Kaushal Silva has urged Sri Lanka to fill the void left by Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara when they return to the scene of one their greatest triumphs for the first Test against England at Headingley on Thursday.
Two years ago, Yorkshire’s headquarters ground was the stage where Sri Lanka clinched a dramatic victory off the penultimate ball to secure their first Test series win in England.
But their first tour of England since that campaign sees them without Sangakkara and Jayawardene, both now retired from international duty.
“We did well here,” said Silva, an opening batsman who played in that victorious 2013 team, at Headingley on Tuesday.
“We were thrilled with that, but this is a new series.
“Sanga and Mahela have left now. So it’s time for all these youngsters to take their responsibility and do their jobs.
“We need to make sure we put up at least 300 … to put ourselves in the game.”
Sri Lanka will also be without injured paceman Dhammika Prasad, whose five second-innings wickets played a key role in the tourists’ 2014 victory at Headingley.
“He is one of the key bowlers, and obviously, we’ll miss him,” said Silva ahead of the three-Test series.
“But we have other very talented bowlers,” he added of an attack that also includes Suranga Lakmal and Nuwan Pradeep, as well as the decidedly sharp Dushmantha Chameera.
Sri Lanka will again be captained by Angelo Mathews, with the all-rounder’s excellent hundred paving the way for their success at Headingley two years ago.
The once feared pitch at Headingley, in Leeds, northern England, is now generally a good surface to bat on, albeit one with pace and bounce, and overhead conditions largely determine how much assistance a seam attack will receive.
Yorkshire coach Jason Gillespie said it was important bowlers avoided a “pretty length”.
“Sometimes if fast bowlers see the ball whizzing through to the keeper at chest height a bit of ego then comes into play,” the former Australia quick told the media.
“It is that ‘pretty length’. It looks good but is it actually challenging the batsmen and putting him under pressure?”
England has a poor recent record at Headingley, with just one win and four defeats at the northern venue since 2007.
In their first Test campaign since a series win in South Africa, England will have to decide whether to give a debut to Nottinghamshire’s Jake Ball, who has made an impressive start to the county season, or retain Steven Finn as the third seamer behind James Anderson and Stuart Broad — now the world’s number-one ranked Test bowler.
Hampshire batsman James Vince is set to make his Test bow, following the enforced retirement of James Taylor with a heart condition, in a batting line-up featuring Joe Root — recently crowned England’s player of the year in all formats — and Yorkshire colleague Jonny Bairstow.
England captain Alastair Cook needs just 36 more runs to become the first Englishman to reach 10,000 in Tests.
By contrast, Alex Hales, Cook’s opening partner, and number three Nick Compton both go into the match badly needing rather larger scores to cement their places.
“There is a bit of revenge to be had,” said Broad, reflecting on a 2014 series which saw Cook, severely criticized for tactical naivety, contemplate resigning the England captaincy after the Headingley defeat by Sri Lanka.
“It was quite an emotional series, it really hurt us as a team to lose in our own conditions.”
Thursday’s match is set to break fresh ground by being the first in men’s cricket where a new points system, modeled on the one used by England and Australia for the women’s Ashes, will be employed.
In a bid to provide further “context”, the results of all the international fixtures this season between England and Sri Lanka will be put together to produce an overall winner.
Details on how points will be allocated between Tests, one-day internationals and Twenty20s are expected to be announced later Wednesday.
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