Karunaratne joins Sri Lanka's 10-man 5000 Test-run club
Dimuth Karunaratne5000* runs at 37.88
5000th run in his 72nd Test and 138th innings
The newest member in Sri Lanka’s 5000 Test-run club, Karunaratne crossed the milestone in Sri Lanka’s first innings of the second match against Bangladesh.
Having only celebrated his 33rd birthday in March, Karunaratne is Sri Lanka’s 10th highest run-scorer in the format and still has time to climb that ladder.
The left-hander looks good value to do just that considering he scored a double-century in the first Test against Bangladesh. He has 11 centuries to date and is enjoying one of the finest calendar years of his career.
Dimuth Karunaratne becomes the 10th Sri Lanka cricketer to cross 5000 Test runs 🔥#SLvBAN pic.twitter.com/LoZKFx2YlV
— ICC (@ICC) April 29, 2021
Arjuna Ranatunga5105 runs at 35.695000th run in his 92nd Test and 153rd innings
One of the nation’s most iconic players, an 18-year-old Ranatunga made his debut in Sri Lanka’s first-ever Test in 1982. He notched Sri Lanka’s first Test half-century in that match. More than 18 years later he raised his 5000th run for the country in Test cricket in his penultimate match for Sri Lanka.
Among the greatest contributors to Sri Lankan cricket ever, Ranatunga famously captained the team to a stunning ICC Cricket World Cup victory in 1996.
Thilan Samaraweera5462 runs at 48.765000th run in 71st Test and 114th innings
Solid as a rock, Samaraweera was the glue in a Sri Lankan batting order boasting some of the most stylish players in the game, while still having plenty of glorious strokes in his own arsenal. A century-maker on debut against India, Samaraweera went on to hit 14 hundreds in the format, with a high score of 231.
The right-hander raced to 5000 Test runs in fewer matches than any Sri Lankan bar Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene.
Tillakaratne Dilshan5492 runs at 40.985000th runs in his 81st Test and 132nd innings
A middle-order batter when he was first picked in the team, Dilshan looked the part early in his career, scoring an impressive 163 in just his second match. But it was not until he was promoted to the top of the order that Dilshan’s career really took off. He averaged 44.29 across his 53 innings opening the batting and allowed Sri Lanka to put opposition attacks under pressure from ball one. All that and he was an exceptional fielder and more than handy bowler too.
Marvan Atapattu5502 runs at 39.025000th run in his 80th Test and 138th innings
One half of Sri Lanka’s most fruitful opening pair, Atapattu was the ice to Sanath Jayasuriya’s fire, wearing opposition attacks down from one end while his partner flayed them from the other. The old-school opener was one of cricket’s great converters, turning 16 of his 33 50+ scores into hundreds, and six of those 16 centuries into doubles.
Angelo Mathews6219* runs at 45.39 5000th run in his 75th Test and 133rd innings
Up until Karunaratne’s entry, Mathews was the most recent Sri Lankan to join the 5000 Test run club, getting there in mid-2018. As reliable a servant to the game as any who has ever represented the island nation, Mathews started his career as the complete all-rounder in 2008. While a run of injuries has stymied his bowling over the past few years, he remains a lock in Sri Lanka’s XI.
Already the fifth-highest run-scorer in Sri Lanka’s Test history with an average that currently sits fourth among them, he already stands as one of the nation’s finest ever performers.
A maiden Test double-century to remember! 🙌@IamDimuth #SLvBAN pic.twitter.com/dyfnKiOBqg
— Sri Lanka Cricket 🇱🇰 (@OfficialSLC) April 25, 2021
Aravinda de Silva6361 runs at 42.975000th run in his 74th Test and 128th innings
The hero of Sri Lanka’s glorious victory in the 1996 World Cup final, de Silva was one of the gems of the country’s Test batting order for nearly two decades. With a technique that could stand up to the sternest of examinations, he scored 20 centuries and 22 fifties across his 93 Tests.
The dashing star was the first Sri Lankan to ever score 5000 runs.
Sanath Jayasuriya6973 runs at 40.075000th run in his 79th Test and 133rd innings
Before there was Steve Smith there was Sanath Jayasuriya – a player picked as a bowling all-rounder who would go on to become a batting great. One of the stars of the ‘96 World Cup, Jayasuriya took his Test cricket to the next level in the years that followed as Sri Lanka established themselves as a force to be reckoned with across formats.
His incredible 340 off 578 against India in 1997 was Sri Lanka’s first Test triple-century and it remains the second-highest score by a Sri Lankan batsman.
Mahela Jayawardene11,814 runs at 49.845000th run in his 70th Test and 114th innings
A modern giant of the game, Jayawardene is Test cricket’s ninth-highest run-scorer and joint sixth-greatest century-maker, well and truly justifying the clamour that surrounded him when he debuted as a 19-year-old.
A remarkable player of spin and more than adept against pace, Jayawardene scored runs all around the wicket and his combination with Kumar Sangakkara stands among the most reliable cricket has seen. Fittingly, the pair boasts the record for the biggest stand in Test history, putting on 624 runs against South Africa in Colombo.
That same innings saw Jayawardene score 374 runs – the fourth-highest score in Test history.
Just how good was Kumar Sangakkara? #ThankYouSanga pic.twitter.com/IxDBrz4B2f
— ICC (@ICC) August 23, 2015
Kumar Sangakkara12,400 runs at 57.405000th run in his 64th Test and 106th innings.
A member of the ICC’s Test Team of the Decade, Sangakkara stands among cricket’s finest ever players with a case to be considered the best batsman of his generation.
Across 134 Tests he scored 12,400 runs at 57.40, finishing his career as the format’s sixth greatest run-scorer with comfortably the best average of anyone who scored more than 10,000 runs. Those statistics are all the more remarkable when you consider he had to keep wickets in 48 Tests. He scored 9283 runs at 66.78 in Tests where he was not the designated keeper.
Sangakkara raced to 5000 runs in just 64 Tests and 106 innings – comfortably the fastest of any Sri Lankan.