assuming dilshan has a test five-for and a test stumping how many others out there would have a stumping, a five for and a century?Sri Lanka had the knack of producing batsman keepers, who later give up gloves to another batsman keeper. List starts with Brendon Kuruppu, Asanka Gurusinha, Hashan Tillekaratne, TM Dilshan, Kumar Sangakkara, Kusal Mendis to Kusal Perera. Kaluwitharana and Prasanna Jayawardane were the two genuine keepers we had who could handle a bat properly.
There were quite a number. None of them grabbed the opportunity and we had to go back to Kalu, till we stumbled upon Sangakkara.In the middle of all this there were a bunch of guys who seemed to be competing with Kaluwitharana in the 90s, Ashley de Silva, Pudubu Dasanayake, Dunusinghe (think he played a good knock in SL's famous win in Napier in 95) and Lanka de Silva (remembered in India for being felled by a Srinath bouncer). Although Kalu was ever-present in the side it seems like he was continually looking over his shoulder. Can't remember if any of these was a serious contender though Lanka's glovework was talked up when he visited India in '97.
Prasanna was certainly a terrific keeper, genuine contender for best of the 00's.
Dilshan's best in a test in 4/10, and 4/4 in ODIs. Never had a 5 for. Nor did Asanka Gurusinha. Guru's FC bowling average of 21.5 as a seamer, shows he was pretty good at it when he was fir.assuming dilshan has a test five-for and a test stumping how many others out there would have a stumping, a five for and a century?
if not for tests then surely he does for odis
oh! tbh that's a surprise, i would have thought if anything it would've been the stumping requirement that precluded him from that clubDilshan's best in a test in 4/10, and 4/4 in ODIs. Never had a 5 for. Nor did Asanka Gurusinha. Guru's FC bowling average of 21.5 as a seamer, shows he was pretty good at it when he was fir.
An easy one this...Mahmudullah Riyad.assuming dilshan has a test five-for and a test stumping how many others out there would have a stumping, a five for and a century?
if not for tests then surely he does for odis
Change the criteria from a stumping to any wk dismissal and you add Woolley, Congdon and L Amarnath to that list.John Reid
Let's not forget Mahmudullah, please.Change the criteria from a stumping to any wk dismissal and you add Woolley, Congdon and L Amarnath to that list.
Change the criteria to local club cricket and you can add me that listChange the criteria from a stumping to any wk dismissal and you add Woolley, Congdon and L Amarnath to that list.
He kept for just one match, but didn't pick up any dismissals.Andrew Hall is another worth mentioning in that regard - three ODI fifties with a best of 81, a five-wicket haul, and I'm sure he kept wicket in a series against Australia as well.
possibly one of the most versatile cricketersHe kept as a substitude against India once too. Guy kept and then bowled the last over as well for a close win I think, when they had someone else keep..
I see what you did there.would take a bullet for the team
He got more than the 70 not out - he went on to make 163.possibly one of the most versatile cricketers
also against India was sent to open in a Test and batted the whole day for 70-odd not out.
correct, but he batted the whole first day for 70-odd not out. Which is what really stood out to me. That kind of stone-walling is rarer these days than someone hitting 130-140 on day 1.He got more than the 70 not out - he went on to make 163.
https://www.espncricinfo.com/series/14933/scorecard/64109/india-vs-south-africa-1st-test-south-africa-tour-of-india-2004-05
He probably would have played more tests for South Africa if his career hadn't overlapped with that of Kallis and Pollock. Having those two in the side meant that Hall's versatility wasn't as useful as it might have been for another team.