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'Scotland either front up or start getting ready to go home'

Published in Rugby
Sunday, 29 September 2019 11:13

For the guts of a week, the Scotland players have tried to move on from the events of Yokohama against Ireland. Not an easy transition, that.

Every day has brought a new inquisition, new questions about their mentality and their ability. It's been uncomfortable and occasionally brutal. In various reports they've been called spineless, clueless and pathetic. One headline ordered them to hang their heads in shame.

At times you felt some players wanted to jump across the table and throttle their interrogators at their hotel in Kobe, but a media conference is not the place for them to vent their fury. All of that should come out against Samoa under the closed roof at the Misaki Stadium on Monday.

After the week they've had then, a response is surely coming. Scotland need to start well at the Misaki, need to work harder, need to defend better. The list of things they must do - and didn't do last time out - stretches the length of Sannomiya, the city's main drag.

The most recent meeting of these sides - a 44-38 Scotland win at Murrayfield in Gregor Townsend's fourth game in charge - showed the extremes of this team, its excellence and its flakiness. Scotland played some class rugby to sail into a big lead in that game. They mauled Samoa off the park, scoring two tries off driven line-outs, both touched down by Stuart McInally.

Then, they fell asleep. Samoa piled through a dozing defence again and again. They scored five tries that day. Scotland scored six. Townsend doesn't need such drama this time. He needs a professional and clinical performance free of mental frailties. Or else.

Blow torches, ripping it up & Bradbury's moment

Townsend has taken a blow torch to the squad that failed so woefully in Yokohama. Some senior men have got it.

Being Scotland captain for two years offered no protection to John Barclay, who has been dumped from the match-day squad. Being captain in Scotland's second last game was no help to Ryan Wilson, who's been demoted to the bench. Being one of the country's highest try-scorers was no use to Tommy Seymour who has also missed out on the 23.

In their place, mostly youth. Darcy Graham - a pocket battleship, a terrific finisher and a player on form - was unlucky not to start against Ireland, but that chance has now come. Graham sounded psyched for the battle when he spoke on Saturday, as did outside centre Chris Harris the day before. If Harris can back up his words with actions, then it won't just be the Samoans who are hitting hard.

There was agony in losing Hamish Watson, but Townsend has ripped it all up in the back-row. Magnus Bradbury has gone from living a parallel universe in Japan - in the country but not in the squad, existing in the margins as injury cover - to being at the heart of the action.

One of the myriad problems against Ireland was the lack of ball-carrying grunt up front. Bradbury can do it - and he can do it well.

His tendency has been to do it in fits and starts in games. An angry Bradbury needs to turn up against Samoa because this kid can play and fight when the mood takes him. If he's ever going to mark himself out as part of Scotland's future then this is his time, this is the moment.

Scotland lacked energy and aggression and work-rate against Ireland. Ireland's dog was a Rottweiler. Scotland's dog was a poodle.

Jamie Ritchie's elevation ups the growl factor. Good on the floor, good in the collisions, decent with ball in hand, Ritchie has the tough job of replacing the injured Watson. He's no Watson in the specifics of ball-carrying and groundhog, but he's got a similar edge as Watson. He's got the same appetite for work, the same kind of hardness.

In between them, there's the great unknown that is Blade Thomson. All that we hear is that Thomson is different to anything Scotland has in that position. He's a ball-carrier with game intelligence and footwork, a clever thinker, a back-row forward with Scottish ancestry but very much of the New Zealand school.

Thomson needs to be as good as his team-mates say he is. The evidence so far is inconclusive. He hasn't played enough Test rugby to settle the argument one way or another, but he deserves his chance.

Scotland's back-row against Ireland had 146 caps. Their back-row against Samoa has 23. In his search for energy, Townsend has sacrificed experience. Not too many people will disagree with the calls he has made.

'The biggest day of Townsend's coaching life'

This is monumental stuff for Townsend. The biggest day of his coaching life and one of the biggest days of his rugby life. If it doesn't go well, then Scotland are goosed and this World Cup will go down as the worst in their history.

The fallout would be scary. Townsend and his staff would be pilloried to the point of demands being made for their heads. The players would be subjected to the kind of slating that would make the reaction to Yokohama seem like a warm-up act. In defeat, Scotland would have nowhere to go bar a deep, dark place.

