in his armoury. His first Test wicket (in picture, right) came off one such: a fast legbreak that squared Rahul Dravid up, and took the top of off stump. Notable among his many carrom-ball victims has been VVS Laxman, lbw in the second innings of the second Test, and then stumped in the first innings of the third.

What is the origin of the term?
Mahendra Mapagunaratne, a Sri Lankan lawyer based in Toronto, is believed to have come up with the phrase, which has quickly caught on among commentators and cricket writers.

Sri Lanka, by the way, are the reigning world champions at carrom. Their men's team beat India in the final, played in Cannes earlier this year.

Spin kills

Never before Mendis has a spinner dominated Indian batsmen so comprehensively and collectively




The ball of the 21st century: Dravid squared up and stunned, his off stump disturbed, was more significant than Gatting's dismissal by Warne © AFP

I had followed India's Test fortunes for 45 years, and never once in that time had I seen the Indian batsmen devastated by a slow bowler through a whole series. Just before the Indian tour of Sri Lanka began, India were beaten by Sri Lanka in the final of the Asia Cup. Mahendra Singh Dhoni confessed that his batsmen couldn't read Ajantha Mendis at all. I was intrigued by the prospect of Tendulkar and Co. - who hadn't taken part in the ODI tournament - playing this latter-day John Gleeson over a Test rubber, but not especially worried because of India's record against spin bowlers.

They had played some good ones. The first Test series I followed was the MCC's tour of 1963-64, and England's main strike-bowler was that fine offspinner, Fred Titmus, who took 27 wickets in five Tests. Every one of those Tests, though, was drawn. In the last Test in Kanpur, India followed on, thanks to a marathon spell of fine slow bowling by Titmus, whose bowling analysis in the first innings read: 60-37-73-6. But he made no headway in the second innings, managing one wicket in 34 overs as India saved the match comfortably.

This set the tone for India's encounters with opposing spinners: the good ones like Titmus, Lance Gibbs, Derek Underwood, Ashley Mallett, Abdul Qadir, Saqlain Mushtaq, Shane Warne and Muthiah Muralitharan got wickets, but not consistently enough to instill fear. Underwood claimed one five-wicket haul in 20 matches. Warne, the greatest legspinner in the history of the game, averaged some 47 runs per wicket against India, and like Underwood managed five wickets in an innings once.

There was something purposeful about the way in which Indian batsmen set about spinners. I remember Tendulkar going after Warne in a first-class game in Mumbai in 1998-99, when the legspinner arrived, riding the crest of his reputation as the greatest spinner in the world. Tendulkar hit a double century, and Warne went for more than 100 for no wickets. Then Navjot Singh Sidhu decided Warne had to go in the Test series, and we were treated to the rare spectacle of convergence in cricket: a spinner walking up to the stumps to bowl and a batsman running down the wicket to hit him. VVS Laxman and Tendulkar, in the 2001-02 home series, nearly ended Warne's career; by the time India won the last Test in Chennai, Warne was reduced to bowling bouncers.

Murali has a better record against India than Warne: 88 wickets at a little over 30 runs per wicket, and more significantly he has bagged six five-fors. I remember a sensational spell of bowling by Murali at the Feroz Shah Kotla, where he went round the wicket, and for half an hour had the Indians groping as his doosras spat off the pitch and jagged away and his offspinners straightened. But for all his genius, Murali was never feared by Indian batsmen in the way that men like Fred Trueman, Wes Hall, Alan Donald and Glenn McGrath were.

Till the helmet arrived, most Indian batsmen were so vulnerable to quick bowling, that spinners, regardless of quality, were seen as light relief. After the helmet, they improved against the fast men, but retained the traditional view of opposing spinners as extras, men who made up the numbers. Occasionally, when the stars were strangely aligned, India lost a Test to spinners, as in Bangalore when Tauseef Ahmed and Iqbal Qasim caught India on a breaking pitch in 1986-87, but it was a happening rare enough to be remembered and brooded over.

Indians were excellent players of spin because the quality of spin bowling in domestic cricket was exceptional. In that Kanpur Test against England in 1963-64, India played three legspinners and two left-arm orthodox slow bowlers: BS Chandrasekhar, Baloo Gupte, Chandu Borde, Salim Durani and Bapu Nadkarni. The bowling was opened by the fearsome tearaway, ML Jaisimha, along with Durani. The proliferation of first-rate spinners meant that any successful batsman in domestic cricket played slow bowling very, very well.




