Kandy’s Harindra Dunuwille was a top class cricketer, his full name goes as Tikiribanda Harindranatha ‘Harindra’ Dunuwille, by profession a Lawyer. He is a product of Trinity College, where he started his cricketing career. He played in the mid 1960’s as a right handed batsman and semi regular spin bowler and had his first taste of top class cricket as a slip fieldsman.
He was famous as a slip fielder for diving catches. He led the Trinity College side in 1966. He also played for the Central Province Schools team, Sri Lanka Schools and Law College. At club level, he played for Kandy Cricket Club, Old Trinitians SC and Central Province. He led the Central Province schools team and was Combined Schools vice captain. Harindra as he was known to many people was one of the finest cricketers to come out of Trinity College.
He started his cricket at the age of nine and played in the Under-12 team and was selected to play in the Under 14 and 16 teams. In 1962 while he was in the Under-16 side, he was invited by the then first XI coach Percy Madugalle to play in the team. He replaced Lalith Thalakada, who had not attended practices and it was Harindra’s first game for the senior side against Kingswood College.
From 1963 to 1966, Harindra was a regular member of the side when he led the side, that year they had a top side and his deputy was Himendra Ranaweera and some of the other players were Glen Vanlangenburg, Nihal Marambe, Ajith Abeyratne and Chandra Amunugama and T.B. Marambe was the coach. Harendera played one of his finest seasons in 1965, when he bagged 49 wickets as a right arm spinner and became the second best Trinitian next to HC Inman who had taken 61 wickets in the 1910s. Harindra won the best bowling prize at Trinity and some of his bowling figures in 1964 were 5/27 and 5/63 vs Wesley, 5/51 vs S. Thomas’ and 5/40 vs Royal. In 1965 he took 7/31 vs Ananda, 5/67 vs Royal, 6/76 vs St. Joseph’s and in 1966 took 6/6 vs Kingswood and 6/39 vs St. Joseph’s.
In 1966 as a steady right hand bat Harindra scored two unbeaten centuries, 129 vs Kingswood College and 120 vs Royal Colege. In his very first year he won his colours and the coveted Lion in 1966 and also took home the highest award at Trinity, the Ryde Gold Medal which is presented to the best all-round student. In 1966 he led the Central Province Schools team in the Zonal tournament and was vice captain to Anura Tennakoon in the Sri Lanka schools team. In the same year as a schoolboy Harindra played for the country under HIK Fernando who got the opportunity to lead as the regular skipper Michael Tissera was injured.
Harindra had a colourful career both on and off the field. His memorable match was in 1966, when the Sri Lanka schools team led by Anura Tennakoon with Harindra as the deputy, entered the final of the Pentangular tourney, in the country’s premier cricket tournament for the Robert Senanayake Trophy. The final was against the Government Services XI which had players like TB Kehelgamuwa, BG Reid, BF Ahlip, DP de Silva, Anuruddha Polonnowita and Daya Sahabandu to name a few. On the way to the final they played against the strong Rest XI in the semi-final which had players of the caliber of Russell Hamer, BWR Thomas, S. Fernando, R. de Silva and Norton Fredericks. The schools side won by 20 runs with one and half hours to spare. The Schools XI scored 157 and 217 to which the Rest XI replied with 142 and 212.
After leaving school in 1967 Harindra played for SSC for one season before playing for Law College for three years and later for Kandy Cricket Club and Central Province. He also played for Old Trinitians SC in the late 1980s and later became the president of the Kandy District Cricket Association. During his term of office, several Test matches were played in Kandy along with a World Cup match. Harindra introduced several tournaments among them, the All Island Schools Under-15 championship for the Dr. CDL Fernando Trophy, limited over’s, six a-side, double wicket and a triangular are prominent.
Harindra was well supported by committee members like late ZM Jauffer, late Dr. MS Uduwella, late Aubrey Kuruppu, Deva Amunugama, Malcolm Perera, Hafiz Marikar, D. Vartharaja, Sunil Wickremanayake, AS Ekanayake, Lakshman Nugawella and Janaka Pathirana to name a few. He was also a live-wire when the late Gamini Dissanayake re-developed the Asgiriya ground to a stadium and was in the Committee with his good friends late HM Halimdeen, late Kavan Rambukwella and the then principal of Trinity late Dr. WG Wickremasinghe.
Harindra was one of the vice presidents of the Board of Control for Cricket when Sri Lanka won the World Cup. As the Kandy Mayor, he formed the first Sports Committee of the Municipal Council and this writer had the privilege of being the first chairman of that committee and promoted sports in a big way through the Playgrounds and Community Centres. Harindra is one of the founder members of the Old Trinitians SC and never held anything back to give the club the much needed boost. Today Harindra has retired from all sports activities.