If they have anything about them, then there's a big performance coming against Samoa, a nation all but abandoned by the powerhouses in world rugby. Samoa have little money and little opportunity to improve. You could write a book about their plight, but the bottom, and sadly unchanging, line is that the treatment of the Pacific Island countries is a scar on rugby.

Maybe that sense of isolation gives them an extra anger to feed off. They are still very much alive in this World Cup, having beaten Russia with a bonus point. Another win against Scotland and Pool A will have had a second seismic result following on from Japan's unforgettable victory over Ireland on Saturday.

On Yokohama form, Scotland are vulnerable. What we know about Townsend's team, however, is that they can bounce back quickly from disappointment. They need that resilience now more than ever.

After Wales hammered them in the opening game of the 2018 Six Nations, they then beat France and England in their next two games. When the USA upset them in Houston that summer, they followed up by destroying Argentina in Resistencia. When France took them apart in Nice last month, they found something in adversity and did them in the return game.

Clear signals and signals of intent

Japan's win of the ages has crystallised Scotland's challenge here. Mere victories are not sufficient any more. They need bonus points now, beginning with Samoa, a team that has in the recent past caused Scottish sides to break out in a rash. In the past five meetings, the Scots have won four of them but the points total across those games is 130-126 - in Samoa's favour.

It's true that this vintage doesn't look as good as their recent predecessors, certainly not in the same class as the side that pushed Scotland to the wire in the World Cup four years ago. That was a terrifying afternoon in Newcastle. This version has a lot of the power and attrition of the sides that went before but not quite as much of the game-breaking brilliance.

They are also without some important men. Rey Lee-Lo, the centre, and Motu Matu'u, the hooker, are both banned after their reckless headshots against Russia. Their numner eight, Afa Amosa, is out of the tournament with a knee injury. Scrum-half Dwayne Polataivao, scorer of two tries against Australia in a warm-up game in early September, hasn't recovered from a concussion sustained against the Russians.

Depleted, they'll still bring a rage to proceedings. As their coach, Steve Jackson, has put it: "We're under no illusions about what Scotland are going to bring in that area [physicality] and they should be under no illusions about what we're going to bring."

Samoa are not happy with the Scots. In the wake of those Lee-Lo and Motu'u high tackles against Russia, Greig Laidlaw said they wanted referee Pascal Gauzere to keep an eye on the way Samoa go into contact on Monday. Not unreasonably, Laidlaw said that Lee-Lo and Motu'u should have received red cards on the night instead of yellow.

Jackson was unimpressed by Laidlaw's intervention. "There's obviously been a lot in the press with people making things a little worse than they already were," he said. "Things put in the media by people in the Scottish squad, talking to the referee about our tackling and all that sort of stuff."

There was always going to be a major edge to this game and the chat in the preamble has only added to it. As one Scottish player after another said last week, this is do-or-die now. They either front up or they start getting ready to go home.

Rea Clinches Fifth World Superbike Title In Style

Published in Racing
Sunday, 29 September 2019 07:00

MAGNY-COURS, France – Jonathan Rea clinched his record fifth World Superbike Championship title in style Sunday with a race victory at Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours.

Rea’s win was his 12th of the season and completed an incredible points comeback, allowing him to clinch the crown two rounds early after being 61 markers in arrears early on in the season.

Starting from the pole for the first time in WorldSBK, Toprak Razgatlioglu couldn’t make the same lightning start which saw him leap up the order in the two previous races.

Rea edged up the inside into turn one to grab the lead but he wouldn’t stay ahead for long, as Michael van der Mark used the slipstream to hit the front at the Adelaide hairpin.

The moment which ultimately proved decisive in the World Superbike Championship battle came on lap two, as Razgatlioglu lost the rear of his Kawasaki at the exit of turn 13.

As the Turkish rider fought to control the slide, Alvaro Bautista was powerless to avoid the Saturday race winner and both riders were eliminated on the spot.

With the words ‘Bautista out’ displayed on his pit-board next time around, Rea now knew that a race victory would see him make history.

Michael van der Mark was keen to ensure that Rea didn’t have an unchallenged run to a fifth WorldSBK crown, keeping the Ulsterman at bay until the Imola chicane on lap six.

