It is difficult not to worry, too, for the newest member of this batting order — debutant Pathum Nissanka, who has lit up first-class cricket over the past few seasons, racking up an impressive average of over 67, and yet was thrust into Sri Lanka’s T20I and ODI teams first, despite not really having prospered in the shorter formats at domestic level. Was there really no thought to letting this 22-year-old get settled in the format he vastly prefers, first? Selectors need only to look at Mendis’ career to figure the pitfalls of pushing young batsmen — however gifted — into all three formats too early. But does Sri Lankan cricket learn such lessons?There have long been attempts to address the structural problems within Sri Lankan cricket — particularly to make the woefully-bloated first-class system more competitive. But none have been successful, as self-serving administrators have sought only to secure votes at board elections, and painted Sri Lanka’s occasional cricketing successes as proof that the system is working. (This is despite Sri Lanka presently ranking seventh in Tests, eighth in ODIs and tenth in T20Is.)On Sunday, Sri Lanka’s supporters chose to revel in nostalgia, and the free-to-air channel that had rights to the West Indies series chose to broadcast the Sri Lanka Legends match instead of the first session of the Test. On Monday morning, the island will wake up to a scorecard from Antigua that suggests these decisions were justified.

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