Sangakkara happy in unfamiliar home
Sa'adi Thawfeeq in Hambantota
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Despite being one of three nations hosting the mega event Sri Lanka find themselves as much as in the same situation as Canada when Kumar Sangakkara goes out to toss with Delhi-born Canadian skipper Ashish Bagai in their opening World Cup match at Hambantota.
None of the 15 players in the Sri Lanka squad have played at this venue before and they have no first hand information of how the pitch is going to behave and what the conditions are going to be especially under lights. It is in the context of such adversity that Sri Lanka take on Canada.
"We trained on the ground and there doesn't seem to be any issues," said Sangakkara looking ahead of Sunday's game. "We need to play well whatever the conditions that we get. It looks a magnificent ground it looks beautiful and the wicket looks fantastic. So conditions will be good for cricket tomorrow.
"The guys have been practicing here and they are happy the way conditions are. It'll be beautiful for cricket and we are all amazed at what a transformation Hambantota has gone through. We will enjoy everything about this ground. Whatever happens with the toss, we need to be strong mentally whether we bowl or bat first we need to do it better than the opposition," said Sangakkara.
"I think our job is to try and win the first game. It's important to build it up step by step. You have to take it game by game. You can't change what other people say about us whether they say that we are good enough to win the tournament or whatever," he said.
"We know we are a good team to compete in this tournament and that's the most important thing rather than worry about anything else. Our focus is on tomorrow's game. India and Bangladesh are good sides, especially India. They are the best ODI unit in the world and most people expect them to win the tournament."
Not only do Sri Lanka have to overcome the alien conditions that they will confront at Hambantota, but for the team overall it has been a tough four days following the deaths of manager Anura Tennekoon's father and team member Chamara Silva's sister. Silva apparently will miss today's game.
"We feel very much for them and at the same time these things bring us closer together," said Sangakkara. "We just need to concentrate on playing good cricket because they be will wanting us to do well."
Leading his country for the first time in a World Cup, Sangakkara said that it was "a great privilege and an honour not just to captain a World Cup team, but to captain this particular team". "They are a wonderful bunch of guys and the best we have in Sri Lanka."
Sri Lanka is likely to go in with a two spin, two pace attack with all-rounder Angelo Mathews playing the role of third seamer.
The team received a timely morale booster with the arrival of Aravinda de Silva, Sri Lanka's World Cup hero of their 1996 triumph and present chairman of selectors, at the team's practice session on Friday.
"Aravinda just came to express his confidence in the team. His advice is extremely valuable at all times and he's a very shrewd thinker on the game and a fantastic cricketer on his own right," said Sangakkara. "It's good to have him not just as the chairman of selectors but once in a while just talk to the team. His job has been a tough one especially in the light of decisions he had to make. But he was very forthright in his selections."
Sangakkara was wary of Canada and said that you cannot take them lightly. "If you take the warm-up game they played against England, they lost only by 16 runs. Every team raises their game when the World Cup comes and we need to raise our game and if we do that we can do well."
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