The Dutchman didn’t trail for long, however, with the Yamaha proving a formidable motorcycle down the backstretch toward turn five, an advantage van der Mark utilized to power past on lap eight.

As the race ticked over half distance, Rea mounted another attack on the leader with van der Mark going defensive into Adelaide. The championship leader was wise to this tactic though and drew alongside into the following Nurburgring chicane, making the move stick on lap 13.

With van der Mark no longer close enough to make use of the slipstream next time around, Rea had the margin he needed to ease clear.

Despite a valiant effort from van der Mark, the advantage grew to more than one second, allowing Rea to close out the final laps and claim his 83rd career WorldSBK victory.

Van Der Mark hung on for second ahead of teammate Alex Lowes, marking the first double podium of the season for the Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team, with Ducati’s Chaz Davies and Ten Kate Racing’s Loriz Baz finishing fourth and fifth, respectively.

Marco Melandri, Leon Haslam, Tom Sykes, Leon Camier and Jordi Torres filled out the top 10.

Ferrari Collapse Hands Hamilton A Russian Victory

Published in Racing
Sunday, 29 September 2019 08:00

SOCHI, Russia – Lewis Hamilton led a shocking one-two finish for Mercedes AMG Petronas Motorsport during Sunday’s VTB Russian Grand Prix, after a dominant first half by Scuderia Ferrari unraveled itself in one fell swoop.

Ferrari had appeared to have the advantage over the Silver Arrows all weekend long, and that pace continued for the early stages of the 16th race of the Formula One season.

Sebastian Vettel led the first 25 laps of the race off a monstrous start at Sochi Autodrom, which saw him leapfrog both Hamilton and polesitter Charles Leclerc before the field ever reached turn one.

Despite the Scuderia having a plan to get Leclerc back out front, however, Vettel put his foot to the floor and opened up as much as a four-second lead over his teammate in order to maintain his place as the faster of the two team drivers.

Leclerc pitted for fresh tires on lap 23 and ripped off a sequence of fastest laps that was enough to allow him to leapfrog Vettel when the latter made his pit stop four circuits later, but Vettel lost power on his Ferrari barely a lap after exiting the pit lane.

As the German pulled to a heart-wrenching stop in the turn-15 runoff area, the victim of an MGU-K problem, a virtual safety car period on the 28th lap allowed both Mercedes drivers – Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas – to steal a free pit stop for fresh medium compound tires.

Hamilton rejoined with a lead he wouldn’t relinquish, while Bottas came out behind Leclerc in third, just before a full safety car was called for the stricken Williams of George Russell, which lost brakes and ended up stuck in the tire barriers.

At that point, Leclerc pitted for a fresh set of soft-compound tires, dropping back behind Bottas but hopeful of being able to re-pass him and mount a charge at Hamilton.

From there, racing resumed for good with 21 laps left in the 53-lap affair, but try as he might Leclerc could never get close enough to Bottas to be able to get back to second.

Lewis Hamilton (44) leads Valtteri Bottas during Sunday’s Russian Grand Prix. (Steve Etherington photo)

That left Hamilton unchallenged out front, cruising to his ninth win of the season and the 82nd of his Formula One career, just nine behind Michael Schumacher’s all-time record.

It was also the sixth win in six runnings of the Russian Grand Prix for Mercedes, extending their unbeaten streak at Sochi Autodrom since the course was added to the F-1 schedule in 2014.

“This win feels like it has been a long time coming. It was just an incredible job from the whole team: never giving up, pushing forward, always trying to be innovative,” said Hamilton. “It’s incredibly inspiring to be part of that and amazing to have this result today, considering how quick the Ferraris were in that opening stint. It was a really hard task to keep up with them, especially on the offset tire (compound), but we kept pushing and the car felt really good today.

“We thought that their soft tires would drop off during that opening stint, but they had such good pace that I was struggling to keep up with them – and that’s probably a little warning for us, because it looked like they got their calculations right in that regard,” Hamilton continued. “I managed to stay within shouting distance, though, and started closing down the gap as their tires started to drop. Charles pitted, then I started catching Seb, and we were in a good position to offset and go long – even had the safety car not come out. … Then everything fell our way, and after that it was a question of building the gap, saving the tires and getting to the finish as smoothly as possible.”

