Arosa Sri Lanka cricket team in South Africa in 1982–83

In October 1982, a representative team of Sri Lankan cricket players undertook a so-called "Rebel tour" to South Africa, to play a series of matches against the South African team colloquially called the 'cuckoo tour'. At the time, the International Cricket Council (ICC) had placed a moratorium on international cricket teams making tours of South Africa, due to the nation's government policy of apartheid, leaving South Africa with no international competition.

AROSA Sri Lanka in South Africa in 1982
 
  South Africa AROSA Sri Lanka
Dates 26 October 1982 – 13 December 1982
Captains Peter Kirsten Bandula Warnapura
Test series
Result South Africa won the 2-match series 2–0
One Day International series
Results South Africa won the 4-match series 4–0

Background

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During the 1970s and 1980s, due to the boycott of South Africa by global sporting bodies, the International Cricket Council blocked any official cricket tours to South Africa. This led to a number of so-called "rebel" tours, where individual players were contracted to tour as part of unofficial representative teams. The first such tour recently took place with an English team touring the country.[1]

Heads of the South African Cricket Union, Ali Bacher and Geoff Dakin, approached Sri Lankan cricketer Tony Opatha in July 1982 to negotiate organising a tour by Sri Lankan players. In September Colin Rushmere, a South African lawyer, flew to Colombo with 14 contracts for the players of a team Opatha had assembled in secret. A month later the Sri Lankan team was touring Zimbabwe and Rushmere visited Harare to confirm the participation of Roy Dias and Duleep Mendis. However both were unable to join the tour team to South Africa as their passports were held by the team manager. When news of the tour broke, the Board of Cricket Control for Sri Lanka (BCCSL) issued 25-year bans to all the tour players. Opatha, who was team manager as well as a player, named the team the 'AROSA Sri Lankan XI'. The 'ARO' standing for the first three initials in his name; Antony Ralph Opatha and the 'SA' standing for South Africa.[1]

Sri Lanka were still an emerging team at the time, having only been granted Test status earlier in 1982, and were not regarded as being in the same league as the South Africans. The tour of a Sri Lankan team, the first ever by a non-white team, was a milestone which showed the world that South Africa (who previously blocked an English team touring in 1968 for containing just one non-white player) was reforming.[1]

The tour

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The tour was a disaster for the AROSA Sri Lankan team, failing to win a single game. They were soundly beaten in all their one-day and "test" matches against the South Africans. Sri Lankan managed only to draw three matches against provincial teams, with the remainder also being defeats.[2] The team was not helped by the absence of stronger performing players like Dias and Mendis and the underperformance of star spin bowler Ajit de Silva who struggled with stress and had a breakdown on tour.[3]

First ODI
6 November 1982
(55 overs match)
Scorecard
South Africa  
291/4 (55 overs)
v
  Arosa Sri Lanka
102 (50 overs)
Jimmy Cook 120
Anura Ranasinghe 2/46 (11 overs)
South Africa won by 189 runs
Wanderers, Johannesburg
Umpires: James Peacock and Sydney Moore
  • Toss not known

Second ODI
8 November 1982
(55 overs match)
Scorecard
South Africa  
281/5 (55 overs)
v
  Arosa Sri Lanka
174/5 (55 overs)
Jimmy Cook 131
Anura Ranasinghe 2/54 (10 overs)
Nirmal Hettiaratchi 50
Garth Le Roux 2/27 (11 overs)
South Africa won by 107 runs
Berea Park, Pretoria
Umpires: Edward Carter and George Hawkins
  • Toss not known

Third ODI
17 November 1982
(55 overs match)
Scorecard
Arosa Sri Lanka  
140 (49.4 overs)
v
  South Africa
174/5 (55 overs)
Nirmal Hettiaratchi 32
Vintcent van der Bijl 4/12 (8.4 overs)
Barry Richards 74
Jeryl Woutersz 1/9 (5 overs)
South Africa won by 8 wickets
Kingsmead, Durban
Umpires: Denzil Bezuidenhout and Barry Smith
  • Toss not known

First Test
19-22 November 1982
(4 day match)
Scorecard
Arosa Sri Lanka  
v
213 (72.3 overs)
Bandula de Silva 70
Garth Le Roux 6/55 (18.3 overs)
378 (106.5 overs)
Jimmy Cook 169
Lalith Kaluperuma 5/123 (45 overs)
141 (62.1 overs)
Flavian Aponso 44
Alan Kourie 5/44 (22 overs)
South Africa won by an innings and 24 runs
Wanderers, Johannesburg
Umpires: Cyril Mitchley and Oswald Schoof
  • Arosa Sri Lanka won the toss and decided to bat
  • Bandula de Silva retired hurt in the Arosa Sri Lanka second innings having scored 3 (team score 8/1) - he returned when the score was 49/4

Fourth ODI
1 December 1982
(55 overs match)
Scorecard
Arosa Sri Lanka  
276/9 (55 overs)
v
  South Africa
278/4 (52.5 overs)
Anura Ranasinghe 100
Garth Le Roux 2/57 (11 overs)
Lawrence Seeff 142
Susantha Karunaratne 2/27 (8.5 overs)
South Africa won by 6 wickets
St George's Park, Port Elizabeth
Umpires: Carl Coetzee and Sandy Matthews
  • Toss not known

Second Test
9-13 December 1982
(4 day match)
Scorecard
Arosa Sri Lanka  
v
282 (90.5 overs)
Flavian Aponso 81
Stephen Jefferies 3/43 (18 overs)
663/6d (159.3 overs)
Graeme Pollock 197
Bernard Perera 2/154 (42.3 overs)
281 (81.2 overs)
Bernard Perera 102
Stephen Jefferies 3/76 (19 overs)
South Africa won by an innings and 100 runs
Newlands, Cape Town
Umpires: Dudley Schoof and Barry Smith
  • Toss not known

Aftermath

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The 14 players were given a 25-year ban, depriving Sri Lankan cricket of a large amount of player talent. Despite earning enough money from the tour to settle down and build houses, most faced social stigma and unemployment afterwards. In 1991 Sri Lankan president Ranasinghe Premadasa lifted the bans on the players allowing many of the rebels to later hold key positions in cricket administration.[1] One player, Flavian Aponso, did play international cricket again at the 1996 Cricket World Cup for the Netherlands (where he had moved after the rebel tour).[4] The Sri Lankan tour is theorised to have helped pave the way for subsequent rebel tours of players from the West Indies a few years later by demonstrating it possible for a non-white cricket team to tour South Africa safely.[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Amaruwan, Dilina (16 January 2019). "Cricket In Cuckoo Land: The Rebel Tour Of Apartheid South Africa". Roar Media. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  2. ^ van Dompselaar, Louis. "Arosa Sri Lanka in South Africa: Summary of results". Cricinfo. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  3. ^ a b Alfred, Luke (16 January 2019). "When Sri Lanka went to cuckoo land". Cricinfo. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  4. ^ "Flavian Aponso". Cricinfo. Retrieved 5 December 2022.

Further reading

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  • Peter May, The Rebel Tours: Cricket's Crisis of Conscience, SportsBooks, 2009.
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