Lahiru Thirimanne Profile – Age, Career Info & Stats
Lahiru Thirimanne Profile – Age, Career Info & Stats

Lahiru Thirimanne Profile – Age, Career Info & Stats

Pretty left-handed batsman Lahiru Thirimanne of Sri Lanka made a career of silken strokeplay and unfulfilled promise. Born in 1989, he had long been anointed as the heir to the island’s batting royalty, demonstrating his credentials with a composed, match-winning century in the 2014 Asia Cup final. In formats, he was rewarded with more than 3,000 international runs, his solid technique of greater use in the slower tempo game of Test cricket. His international travels, which involved a very brief captaincy stint, never consistently matched its potential, but Thirimanne was always an elegant and combative presence that helped provided crucial stability to the top of the order in Sri Lanka’s transition period.

Personal InformationDetails
NameLahiru Thirimanne
AgeAugust 09, 1989 (35 years)
Birth PlaceMoratuwa
Height
RoleBatsman
Batting StyleLeft Handed Bat
Bowling StyleRight-arm medium
CountrySri Lanka

Lahiru Thirimanne’s Bowling Career Stats

Lahiru Thirimanne was best known for his stylish left-hand batting, but also provided useful part-time right-arm medium pace. His bowling figures in international cricket are modest: they paint a picture of an occasional partnership breaker rather than an attacking bowler. In ODIs, where he was most effective, took 16 wickets with a best of 2/30 and was frequently used to run quiet overs in the middle. He took 1 wicket in Test cricket, and was also wicketless in T20Is. These numbers reflect his second fiddle status, but the one or two big overs he would contribute at key moments was a sneaky value add to the side.

Test Format Stats

Test numbers are the ultimate test of a cricketer’s stamina, ability and strategic smarts. They transcend mere wicket numbers, preferring a low average and tight economy rate as the truest marks of dominance. The much-vaunted five-for is the gold standard, proof of a bowler’s ability consistently to take batting sides apart and shape the pace of games over long, punishing days.

DetailsTest
Match44
Innings5
Balls84
Runs51
Wickets0
Average0.0
Economy3.64
Strike Rate0.0
Best Bowling Inning0/5
Best Bowling Match0/5
5w0
10w0

ODIs Format Stats

The statistics of an ODI bowler are a complicated ledger of containment and enterprise. A good average is, of course, essential but a low economy rate under 5.0 is really the currency of pressure. Five-wicket hauls are a cause for celebration, but the most valuable bowlers are the ones who regularly fracture partnerships in middle overs, and so Molten figures can tell us as much about a story of strategic suffocation as outright destruction.

DetailsODIs
Match127
Innings4
Balls104
Runs94
Wickets3
Average31.33
Economy5.42
Strike Rate34.67
Best Bowling Inning2/36
Best Bowling Match2/36
5w0
10w0

T20I Format Stats

In T20Is, the bowling figures are reduced to brutally unforgiving shorthand: economy rate. Wickets are a distant second to the suffocating pressure of going at less than eight an over. A bowler’s average doesn’t mean a lot because what counts is who can execute their yorker or slower bouncer best right at the death, as statistics will show you that it really doesn’t matter how good you are – all face the same challenges and chaos specific to Twenty20 cricket.

DetailsT20I
Match26
Innings0
Balls0
Runs0
Wickets0
Average0.0
Economy0
Strike Rate0.0
Best Bowling Inning-/-
Best Bowling Match-/-
5w0
10w0

Lahiru Thirimanne’s Batting Career Stats

Lahiru Thirimanne’s record as a batter is that of a graceful but sporadically successful international cricketer. The left-handed batsman scored 3,195 runs all formats included. As he had a very technically sound game that accounted for two tons and fifteen fifties. His highest peak came during the 2014 Asia Cup final; with a steely, match-winning 101 not out he announced his promise. More his résumé of 1800-plus runs at an average above 34 indicate that he can anchor the innings – providing top order stability for the often troubled Lankan team in recent times.

Test Format Stats

Lahiru Thirimanne’s test numbers are another sad story of potential not realized. In 31 games, he made 991 runs at an average of 23.59, a modest return for someone with such a graceful approach. His trio of half-centuries, with a best of 155*, were brief flashes of brightness that failed to be sustained, and failure on too many occasions even then meant his Test career was over before it had the chance to mature, more story of tantalising elegance than fulfilled potential in the toughest arena.

DetailsTest
Match44
Innings85
Runs2088
Ball Faced5294
Highest Score155
Average26.43
Strike Rate39.45
NO6
Fours207
Sixes3
50s10
100s3
200s0

ODIs Format Stats

The ODI field is a 100-over story of controlled aggression and strategic naanies. There is something unique in its statistics too which speak of a duality – the art of the anchoring century alongside the explosiveness of a 50-ball hundred. An economy rate is as valuable to a bowler as five wickets, it is a format where cumulative pressure, the net not simply the moments taken, defines the ultimate tale of numbers on the scoreboard.

DetailsODIs
Match127
Innings105
Runs3164
Ball Faced4389
Highest Score139
Average34.77
Strike Rate72.09
NO14
Fours244
Sixes25
50s21
100s4
200s0

T20I Format Stats

Lahiru Thirimanne’s T20I numbers read like a biography at odds with the craziness of format itself. He made 291 runs in his 26 innings at a strike rate of only 108.99, telling the story of his classic anchorman style. He managed a half-century, but his game was always more suited for the longer formats; so his journey in T20Is was a stopgap haphazard time rather short period defined by graft than firework.

DetailsT20I
Match26
Innings20
Runs291
Ball Faced267
Highest Score44
Average16.17
Strike Rate108.99
NO2
Fours27
Sixes5
50s0
100s0
200s0

Lahiru Thirimanne’s Career Information

Lahiru Thirimanne’s international career was an absorbing tale of grace lacking grit and promise that delivered in fits and starts. The left-hand batsman, for long tagged as the future cornerstone of Sri Lanka showed his class in testing conditions with a match-winning 101 against Pakistan in the final of the Asia Cup 2014, a high point in career. In 127 matches, he scored more than 3,000 runs, and although limited-overs cricket was always a better home for his sound technique – which in ODIs was good for an average of mid-30s – he remained one of the more straightforward men to dismiss. Though his Test career, which included a brief reign as captain, never quite achieved the level to which his talent suggested he was capable of reaching — Graham Gooch ruffled a few feathers when he called Tavare an “incurable stodger” in 1986 — he was an elegant and tough presence at the top of the order. In the end, his career was one of stylish grit and much-needed stability in a turbulent transitional period for Sri Lankan cricket.

T20 debutvs Pakistan, Jun 01 at 2012 at Mahinda Rajapaksa International Stadium
Last T20vs South Africa, Mar 28 at 2016 at Arun Jaitley Stadium
Test debutvs England, Jun 16 at 2011 at The Rose Bowl
Last Testvs India, Mar 12 at 2022 at M.Chinnaswamy Stadium
Odi debutvs India, Jan 05 at 2010 at Shere Bangla National Stadium
Last Odivs Pakistan, Oct 02 at 2019 at National Stadium

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