Till the helmet arrived, most Indian batsmen were so vulnerable to quick bowling, that spinners, regardless of quality, were seen as light relief. After the helmet, they improved against the fast men, but retained the traditional view of opposing spinners as extras




This basically meant that even the average Indian batsman read turn from the bowler's hand, not off the pitch, and used his feet to get to the pitch of the ball to minimise spin. Gundappa Viswanath, Sunil Gavaskar, Mohinder Amarnath, Mohammad Azharuddin, Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly, Laxman, Rahul Dravid, all played slow bowlers in this way. Even Indian batsmen of the second rank, like Ravi Shastri and Sidhu, treated decent spin bowlers with nimble-footed contempt.

So the Asia Cup defeat didn't worry me because the Fabulous Four - Tendulkar, Dravid, Laxman and Ganguly, arguably the best players of spin bowling in the world over long and distinguished careers, hadn't figured in that team. I wasn't complacent, but it was reasonable to believe that they would figure Mendis out. The last freak spinner they had played, Paul Adams, hadn't puzzled them for a minute. While Mendis was clearly the better bowler, given his limited-overs performance and Bishan Bedi's testimonial, how dangerous could a Test debutant be, given the collective experience of the best batting line-up?

Very dangerous. It was Dravid's dismissal in the first Test that set the alarms off. Nobody in the world plays later off the back foot than Dravid did. The sight of him, crease-bound, stabbing down on Mendis down a middle-stump line, missing by a mile and the ball taking the off bail was a more significant moment in the history of Test cricket than the much-celebrated ball, which Warne ripped across Mike Gatting to bowl him. For two reasons: Dravid is by some distance the better batsman, and offspinners aren't meant to bowl fast legbreaks.

Everyone has a theory about how Mendis engineered this unprecedented, spin-prompted collapse. So do I. Before going there, though, it's useful to remember that he didn't do it alone. If he took 26 wickets, Murali took 21 and the Sri Lankan seamers chipped in whenever they were needed. Still, after allowing for these supporting roles, what Mendis did was extraordinary. In the six Test innings played in the series, he dismissed Laxman five times, Dravid four times, Gambhir three times and Tendulkar once.

The consensus seems to be that they couldn't read his mystery ball, but the real problem seemed to be that even when they did read it (and by the end of the series it looked as if Laxman and Dravid had begun to recognise the knuckle-ball from the hand, in that they could distinguish it from his offspinner and his googly), they couldn't tell if the ball was going to zip straight through or turn away. Since the knuckle-ball pitched in line, if the batsman played down the wrong line he was either lbw or bowled. It must have been a bit like playing Chandrasekhar, not knowing if the googly was going to turn or shoot through like a topspinner.




Sultans of Spin: Mendis and Murali are two of the few spinners who have done well against India © AFP

The problem was aggravated by the fact that it was hard to go down the wicket to Mendis because his knuckle-ball was faster and shorter in length than his normal delivery; there wasn't the time to get to the pitch. Tendulkar, Laxman, Ganguly and Dravid were slower and less confident than they had been in their prime, so they stretched down the pitch in defence, but this didn't work as it might have done once, because the review system being tried out in this series meant that the big stride forward no longer received the benefit of the doubt.

Why did Sehwag succeed when the others failed? His technique has always been fundamentally different from that of the others. His footwork is minimal, he plays alongside the ball without committing himself to a line till the last moment and he played Mendis off the pitch. It worked for him because his hand-eye coordination is exceptional, and his instinct is to attack: Mendis never got an opportunity to set him up as he did with the more defensive Dravid or Laxman.

So is Mendis a comet or a star? The latter, I think, because unlike with other mystery men, a batsman could teach himself to recognise the grip of his knuckle-ball without ever being sure that he could read its turn. Given his accuracy, temperament and variety (we shouldn't forget that he bowls a mean offbreak and a decent googly) his debut signals someone special. Unluckily, it also announces the end of something special. Thirty years ago, in a landmark three-Test series, Zaheer Abbas, helped by Javed Miandad, caned India's great spin trio into retirement. Ajantha Mendis, I suspect, has just rung the curtain down on another great foursome.

Mukul Kesavan is a novelist, essayist and historian based in New Delhi. This article was first published in the Kolkata Telegraph

Mendis not a permanent threat - Dhoni




Mahendra Singh Dhoni was among Ajantha Mendis' three victims © AFP

Mahendra Singh Dhoni, the Indian captain, has said that Ajantha Mendis was an unusual bowler in comparison to Muttiah Muralitharan, but it's only a matter of time before batsmen are able to pick his variations easily. Mendis continued to trouble the Indians after picking up 3 for 21 off nine overs in Sri Lanka's easy eight-wicket win in the first one-dayer in Dambulla. Muralitharan too chipped in with three wickets to skittle India out for a paltry 146.

