Cricket-Sri Lanka's Shanaka says constant criticism has affected players' mental health


Cricket - ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026 - Super 8 - Sri Lanka v England - Pallekele International Cricket Stadium, Kandy, Sri Lanka - February 22, 2026 Sri Lanka fans celebrate after Dasun Shanaka hits six runs off the bowling of England's Jamie Overton REUTERS/Lahiru Harshana

COLOMBO, Feb 26 (Reuters) - Sri Lanka captain ⁠Dasun Shanaka said the relentless criticism aimed at his players has been damaging ⁠to their mental health and undermined their efforts at the Twenty20 World Cup, ‌where they were eliminated from the group stage on Wednesday.

The tournament co-hosts drew heavy flak from fans and pundits for their shaky buildup to the World Cup, which included losing five of six limited-overs matches to England.

The 2014 ​champions suffered a second successive Super Eights defeat on Wednesday, ⁠with New Zealand scoring a comprehensive ⁠victory to knock them out ofthe tournament.

Shanaka apologised to fans after their "embarrassing" performance but also felt ⁠anatmosphere ‌of negativity had reached an extent where the authorities must intervene.

"No matter how we as cricketers try to stay positive, there is negativity outside," Shanaka told reporters after ⁠their defeat in Colombo.

"We will play and leave, but for ​the players who will come ‌in the future, if the government can even stop it, that's better for their ⁠mental health."

Chasing 169 ​for victory, Sri Lanka were 46-5 in the 11th over and never looked like recovering.

"Honestly, we are very sorry for what happened. No one goes out there to fail, everyone goes with the intention ⁠of playing well and winning for the team," said ​Shanaka.

Losing the services of three key bowlers - Wanindu Hasaranga, Matheesha Pathirana and Ehsan Malinga - through injuries was a major setback.

"You've also got to make fitness a non-negotiable," he said.

"When you have the number ⁠of injuries we've had, it's hard to get a good outcome.

"Your fitness level influences your injuries. There are some players who can't even get into the team because of fitness issues. That's something we've talked about a lot over several World Cups now," he added.

Former captain Kumar ​Sangakkara said Sri Lanka were in danger of becoming irrelevant in ⁠the cricket world.

"There is a lot of work to be done at all levels to course ​correct," he wrote on X.

"We can’t do the same ‌things over and over and expect different results when ​the cricket world around us has evolved so quickly. We haven’t adapted and the danger is irrelevance."

(Reporting by Amlan Chakraborty in New Delhi; editing by Peter Rutherford)

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