Bottas fended off every advance Leclerc made to finish second, giving Mercedes their fourth top-two sweep in six tries in Sochi, with Leclerc crossing third.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was a distant fourth, while his teammate Alexander Albon rallied from a pit-lane start due to power unit penalties to complete the top five finishers.

McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, Racing Point’s Sergio Perez, the sister McLaren of Lando Norris, Haas F1’s Kevin Magnussen and Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg filled out the points scorers.

Though Ferrari appears to have found an edge against the Mercedes duo, Hamilton is relishing the challenge as the stretch run continues to wind down the F-1 season.

“When you have a battle like this, you’re working flat out, turning over every stone and questioning every little thing you can do better,” he noted. “We love that challenge and I’m really excited for the next few races.”

The finish:

Lewis Hamilton, Valtteri Bottas, Charles Leclerc, Max Verstappen, Alexander Albon, Carlos Sainz, Sergio Perez, Lando Norris, Kevin Magnussen, Nico Hulkenberg, Lance Stroll, Daniil Kvyat, Kimi Räikkönen, Pierre Gasly, Antonio Giovinazzi, Robert Kubica, George Russell, Sebastian Vettel, Daniel Ricciardo, Romain Grosjean.

PHOTOS: James Dean Classic

Published in Racing
Sunday, 29 September 2019 09:00

Mario Andretti Returns To The Charlotte ROVAL

Published in Racing
Sunday, 29 September 2019 11:00

CONCORD, N.C. – Any time Mario Andretti walks in a room, his mere presence commands attention.

Undeniably one of the greatest race car drivers to ever put on a helmet, Andretti was on hand Sunday afternoon at Charlotte Motor Speedway to serve as the ceremonial pace car driver during the Bank of America ROVAL 400.

The 1969 Indianapolis 500 winner and 1967 Daytona 500 champion previously got to check out the ROVAL in 2017, when he took a Porsche 918 for a spin around the 2.28-mile circuit as speedway officials were working to develop the course ahead of the inaugural ROVAL race in 2018.

“I was reminded that by the dealer that the car is over $1 million, which I knew. He said to take it easy and I said yeah, right,” Andretti said, which was followed by laughter from most of the media in attendance. “I don’t think the dealer was all that pleased because at the end, the brakes were smoking pretty good.”

The course that Andretti drove on that day is different than what was eventually utilized for the inaugural event, but he admits he can’t take credit for most of the course.

One thing he did suggest was the addition of chicanes to the track to help slow the cars down and create passing zones.

“I can’t take too much credit for the course itself,” Andretti said. “The only thing I suggested at the time … they didn’t have any of the chicanes. I thought that they created more action and they needed to slow the cars down before turn three (on the oval).

“As you can see they put a chicane there last year, but it was too fast. Obviously they need more of a hard braking (zone). I like the way that they reacted for this year, which they put in a proper corner. That’s going to be interesting.”

By his own admission, Andretti has never been a fan of road courses inside of ovals, like Charlotte’s ROVAL or the course utilized by Daytona Int’l Speedway for the Rolex 24.

However, Andretti said the ROVAL is different.

“It’s always a challenge to create a road course that has good technical and flow when you’re somewhat limited with the geography,” Andretti said. “I’ve never been too much of a fan of road courses inside an oval. I’m a fan of this one. They did the best job that you could have expected.

“I think they definitely needed something to slow the cars down before turn four, because they have that symmetrical road racing setup. So for all the reasons they obviously did the right thing.”

On the heels of Josef Newgarden’s successful exhibition run with his Indy car around the ROVAL on Friday, the 1978 Formula One champion was asked about the potential of the NTT IndyCar Series partnering with NASCAR for a doubleheader event at the ROVAL or another circuit.

Andretti was quick to respond with a resounding yes.

“Our sport has loyal fans for different disciplines, but there is also a lot of crossover,” Andretti said. “If a doubleheader with IndyCar puts six more butts in the seats, then that is six more seats that you’ve gained. The crossover would be healthy for everyone.

“I would encourage it, of course. Probably IndyCar would benefit more than stock cars because the audience is much greater for NASCAR. But at the same time, you’ve got to look at the big picture – motorsports. Create the interest and the fans are the most important part.”

Carolina picks Staal to replace Williams as captain

Published in Hockey
Sunday, 29 September 2019 11:51

RALEIGH, N.C. -- Jordan Staal has been picked as the captain of the Carolina Hurricanes.