"With time batsmen will get used to playing him. Even Murali some seven-eight years back was really difficult," Dhoni said. "Everybody was talking about him. With time I think it will get a bit easier. Mendis is a bit more unusual than Murali. I have not seen any bowler like this.

"Mendis is difficult to pick because he is a very different bowler. Even if you pick him up, by the time you realise what the ball is it gets very late to play a big shot. But it is not only about playing. You have to rotate the strike because you don't want a bowler to end up ten overs for 20 runs.

"But if you see the way he has played the two games against us, even in the Asia Cup, he gave away just ten runs in six or eight overs. You need to take a few from him and a few from Murali and look to attack the others. You've got to have something on the board."

Dhoni emphasised that a good start was essential for his side to get to a substantial total. "We were off to a good start in the Asia Cup but then we lost quick wickets," Dhoni said. "After that when you are playing Mendis it's difficult. It gets a bit tough when you have to rotate the strike and also save the wicket if the bowler is as unusual as Mendis.

"Once you get used to the variations then it gets easy for the batsmen. The only option right now is to play more and more of him and that's the only way of getting better. You can see a thousand videos but it doesn't matter until you go out there and play him off the track from 20 yards."

Dhoni's counterpart Mahela Jayawardene, however warned his side of a backlash similar to that of India's victory in the second Test in Galle after a heavy innings defeat in Colombo.

"Definitely, they will come back strongly. They have a very good side and they have a lot of talented individual players who can change the match for them," Jayawardene said. "So we will make sure we will play the same brand of cricket that we played today."

Jayawardene said the absence of Virender Sehwag for the remainder of the series with a twisted ankle will hurt India. Sehwag was India's leading run-scorer in the Tests with 344 runs and his double-hundred shaped the victory in Galle.

"Virender is a big-game player. It's important for them to have him. But we are playing against India and not against individuals. That's what we did in the Test matches as well. He can come and do his job but our task is to make sure it won't happen."

Jayawardene, who scored an unbeaten 61 off 82 balls, said it was important he was able to finish the game off. "We knew it was going to be tough, the Indian fast bowlers came strongly and bowled at the good areas. When I was batting with Kumar [Sangakkara], I said 'let's bat the 15-20 overs, that's crucial.' Unfortunately, Kumar got out but I thought Chamara Kapugedera batted really well. So we need to keep this momentum going. It's important that we consistently put partnerships and score runs. That's where the difference would be."

Mendis remains a mystery




Mahendra Singh Dhoni said after the Asia Cup that Ajantha Mendis couldn't be read. Nothing's changed since then © AFP

The crisp, cream clothing made way for dazzling blue, but the script read much the same. Watching India clearly weighed down by the finger freak waiting in the wings, unsure about how to tackle tidy medium-pace, anxious about what could be unleashed at any moment, it was hard not to get a sense of déjà vu. The Test specialists were gone, but the one-day recruits suffered a similar fate.

India's latest defeat against Sri Lanka wasn't all about Ajantha Mendis, though at the rate he is picking up awards and checks, he's certain to be a richer man and teach Arun Lal, the post-match emcee all tour, a fair amount of Sinhalese. Mendis played a key role, but India were severely dented after Sri Lanka's new-ball duo nipped out three early wickets.

That pair took much of the pressure off Mendis and Muttiah Muralitharan. Chaminda Vaas breached Gautam Gambhir's defence with the second ball of the match and Nuwan Kulasekera bowled very well, complementing his partner, to take two wickets. After five overs India were 9 for 1; after ten 29 for 2; after 15, 42 for 3; after the Powerplays they were reeling at 73 for 4. Therein lies the command that Sri Lanka took over the opposition. Vaas and Kulasekera choked the top order and Thilan Thushara, bowling tidy left-arm seam, maintained the pressure. It was a clinical example of attacking through partnerships.

More importantly, it was the perfect setting for Mendis to come in for the last over of the Powerplays. India were unsettled by their early losses and apprehensive about Mendis' arrival. They were unsure about how to handle the situation, and it proved detrimental.

When Mendis did arrive, India's batsmen looked no closer to deciphering him. His first strike hurt so deep that India failed to recover. Yuvraj Singh was beaten first ball by a slider, survived an extremely tight lbw shout, tried to dictate terms with a six over long-on, and was then utterly befuddled by a quicker one that skidded on. Too far forward, Yuvraj was left looking silly. India's most experienced player had fallen for the dangling carrot, and the reverberations were loud.

