Shanaka, though, has an especially glaring weakness with bat – his terrible numbers against legspinners. Where his regular ODI batting average is 23.38 and strike rate 93.14, he averages 12.06 against legbreak bowlers, and strikes at 82.27 against them. In this match, he got out to Rashid Khan, unsurprisingly. But before he got out himself – bowled for 5 by a fast legbreak that he had tried to sweep – he also contributed to the dismissal of Kusal Mendis, earlier in that Rashid over. Shanaka had struck the ball aerially back at the bowler, who dropped the catch, but had the ball deflect into the non-striker’s stumps before Mendis could get his bat back down in the crease.What complicates the selection for Sri Lanka is that these players have utility beyond their numbers. Shanaka is a popular captain, both within the team and among fans. He has his strategic limitations but has also helped orchestrate a lift in Sri Lanka’s ODI outcomes. The team now has 12 ODI wins on the trot, though many of those games were in the Qualifier.Under him, they have won 21 and lost only 13 matches. In the three years before he took the reins, they’d lost 29 ODIs to the 14 they had won. In T20Is, they’ve even won an Asia Cup under Shanaka.But if Sri Lanka are to become serious contenders both in the business end of this Asia Cup, and the World Cup to follow, they have to have more consistent firepower at Nos. 6 and 7. Shanaka would also rest much easier as captain if he could bully death bowlers much more regularly than he has in ODIs so far.

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