Ceylonese Cricket Team In Pakistan In 1966–67
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The Ceylon cricket team toured Pakistan in November 1966. Ceylon did not then have Test status, but three five-day unofficial Tests were played, Pakistan winning all three by large margins in only four days. The tour also included two other first-class matches before the unofficial Tests.


The Ceylon team

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Michael Tissera Michael Hugh Tissera (born 23 March 1939 in Colombo) is a former Sri Lankan ODI cricketer who played in the 1975 Cricket World Cup. School Tissera was educated at S. Thomas' College, Mount Lavinia, where, initially appearing in 1954 aged fourte ...
(captain) * Neil Chanmugam * Fitzroy Crozier *
Herbert Fernando Herbert I. K. Fernando (born 4 January 1933) is a former cricketer who was Ceylon's principal wicket-keeper from 1953 to 1970. He was also a doctor and a brigadier in the Sri Lanka Army. Life and career Herbert Fernando attended St Peter's Coll ...
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Lionel Fernando M. E. Lionel Fernando is a former civil servant and Diplomat. He has held the offices of Secretary to the Ministry of Media, Tourism and Aviation, Secretary to the Foreign Ministry, Sri Lankan Ambassador to the Netherlands, Sri Lankan Ambassado ...
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Norton Fredrick Norton Fredrick (14 November 1937, Wattala – 10 August 2011, Wattala) was a Sri Lankan cricketer. He was primarily a fast bowler who represented Ceylon from 1964 until 1968 before retiring due to family commitments. On his first-class debut i ...
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David Heyn Peter David Heyn (born 26 June 1945) is a former Sri Lankan cricketer who played in 18 unofficial Test matches from 1966 to 1976, and two One Day Internationals in the 1975 World Cup. Heyn is widely regarded as one of the best cover point field ...
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Clive Inman Clive Clay Inman (29 January 1936 – 7 December 2022) was a Sri Lankan cricketer who played first-class cricket for Ceylon from 1956 to 1966 and for Leicestershire from 1961 to 1971. Cricket career Inman attended St Peter's College, Colombo. ...
* Stanley Jayasinghe * Nihal Kodituwakku *
Ian Pieris Ian Pieris (14 March 1933 – 1 January 2016) was a Sri Lankan first-class cricketer and a former president of Sri Lanka Cricket. Education Pieris was educated at S. Thomas' College, Mount Lavinia and then read economics at Queens' College ...
* Anura Tennekoon *
B. W. R. Thomas Bertram W. R. Thomas is a former cricketer who played for Ceylon in the 1960s. Cricket career Thomas was a leg-spinner. He attended S. Thomas' College, Mount Lavinia, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, playing in the cricket team. Thomas was ...
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Sarath Wimalaratne Sarath Ransiri Wimalaratne (born 14 June 1942) is a former cricketer who played for Ceylon in the 1960s. He is now a physician in Sydney. Cricket career Wimalaratne attended Ananda College, where he captained the cricket team in 1962 and toured I ...
All 14 players appeared in the three-match series against Pakistan. Pakistan, captained by Hanif Mohammad, also used 14 players. Only five of the Ceylon team – Tissera, Chanmugam, Herbert Fernando, Fredrick and Jayasinghe – had toured India in 1964–65, Ceylon's previous major tour.


The tour

After a drawn two-day match in Bahawalpur, the Ceylon team drew a first-class match against a President's XI in
Rawalpindi Rawalpindi ( or ; Urdu, ) is a city in the Punjab province of Pakistan. It is the fourth largest city in Pakistan after Karachi, Lahore and Faisalabad, and third largest in Punjab after Lahore and Faisalabad. Rawalpindi is next to Pakistan's ...
. Inman was the highest scorer, with 87 in 90 minutes in the first innings, and Wimalaratne and Thomas were the chief wicket-takers. Next came a first-class match in Lyallpur against a Punjab Governor's XI, which was also drawn. Inman scored 102 in 127 minutes in the first innings, and Chanmugam and Thomas were the chief wicket-takers. In the first unofficial Test, at Lahore Stadium, Pakistan scored 425 ( Mushtaq Mohammad 101), Crozier taking 6 for 135 and Chanmugam 3 for 54. Ceylon were then dismissed for 189 ( Intikhab Alam 5 for 70; Wimalaratne, at number 11, was the highest scorer with 41 not out) and, following on, 275 (Jayasinghe 118; Intikhab Alam 4 for 85). Pakistan scored 40 without loss to win by 10 wickets. The second match, at Dacca Stadium, was even more one-sided, Pakistan declaring and winning by an innings and 37 runs. Pakistan scored 517 for 7 declared (Mushtaq Mohammad 129, Hanif Mohammad 114; Thomas took the first three wickets and finished with 3 for 166). Ceylon made 213 and 267. Crozier's 57 in the second innings was the only fifty; Saeed Ahmed took 5 for 48 and 5 for 82. The third match, at the National Stadium, Karachi, was another innings victory for Pakistan. Ceylon were dismissed for 178 ( Saleem Altaf 4 for 56), Pakistan replied with 483 ( Javed Burki 210; Crozier 7 for 133) and Ceylon made 270 in their second innings (Tissera 120 not out; Intikhab Alam 4 for 55), giving Pakistan victory by an innings and 35 runs. In the series, Pakistan scored 1466 runs for 27 wickets at an average of 54.29; Ceylon scored 1392 for 60 wickets, average 23.20. The tour, which had been intended to prepare the Ceylon players for the planned tour of England in 1968, was a disappointment. '' Wisdens report put Ceylon's failure down to their inexperience in longer matches: "Ceylon, whose cricket is normally confined to one and a half day games, showed their inability in four-day cricket, always forcing the pace, trying to make the game bright and entertaining, and as a result they lacked the staying power and temperament which are so vital in big cricket." Some of the Ceylon players thought the Pakistan umpires were biased against them.


Leading players

In the three matches against Pakistan, Crozier was Ceylon's outstanding player, taking 14 wickets (out of the 27 wickets Pakistan lost in total) at an average of 26.57, and making 142 runs at an average of 23.66. Jayasinghe and Tissera each scored a century, but otherwise failed to reach 30; Ceylon's only other fifty was Crozier's in the second match. Inman, after good form in the preliminary matches, scored only 110 runs at an average of 18.33.


References


External links


Ceylon in Pakistan 1966-67
at CricketArchive
Ceylon in Pakistan, Nov 1966
at
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Further reading

* Ghulam Mustafa Khan and Christie Seneviratne, "Ceylon Tour of Pakistan, 1966", '' Wisden'' 1967, p. 895. {{DEFAULTSORT:Ceylon cricket team in Pakistan in 1966-67 1966-67 Pakistani cricket seasons from 1947–48 to 1969–70 International cricket competitions from 1960–61 to 1970