Thereon it was much the same as in the Tests. Mendis left the rest to fumble about in the dark. Mahendra Singh Dhoni fidgeted and fussed about his crease, playing and missing until he was put out of his misery by an outside-edge that flew to slip. Runs dried up. The heat turned up. After the Asia Cup, Dhoni said Mendis just couldn't be read at all; nothing has changed.




India's players have bounced between analysing footage, hoping that his aura may wear off and stressing on reading him off the pitch. What they need to understand is that for the time being Mendis is beyond understanding. Hard as it may sound, they need to take him out of the equation, stop worrying about him




Again bowling accurately and lethally, Mendis finished with 3 for 21 off nine overs, helping reduce India to 87 for 7 after which he was taken out of the attack. All Murali had to do was twirl his wrist and gobble up the lower order, even if his last over went for 14. The problem with India's approach against Mendis was that everyone wanted to build, nobody wanted to do maintenance.

"Creativity is not like a freight train going down the tracks," wrote Bob Dylan in his autobiography, Chronicles. "It's something that has to be caressed and treated with a great deal of respect. If your mind is intellectually in the way, it will stop you. You've got to programme your brain not to think too much."

Flip that around and you understand India's predicament against Mendis. They've been bamboozled, nay awed, by Mendis' bag of tricks since he destroyed them in Karachi. Mendis is special, no doubt about it. India's players have bounced between analysing footage, hoping that his aura may wear off and stressing on reading him off the pitch. What they need to understand is that for the time being Mendis is beyond understanding. Hard as it may sound, they need to take him out of the equation, stop worrying about him.

Virender Sehwag didn't think too much about Mendis in Galle and finished the match with 251 runs. There's a possibility he may be out of the whole series, and that's a massive worry, for in a sense India lost this match before Dhoni went out for the toss. They lost this match some time during training yesterday when Sehwag injured himself. Sehwag was India's highest scorer in the Test series, handling Mendis with aplomb during his double hundred in Galle, and their best bet at providing a solid start.

Dhoni spoke of the added responsibility on Sehwag to pass on advice to India's one-day recruits. In terms of his experience against Sri Lanka's spinners and his ability to provide starts, an integral asset in cricket, Sehwag's loss was brutal. In his last ODI he hammered an exhilarating 60 from just 35 balls, helping India storm to 76 from just nine overs.

Without their best player, India's indecision crept in from the onset. The openers may have thought attacking Sri Lanka's medium-pacers was the best option given their inefficiency in the Tests. That didn't work, and they had no answer to Mendis.

Even if they do a half-baked job of something, India's batsmen will find themselves one-eyed men in the kingdom of the blind. But at the moment they remain indecisive about picking one approach; it's a toss-up between throwing in the towel or trying to force the pace against spin. India need to find a way to rotate singles, as well as score runs.

"Its important to learn," said Dhoni, "because everyone makes mistakes. Unless you learn from those your own, your team's graph won't go up."

There's only a day's gap for the second match. India's time starts now.

Handling Mendis is up to the individual - Dhoni




Mahendra Singh Dhoni has said Sachin Tendulkar's absence will be crucial, but wants the youngsters to step up and accept more responsibilities © AFP

Hardly 15 minutes after Mahendra Singh Dhoni arrived at the team hotel in Colombo with his fellow one-day recruits, had he faced a barrage of questions. No surprise that most of them focused around the man who snatched almost half of the Indian wickets in the Test series, Ajantha Mendis.

"I'll just ask Mahela [Jayawardene] if he will lend Mendis for a couple of practice sessions. If not, then...," Dhoni said with a laugh when asked how India could tackle Mendis. "But seriously, we will have to deal with it in a personal way. We can watch 1000 videos of what he does, but it is up to the individual to play him on the turf. It depends on your frame of mind."

India's ODI squad includes two uncapped players, Tamil Nadu's S Badrinath and Delhi's Virat Kohli, the victorious Under-19 captain. Sachin Tendulkar will not play the five-ODIs after sustaining an injury to his left elbow during the third Test in Colombo. Dhoni admitted that was a major blow, but put faith in the younger players. "It's not just his contribution with bat and the ball, but he comes up with brilliant suggestions and advice on the field. The impact he has in the dressing room is great.

"But cricket goes on. The youngsters will have to prove they are good enough. Whenever this scenario has happened in Indian cricket, somebody has accepted responsibility. Sri Lanka is one of the toughest places to play cricket. You don't often get loads of runs when batting. It can be crucial."

In the Tests India's batsmen failed to put up good scores, failing to cross 330, and that cost them the series. Dhoni, however, said it was important for the batsmen to back themselves to score briskly, despite the setbacks.

"There are a few things that we need to assess," said Dhoni. "I've always been saying that confidence shouldn't go up and down with the performance. You have to stay positive always."

