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Thursday, February 12

Roshan Punyajith Wijesinghe Guneratne (1962-2005) Test Cap #:24

© en.wikipedia.org
Full name Roshan Punyajith Wijesinghe Guneratne
Born January 26, 1962, Colombo
Died July 21, 2005, California (aged 43 years 176 days)
Major teams Sri Lanka, Colombo Cricket Club, Nomads Sports Club
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak

Biography
Roshan Guneratne made his first class debut against the touring Australians playing for the President's Board XI in the lead-up to the one-off Test at Kandy in 1982-83. Guneratne captured the wickets of Kepler Wessels and Greg Chappell finishing with 2 for 66. The selectors were sufficiently impressed to include him in the starting XI for the Test despite the fact that they already had an established legspinner in DS de Silva. It proved to be an unhappy time as the Australians rattled up 514 for 4 before declaring, Guneratne bowling 17 expensive overs, taking 0 for 84. Sri Lanka suffered a crushing victory and it proved to be Guneratne's sole test appearance. He went on to represent NCC, Moors SC and Nomads in Division One domestic cricket before leaving for the USA to join his mother and sister. He died in California at the age of 43, only the third Sri Lankan Test player to die.

Mithra de Silva Wettimuny (1951-2019) Test Cap # 22

 
Full name Mithra de Silva Wettimuny
Born June 11, 1951, Colombo
Died January 20, 2019, Colombo (aged 67 years 223 days)
Major teams Sri Lanka
Batting style Right-hand bat
Relation Brother - SRD Wettimuny, Brother - S Wettimuny

Profile
Mithra Wettimuny's cricket career was brief - of his nine first-class appearances, two were Tests, only one was in Sri Lanka, and they spanned a little over four months in 1982-83. A diminutive top-order right-hand batsman, he scored fifty on his first-class debut in Zimbabwe, but failed to do so in any of his remaining outings. Despite this, he was selected to tour New Zealand, making his two Test appearances on that tour where he managed 28 runs in four innings. They were his last first-class matches. In the first of these games he opened the innings with his younger brother, Sidath - only the third instance of brothers opening together. Their older brother, Sunil, also played for Sri Lanka before they gained Test status

Test debut New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Christchurch, Mar 4-6, 1983
Last Test New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Wellington, Mar 11-15, 1983
First-class span 1982/83 - 1982/83

Sridharan Jeganathan (1951-1996) Test Cap #.19

 
Full name Sridharan Jeganathan
Born July 11, 1951, Colombo
Died May 14, 1996, Sri Lanka (aged 44 years 308 days)
Major teams Sri Lanka, Nondescripts Cricket Club
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox
Other Coach
Relation Son - BC Jeganathan

Profile
The first Sri Lankan Test player to die, allrounder Srid­haran Jeganathan passed away on May 14, aged 44. A left-arm spinner and lower-order right-hand batsman, Jeganathan played in both Tests of the injury-hit tour of New Zealand in 1982-83. His disappointing return of 19 runs (4.75) included four single-figure scores, and he failed to take a wicket. Ignored for a while, he was recalled for the 1987 World Cup in India and Pakistan, dismissing Richie Richardson of West Indies and taking both wickets (Gooch and Robinson) in the eight­wicket defeat by England at Pune. His 2 for 45 there remained his best bowling in five one-day internationals, in which he took five wickets (41.60) and scored 25 runs (8.33). Jeganathan had toured Eng­land with the team which won the inaugural ICC Trophy in 1979, and took 4 for 92 against Nottinghamshire. In all first­class cricket he took 49 wickets (31.61), and scored 437 runs at 13.66. His highest score, of 74, was made against Tasmania at Devonport on that 1982-83 tour: coming in at 89 for 7, he put on 140 for the eight wicket with Ravi Ratnayeke (64 not out). He later became Malaysia's national coach.

Test debut New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Christchurch, Mar 4-6, 1983
Last Test New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Wellington, Mar 11-15, 1983
ODI debut New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Auckland, Mar 20, 1983
Last ODI Australia v Sri Lanka at Melbourne, Jan 14, 1988
First-class span 1973-1988
List A span 1973-1990

Ronald Guy De Alwis (1960-2013) Test Cap #:16

© adaderana.lk

Full name Ronald Guy De Alwis
Born February 15, 1960, Colombo
Died January 12, 2013, Colombo (aged 52 years 332 days)
Major teams Sri Lanka, Sinhalese Sports Club
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
© hirunews.lk
De Alwis had a constant tussle with Amal Silva to maintain the No.1 wicketkeeping berth. Quite tall, De Alwis was considered the superior keeper, though Silva held the upper hand in the batting stakes by quite a stretch. Mahes Goonatilleke's defection allowed de Alwis to make his debut on the 1982-83 tour of New Zealand. One of seven debutants in the first Test at Christchurch, de Alwis scored 0 and 3 and took one catch. Amal Silva was preferred in the next match, though De Alwis kept in all three Tests when New Zealand toured Sri Lanka. De Alwis's keeping was exemplary and while he made some handy scores in the lower order he could not convert them. Injury on the 1984 tour of England cost him his place, and Silva had a tremendous Test at Lords and kept his place with some solid knocks thereafter. In his further Tests - when Silva was injured or unwell - de Alwis kept tidily but his batting was below standard. Conversely in the one-day game de Alwis was quite a useful lower-order batsman.

Test debut New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Christchurch, Mar 4-6, 1983
Last Test Australia v Sri Lanka at Perth, Feb 12-15, 1988
ODI debut New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Dunedin, Mar 2, 1983
Last ODI New Zealand v Sri Lanka at Sharjah, Mar 31, 1988
First-class span 1982-1995
List A span 1982-1989

Anura Nandana Ranasinghe (1956-1998) Test Cap #:13

© En.wikipedia.org

Full name Anura Nandana Ranasinghe
Born October 13, 1956, Kalutara
Died November 9, 1998, Colombo (aged 42 years 27 days)
Major teams Sri Lanka, Burgher Recreation Club
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm medium, Slow left-arm orthodox

profile
© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
A schoolboy prodigy Anura Ranasinghe made his international debut in the 1975 World Cup against the might of the West Indies whilst still only 18 years of age. Ranasinghe played in all three matches for the Sri Lankans without producing any performance of note. His Test debut came on Sri Lanka's inaugural Test tour of Pakistan in 1981-82, but he struggled with the bat scoring 6 and 5 batting at No. 7. Despite taking the new ball he was used sparingly although he did take 1 for 23 in the first innings. His second and final Test came against India later in 1982 - he made a duck in the first innings but showed his skill in making a battling 77 second time round, a n innings which not only help Sri Lanka save the game after conceding a first-innings lead of 230, but almost allowed them to snatch a remarkable win as India closed on 135 for 7 chasing.

He was expected to continue to be a key player in the fledgling Sri Lankan team but all that ended when he chose to join the infamous Sri Lankan rebel tour to South Africa in 1982-83, earning him a life ban. When that was rescinded in 1989 he resumed his club career for another couple of seasons and then moved into coaching. He died suddenly in 1998 four days before his 42nd birthday.Anura Ranasinghe, who died in his sleep on Monday night, was one of the finest all-round cricketers produced by Sri Lanka and the first schoolboy to play in the World Cup.

Somachandra de Silva (1942 – 2025) Test Cap # 2