The team announced Staal's selection Sunday before its exhibition game against Washington, adding that forward Jordan Martinook and defenseman Jaccob Slavin will be the alternates.

Staal shared the captaincy with since-traded defenseman Justin Faulk two seasons ago, with each player holding the title for half of coach Bill Peters' final season.

Justin Williams captained the Hurricanes to the Eastern Conference final last season, but his future is in question after he stepped away from the sport to start this season.

Staal is starting his eighth season with Carolina, making him the longest-tenured player on the team. Older brother Eric was the Hurricanes' captain from 2010 until he was traded to the New York Rangers in 2016.

Perez wins his first European Tour title at St. Andrews

Published in Golf
Sunday, 29 September 2019 06:48

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — Rookie Victor Perez claimed his first European Tour title in his 29th appearance after posting a 2-under 70 to win the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship by one shot on Sunday.

The 27-year-old Perez narrowly missed his 12-foot birdie putt at the last but a close-range par was good enough to see him become the first French winner of this tournament with 22-under 266 overall.

Perez, who is based in Scotland and ranked No. 184, had previous rounds of 64-68-64. He graduated from the Challenge Tour last year.

Matthew Southgate (71) was second after a thrilling final-round battle with Perez, who had three birdies and a solitary bogey on the par-3 No. 11 at the Old Course at St. Andrews.

Southgate had two bogeys on the back nine and failed to make the birdie he needed at the last to force a playoff.

"Obviously I felt like I had a solid day. I did my job and it was good enough, and next thing you know, you're a winner on the European Tour," Perez said. "You have to take it how it comes and it's a great win for me."

Paul Waring (70) and Joakim Lagergren (69) finished in a tie for third on 20 under.

INDIANAPOLIS – Mi Jung Hur wanted to go wire-to-wire on the LPGA Tour for the first time, and she had the perfect formula Sunday at the Indy Women in Tech Championship.

She didn't make any mistakes at Brickyard Crossing.

No one came close.

Hur closed with a 4-under 68 for a four-shot victory, her second LPGA Tour title of the year.

"After the third round, I was talking about that wire-to-wire because I never had that before in my life and I really wanted to do it," Hur said on the 18th green after getting soaked by in a celebration. "And I did it. I'm so happy."

The 29-year-old South Korean became the sixth multiple winner on the LPGA Tour this season. Jin Young Ko, a double major winner this year, has four victories. No one else has more than two.

Nanna Koerstz Madsen birdied her last two holes for a 67 to finish alone in second, the only drama in the final round. It was a big deal to Koerstz Madsen, who moved from No. 70 to No. 44 in the Race to the CME Globe.

The LPGA Tour has four events remaining - all of them in Asia - before the top 60 qualify for the season-ending CME Globe Tour Championship in Florida.

Marina Alex, in her first appearance since her Solheim Cup debut, began the final round two shots behind. Alex did not make a birdie until the 16th hole, closed with another birdie for a 72 and finished alone in third.

Megan Khang (68), Sakura Yokomine (68), Bronte Law (70) and Maria Torres (72) tied for fourth. Torres opened with three birdies in four holes to get within one shot. That was her last birdie, and she lost ground with three bogeys that kept her from moving up more in the Race to the CME Globe. Torres was projected at No. 70.

The lead down to one, Hur rolled in a birdie on No. 4 and closed out the front nine with another birdie to stretch her lead to five shots as everyone around her dropped shots at Brickyard Crossing, the course that has four holes inside the Indianapolis Motor Speedway oval.

Hur added a pair of birdies early on the back nine to put it away.

"MJ, when she plays good, she's on fire," Koerstz Madsen said. "So I wasn't really thinking that I could catch her. I was thinking she's going to go out and shoot 4 under or 5 under or something, so it was going to be really hard if I had to catch her."

Hur won the Ladies Scottish Open in August, ending nearly five years without a victory. Now she has two victories seven weeks apart, and Hur hopes she is not finished. Among those celebrating with her on the 18th green was her husband. She was married in January.

"Yeah, had two wins this year with my husband already - first one was in Scotland and this one," she said. "Hopefully, he is traveling more with me. There would be another good memory I can make."