India's recent record in the subcontinent includes losses in the finals of the Kitply and Asia Cup, which Dhoni termed as "crucial games", and he hoped to rectify that trend. The ODI specialists had two days of practice at the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore, which Dhoni said was "up to the mark", and he noted a lot of energy in the side.

Jayawardene, Dhoni's counterpart, was understandably optimistic about the ODIs, having defeated India in the Asia Cup and the Test series. "It is always a different game and we have different game plans [for handling India]," he said. "It's a young side, and we are grooming a young group of guys to take over. We are looking to the little things well as individuals - that's been our emphasis and I think that's what has contributed to our improvement over that period."

Picking up 26 wickets is no mean achievement for a bowler, but when Mendis and Murali operate in tandem is when they're so difficult. After a long time, Murali has a genuine match-winning spinning partner, and Jayawardene felt it was quite a relief for a captain to have such an option. "We now have good attacking options," he said. "Murali has got the support he requires and also there is support for [Chaminda] Vaas. We have the likes of Lasith Malinga and Dilhara Fernando. For us it's always a team and it does not matter what Ajantha Mendis does."

Sri Lanka will welcome back their prolific one-day opener, Sanath Jayasuriya, but Jayawardene was not sure about who would partner him. Sri Lanka's 15-man squad includes eight batsmen, so they have choices between Malinda Warnapura, Mahela Udawatte, and Kumar Sangakkara to open. Jayawardene said Warnapura's success in the Tests - he scored 243 runs at 60.75, with a hundred in the first Test at the SSC, and two fifties - gave Sri Lanka a viable option, but Sangakkara's success in the Asia Cup could see him opening with Jayasuriya.

"The way everyone's talking about Ajantha," Jayawardene said, "he might take ten wickets even before going on." The venue for the first two ODIs is Dambulla, a notoriously low-scoring venue which favours spin, so India will need to be on their best guard against Sri Lanka's two spinners.

Mendis beats a Bedser best




A rare feat: Ajantha Mendis outbowled Muttiah Muralitharan in the series against India © AFP

The last time a Sri Lankan bowler took more wickets than Muttiah Muralitharan in a Test series - barring the one at home against South Africa in 2004 where he played only one match - was when West Indies visited in 2001-02. Only a record-breaking performance from Ajantha Mendis, in his debut series, prevented Murali from topping the wickets tally again against India with 21 scalps. Mendis' 26 at 18.38 apiece was the record for most wickets by a debutant in a three-Test series. This week's List looks at which bowlers have taken the most wickets in debut series of varying length.

The record that Mendis broke belonged to Alec Bedser, which he set during his debut series - a three-Test rubber against India in 1946. Bedser took 24 wickets in five innings at an average of 12.41, including 11-wicket hauls in the first two Tests. His 7 for 49 at Lord's was the second-best performance in an innings on debut, after Albert Trott's 8 for 43 against England at the Adelaide Oval in 1895.

Does anyone remember Franklyn Saliya Ahangama? He was a Sri Lankan medium-pacer who was fast-tracked into the Test side less than two weeks after his first-class debut with Sri Lanka Colts in 1985. He dismissed Mohammad Azharuddin with his fourth ball in Test cricket - the first of his 18 wickets at 19.33 apiece in the three-Test series against India. He took five wickets in his second match, at the P Saravanamuttu Stadium, which was Sri Lanka's maiden Test victory. Injuries, combined with the short supply of Tests, curtailed Ahangama's career and though he toured England in 1988 and 1991, the 1985 series against India remained his only Test appearance.

Most wickets in a three-Test series on debut
Player Mat Balls Runs Wkts BBI Ave 5 10
Series Season
BAW Mendis (SL) 3 979 478 26 6/117 18.38 2 1
v India 2008
AV Bedser (Eng) 3 866 298 24 7/49 12.41 2 2
v India 1946
SR Clark (Aus) 3 708 317 20 5/55 15.85 1 0
v South Africa 2005/06
J Cowie (NZ) 3 839 395 19 6/67 20.78 1 1
v England 1937
FS Ahangama (SL) 3 801 348 18 5/52 19.33 1 0
v India 1985
Shabbir Ahmed (Pak) 3 714 341 17 5/48 20.05 1 0
v Bangladesh 2003
MRCN Bandaratilleke (SL) 3 960 339 16 5/36 21.18 1 0
v New Zealand 1998
RO Collinge (NZ) 3 655 265 15 3/41 17.66 0 0
v Pakistan 1964/65
RJ Shastri (India) 3 882 277 15 5/125 18.46 1 0
v New Zealand 1980/81
BKV Prasad (India) 3 855 375 15 5/76 25.00 1 0
v England 1996

The summer of Mendis

This series will always be remembered for the startling effect Ajantha Mendis had on India, starting and ending with his dismissals of Rahul Dravid. Mendis was undoubtedly the story of the summer but this was a Sri Lankan victory founded on consistency, determination and plenty from the supporting act. Cricinfo runs the rule over Sri Lanka's contributors to the 2-1 success.




