Th in All time Kumar Sangakkara reached 7,000 runs scored in Test,
vs Pakistan on 24 July.
Sangakkara's best return for dismissals in an innings is four,
a feat he achieved on three occasions;
Sangakkara's best return for rejections in an innings is four,
an accomplishment he accomplished on three events;
Being Sri Lankan you learn those lessons quite well, because, throughout our civil war,
cricket was a unique vibe,” Sangakkara said.
He retracted former Sri Lankan captain Kumar Sangakkara, whose name is a record of four centuries in a World Cup.
But Sangakkara, one of the world's best batsmen of the past two decades,
said playing in Lahore sends out a powerful symbol.
On 27 June, Sri Lankan batsman Kumar Sangakkara said he would retire from international cricket
after the second Test of the series.
On 3 March 2009, a
terrorist attack on the Sri Lankan team convoy in Pakistan injured 6 Sri Lankan players including Sangakkara.
But Sangakkara, who is also the president of the Marylebone Cricket Club(MCC),
said Pakistan was slowly restoring its reputation as a safe destination for visiting teams.
But Sangakkara, who is also the president of the Marylebone Cricket Club,
said Pakistan was slowly restoring its reputation as a safe destination for visiting teams.
In the 2015 three-match series against Sri Lanka,
he dismissed Kumar Sangakkara, who was retiring following the second Test,
four consecutive times in his final four innings.
Kumar Sangakkara, current president of the Marylebone Cricket Club(MCC),
said that the 2009 terror attack taught him a lot of lessons and made him aware about his own values and character.
Sangakkara, who was part of that team,
is now back to the city almost 11 years after when he will be leading the MCC in three T20 matches and a 50-over game.
Kumar Sangakkara(Sinhalese: ක ම ර ස ගක ක ර;
Tamil: க ம ர சங கக க ர; born 27 October 1977) is a Sri Lankan cricket commentator and former cricketer and captain of the Sri Lankan national team.
He was infamously run out in a match against New Zealand
when he left his crease to congratulate Kumar Sangakkara, who had just scored a single to reach his century;
the New Zealand fielder had not yet returned the ball to the wicketkeeper, so the ball was still in play.