World Twenty20 Kumar Sangakkara to resign from T20s after Bangladesh event.former Sri Lankan chief Kumar Sangakkara has said he will resign from Twenty20 internationals after the finish of the World T20 in Bangladesh."definitely, unmistakably, this is my last World T20," the trendy left-hander told Sunday Island newspaper."i won't be playing any T20 internationals after this.
Sangakkara, in the same way as other of his counterparts, however, will keep on utilizing his exchange down home Twenty20 competitions around the world."it's miserable, yet that is reality. It's not the end of my T20 profession however. I might want to play establishment based T20s. Once your World Cup prospects are over, you ought to give the following harvest of players a good fortune. It's a characteristic progression."the veteran batsman has played 50 T20 internationals, scoring 1,311 runs at a normal of 32.77 with seven half-hundreds of years to his name.
Sangakkara said he might take an approach his ODI vocation after the end of one year from now's World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.the 36-year-old has played 50 matches in Sri Lanka colors in the most limited arrangement of the diversion, scoring 1,311 runs at a normal of 32.77 with a strike rate of 120. Sangakkara captained Sri Lanka to the last of the 2009 competition, when they were defeated by Pakistan at Lord's, and he was essential in their rushed to the 2012 last when the West Indies proved to be the best. "Most likely, undoubtedly, this is my last World Twenty20. I won't be playing any T20 internationals after this," he told Sunday Island.
Sangakkara said he might take an approach his ODI vocation after the end of one year from now's World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.the 36-year-old has played 50 matches in Sri Lanka colors in the most limited arrangement of the diversion, scoring 1,311 runs at a normal of 32.77 with a strike rate of 120. Sangakkara captained Sri Lanka to the last of the 2009 competition, when they were defeated by Pakistan at Lord's, and he was essential in their rushed to the 2012 last when the West Indies proved to be the best. "Most likely, undoubtedly, this is my last World Twenty20. I won't be playing any T20 internationals after this," he told Sunday Island.