Ajantha Mendis finished the series with 26 wickets, the most for a three-match debut series © AFP

9.5
Ajantha Mendis
The Man of the Series, and deservedly so. Much had been written about Ajantha Mendis before the match, and he completely lived up to the hype. His match figures of 8 for 132 are the best by a Sri Lankan debutant, and he didn't stop there. Combining two-fingered googlies and doosras, skidders and offcuttesr with unbelievable accuracy, Mendis finished the series with 26 wickets, the most for a three-match debut series. Murali's trickery was to be expected but it was Mendis' aggression and accuracy that rattled India's cage. Every batsman, apart from Virender Sehwag and Sourav Ganguly, was dismissed at least once by him - VVS Laxman fell to him five times. Yet at the end of the series Mendis couldn't say which of them he would remember the most. "A wicket's a wicket," he said. Finger flickin' good.

8
Mahela Jayawardene
Jayawardene topped Sri Lanka's batting averages with 279 at 69.75, as almost expected. With his ninth ton at the SSC, Jayawardene became the first batsman to score four consecutive centuries at a ground, his 23rd overall, a brilliant effort that helped form a massive total. His 86 in the first innings in Galle was all class but a reckless cut shot in the second left Sri Lanka 10 for 3 chasing 307. His captaincy continued to inspire confidence - his field placing at the SSC was brilliant - though he went perhaps a bit too defensive on the final day of the series, allowing Rahul Dravid and an injured VVS Laxman free singles. He remained the epitome of a very professional Sri Lankan unit and used the review system much better than Anil Kumble - especially in the third Test, where Sri Lanka got six decisions overturned in their favour while India got none.

7.5
Muttiah Muralitharan
Mendis' success took plenty of pressure off Murali, but he began the series with a Man-of-the-Match haul of 11 for 110 in the first Test. Not for the first time, Murali made India's batsmen dance to his tune. His dismissals of Gautam Gambhir in both innings at the SSC were down to beautiful flight, and his entire array of artillery was on view. However, Murali was overshadowed completely by Mendis in Galle. He is not used to that, especially at home, and one of the key factors in India's success in Galle was that he took only 5 for 200, three of which were tailenders' wickets, after the damage had been done. Murali picked up only two more in the final Test to finish with 18 at 22.23.

Thilan Samaraweera
He was Sri Lanka's second-highest run scorer and most consistent batsman this series, Samaraweera's fourth century at the SSC was perhaps overshadowed by Mahela Jayawardene's record-equalling ninth at the same venue, but it was a crucial one, highlighted by pugnacious shots and brilliant running. Samaraweera ran out of partners in Galle, remaining unbeaten on 67, and contributed crucial runs at the PSS. He previously had a risk-free approach but worked on his game during his stint out of the team, and credited his A team coach Chandika Hathurasingha for the results. Whatever the reason, Samaraweera was the bedrock of Sri Lanka's batting.

Malinda Warnapura
Warnapura, the nephew of Sri Lanka's first Test captain Bandula Warnapura, enjoyed his time against India. Scores of 115, 66, 0, 8, and 54 not out did justice to the talent displayed in the West Indies earlier this year and, critically, Warnapura showed an appetite to dig in. He dropped a couple chances in the field but his batting more than made up for it.

7
Dammika Prasad
Prasad, a right-arm fast-medium bowler, did perhaps more than what was expected of him. He was added to the squad in Galle but didn't make his debut until the final match. But what a match it was. Prasad justified Sri Lanka's decision to include him for his pace by taking three big wickets - Virender Sehwag, Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar - in the first session on day one, then scored a classy 36, and returned to take out India's openers after a blazing start in the second innings. With Chaminda Vaas not making any impact, Prasad, who has a decently disguised slower ball, can seriously boost his Test career if he learns the art of reverse-swing.

Kumar Sangakkara
A subdued series, by his own high standards, from Sangakkara. Fell early at the SSC, was out for 68 when a hundred looked there for the taking in the first innings at Galle, a wicket that triggered a collapse, and failed in the second, but displayed amazing concentration to score a match-winning 144 at the PSS. His fielding, especially in the slips, remained average.