LIVE: MLS Eastern Conference playoff race in focus

Published in Soccer
Sunday, 29 September 2019 15:07

Big Picture

It had rained pretty much constantly for two weeks in Colombo before Sri Lanka had left to Pakistan. After arriving in Karachi early last week, it had rained pretty much constantly for the first few days, forcing the abandonment of the first ODI. In a fortnight in which climate change has been in the news globally, perhaps it has been fitting that unstinting, unseasonal rains in both cities have also left their mark on the game.

Whether the rains are a result of a changing climate or not, they certainly have made Sri Lanka's unenviable position even worse. Already weakened by a slew of withdrawals, Sri Lanka have also been unable to train as they would like, both before they left for the tour, as well as since arriving in Pakistan. What's more, if there is extra moisture in the Karachi surface to aid seam bowling, this too, may play into the hands of their hosts, who have the superior seam attack.

ALSO READ: Ian Chappell on why cricket needs to take climate change seriously

Pakistan may be stepping out into a new era, under Misbah-ul-Haq. But they were always strong favourites in this series, against a team that still does not have a permanent coach. The rains have only made Sri Lanka's challenge more difficult.

Form guide

Pakistan WWWWL (completed matches, most recent first)
Sri LankaWWWLW

In the spotlight

There is no doubt Danushka Gunathilaka is a talented batsman. But he has, in the past three years, been on the end of too many disciplinary indiscretions, the most-recent of which was a broken curfew in the middle of a Test match last year. Gunathilaka was not picked for Sri Lanka's World Cup squad, partly because of that history. He needs more runs most to convince the selectors that he should be part of Sri Lanka's best starting XI when all players are available.

ALSO READ: This tour a precursor to December Test series, says SL coach Ratnayake

The days when Sri Lanka's batsmen could consider themselves among the best players of spin are long gone. As the likes of Imran Tahir have repeatedly proved, this generation of Sri Lanka batsmen have a particular weakness against legspin. In the five games he has played against them so far, Shadab Khan has excellently exploited this weakness, taking 10 wickets at an average of 16.3 - his best against any major nation. With the current Sri Lanka top-order batsmen being essentially the second string, perhaps Shadab has an opportunity to improve on those numbers.

Team news

It is difficult to predict Sri Lanka's XI, but Nuwan Pradeep may get a game owing to his experience. Lakshan Sandakan is the only specialist spinner in the squad, but with the likes of Shehan Jayasuriya and Wanindu Hasaranga (both spin-bowling allrounders) around, perhaps he will not be required, especially if seam movement is expected.

Sri Lanka (possible): 1 Lahiru Thirimanne (capt.), 2 Danushka Gunathilaka, 3 Avishka Fernando, 4 Sadeera Samarawickrama (wk), 5 Oshada Fernando, 6 Shehan Jayasuriya, 7 Dasun Shanaka, 8 Isuru Udana, 9 Wanindu Hasaranga, 10 Kasun Rajitha, 11 Nuwan Pradeep

Batsman Asif Ali played only two World Cup matches, but may get an opportunity here. Left-arm seamer Usman Shinwari, who last played an ODI in March, could also get a game.

Pakistan (possible): 1 Fakhar Zaman, 2 Imam-ul-Haq, 3 Babar Azam, 4 Haris Sohail, 5 Sarfraz Ahmed (capt.) (wk), 6 Asif Ali, 7 Imad Wasim, 8 Shadab Khan, 9 Wahab Riaz, 10 Mohammad Amir, 11 Usman Shinwari

Pitch and conditions

There is only a 10% chance of rain on Monday, which should mean a match of some sort will be possible. Bright sunshine over the weekend has also helped dry the ground, which had been seriously waterlogged on Friday.

Stats and trivia

  • Pakistan have won their six most-recent (completed) matches against Sri Lanka - a streak that goes back to 2017

  • Gunathilaka has played only five ODIs since the start of 2018, but averages 46.50 through that period

  • Shadab has never gone wicketless against Sri Lanka. All five of his matches against them were in the UAE

  • Babar Azam is ranked third on the ICC rankings for ODI batting, while Imam-ul-Haq is joint 11th with Australia's Aaron Finch. To find the best-ranking Sri Lanka batsman involved in this series, you have to go all the way down to No. 80: Avishka Fernando

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