Prasanna Jayawardene
Arguably the best wicketkeeper around. His glovework was professional all series, bar one drop off Gautam Gambhir early in Galle, and he kept outstandingly to Murali and Mendis. He pulled off brilliant stumpings in every Test, but didn't perhaps too enough with the bat. He made decent contributions but should have stuck around for a big innings.

4
Chaminda Vaas
With Prasad's arrival and the prospect of Lasith Malinga and Dilhara Fernando returning from injury, Vaas will be under tremendous pressure to keep his place. Aged 34, he managed only five wickets at 44.00, four of which came in two crucial spells in Galle. Vaas bowled ten overs in the first Test and took 0 for 50, his pace often dipping as low as 110kph. His saving grace was a dogged 47 in the first innings at the PSS, helping Sri Lanka out of a trick passage and inspiring confidence in Sangakkara.




Prasanna Jayawardene kept brilliantly to Mendis and Murali and effected stumpings in each Test © AFP

2
Michael Vandort
After a consistent year, Vandort came a cropper against India, making just 39 runs in five innings. His uncertain footwork and hard-handed stabs in the first two Tests against the moving ball resulted in several edges to the slip cordon, and he failed in the decider as well. He has the support of his captain and coach, so he can expect an extended run in the Test side with no other options really looking good.

Nuwan Kulasekara
Picked ahead of left-arm fast bowler Thilan Thushara, who played in West Indies in April this year, Kulasekara's lack of pace told. His 20 overs in two innings at the SSC yielded one wicket - a needless shot from a gung-ho Virender Sehwag - and cost 67 runs. He went wicketless in Galle and didn't impress with the bat for someone with a Test fifty at Lord's against a quality attack.

Mendis's rapid rise surprised us - Jayawardene




Jayawardene: "He's got a very good head above his shoulders, he thinks quite well, listens to what we need to do and he adapts well" © AFP

Regardless of the outcome of the third and final Test between Sri Lanka and India, the astonishing bowling of Ajantha Mendis will be a highlight of the series. His meteoric rise and popularity have pleasantly surprised his captain Mahela Jayawardene.

"When we saw him we knew we had to develop him in the right manner," Jayawardene said on Thursday. "We never expected him to be this successful early in his career, probably because he hadn't played that much of first-class cricket. We thought he'd take a bit more time to settle in.

"But he has surprised a lot of us, as well as other people, in showing what he is capable of doing. He's got a very good head above his shoulders, he thinks quite well, listens to what we need to do and he adapts well, which is a good sign. It means he will definitely improve as a bowler because that's what he needs to do at this level and be very competitive."

Mendis is the leading wicket-taker in the series with 18 wickets from two Tests, which is two more than Muttiah Muralitharan and six more than India's best bowler Harbhajan Singh. He needs just six more wickets in the final Test at the P Saravanamuttu Stadium to break Muralitharan's bowling record of 23 wickets for the series achieved in 2001.

For the past decade or more Sri Lanka had to rely on the bowling skills of the veterans Muralitharan and Chaminda Vaas, and Jayawardene sees Mendis's sudden arrival as a blessing.

"It's a definite advantage to have a guy like Ajantha to back up Murali and Vaas," Jayawardene said. "That's where we lacked somebody, that strike option apart from those two guys.

"Unfortunately the other strike bowlers are injured Lasith (Malinga), Dilhara (Fernando) and (Farveez) Maharoof. That's something we can't control right now. Hopefully these guys can come into the set up, so that's going to give us a potent attack. We'll have a lot of options."

Not only has Mendis struck fear into the hearts of the opposition batsmen but he has suddenly become the most sought-after sports personality in Sri Lanka. In the past fortnight he has been signed up by the country's leading bank - Bank of Ceylon, a leading supermarket chain Cargills and the mobile phone company Dialog as their brand ambassador.

Asked whether such financial attractions would take Mendis' focus away from cricket, Jayawardene said: "I don't think he is going overboard. You need to give the guy a break. These opportunities don't come that often. If the sponsors are willing to sign him up then I'm quite happy that he is getting all these opportunities. I am sure Ajantha realises what his priorities are. He hasn't missed any practice sessions, or any training sessions or any treatment. His priorities are pretty much straight-forward. He knows he needs to do a lot of hard work to be at this level and be consistent."

Spinning it right




Ajantha Mendis: "I never intended to get awed by bowling with Murali" © AFP

Ajantha Mendis and Harbhajan Singh came into this match under varying levels of pressure but bound by a common thread - both were bowling as junior partner to a spin-bowling legend. At the end of a gripping second day's play, both Mendis and Harbhajan outbowled their illustrious partners and turned in performances which, at different stages of the day, put their team on top. Mendis, bowling his bag of tricks, triggered another Indian collapse in which they lost their last six wickets for 51 runs. Harbhajan, tossing it up and varying his pace in a refreshing change, sent Sri Lanka on a post-tea slide from 137 for 1 to 192 for 5.

Neither Mendis nor Harbhajan had much support from the famous names at the other end. Muttiah Muralitharan - rather surprisingly, given his previous exploits in Galle - took just two wickets while Anil Kumble was plain listless. It was left to the younger men to step up, and how.

Back in 1972, Bobby Fischer carried an immense burden of expectation when he faced off against Boris Spassky in what came to be termed the 'Match of the Century'. Fischer had Spassky to beat and the hype of being a child prodigy to live up to; Mendis had to bowl alongside Muralitharan, the most successful bowler ever, and also follow up on the eight wickets on his Test debut. "I never intended to get awed by bowling with Murali," Mendis said. "I gained the inspiration and confidence to go out and bowl against some of the world's best batsmen because of my training in the army which has hardened my outlook and helped bring discipline into my bowling."

Trained as an artillery gunner, Mendis relied on his amazing accuracy to flummox India. Rare is the day in Sri Lanka when Murali is rendered ineffective but Mendis applied the pressure admirably. VVS Laxman was undone by a short ball, lobbing a tame catch to midwicket. Dinesh Karthik was caught plumb in front, missing a skidding carrom ball. Harbhajan was made to look like a complete novice by another carrom ball that cut past the bat, and Mendis celebrated emphatically. He finished the innings with 6 for 117, the first of what should be many five-fors.

This was his first big test, with Virender Sehwag going after him. Yet he was accurate, still making the batsmen play every ball, still coming up with unplayable deliveries. It was a sensational return for a bowler in his second Test, but most of the praise went to Sehwag's glorious unbeaten 201 out of an Indian total of 329. It's extremely difficult to pick out the last time a spinner took six first-innings wickets and was overshadowed.




If ever Harbhajan Singh needed to prove that he could win India a match overseas, it was now, especially with Kumble not performing © AFP

"Although India were determined to attack my bowling I didn't come to the match with any definite plans," Mendis said, "but I knew if I did the right things I would be successful." Even in the today's age of technology and slow-motion replays, Mendis continues to fox batsmen. Just 23, he has also proved that a rookie needn't necessarily crumple under pressure like a soft-drink can.

A few hours later, Harbhajan found redemption of sorts. He was under pressure to deliver after a controversial year, one in which he was accused of making a racist remark on the field in Sydney and banned for slapping Sreesanth during an Indian Premier League game. In the last two-and-a-half years, he averaged 44.46 outside India. If ever Harbhajan needed to prove that he could win India a match overseas, it was now, especially with Kumble not performing.

India didn't have many runs to play with, but there was still a marked difference in his bowling. Harbhajan looped the ball as opposed to darting it in on middle and leg, as he has done for the past few years. The change, as he pointed out, worked. "I bowled quicker through the air in this match because the ball was drifting a bit," he said. "I tried to mix my pace and that worked for me today. The odd ball was spinning, so you need to set your field accordingly. That creates chances."

That's what the basics of offspin are: line and length and variations in pace. Chances were indeed created, none more successfully than in the over in which he dismissed Thilan Samaraweera and Tillakaratne Dilshan. Both deliveries dipped on the batsmen sharply and they misread the line. Samawareewa was out lbw, Dilshan caught at forward short leg. This track was more conducive than a "flat" SSC pitch, Harbhajan said, and his strikes gave India leverage after a strong second-wicket partnership threatened to put Sri Lanka level.

Mendis and Harbhajan are different bowlers at different stages of their career. Mendis is a genius in the works, Harbhajan a proven match-winner searching for redemption. Today, divided by style but united by purpose, they combined to produce a fantastic day's cricket.

The month of Mendis



All hail Ajantha © AFP

The Debut
July 2008 will be remembered as the Month of Mendis. Thus far secure reputations took a battering as Ajantha Mendis put India's batsmen to the sword: first the one-day marauders in the Asia Cup final, and then the real deal, the Fab Four, in the SSC Test. The batsmen's energies were mostly spent trying to read what Mendis was going to bowl - in itself a feat calling for considerable skill. Even if they did read him, it amounted to nothing: Mendis still managed to beat them in the flight, and bowl accurately, giving away no free runs. In the SSC Test, his first, he bowled 45.5 overs, which included a total of two bad deliveries. He took 6 for 13 in the Asia Cup final, and two four-fors at the SSC, comprehensively deceiving Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman twice each, mention of which he wouldn't mind on his gravestone.

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