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‘Make sure you’re in Sri Lanka’: Khawaja reveals selection guarantee

“Andrew McDonald, one thing last year he said to me was ‘I don’t care what happens, just make sure you’re on the Sri Lanka tour, I want you on the Sri Lanka tour’. At the time I was like ‘cool, yep’. I’m not just playing because I’ve got a gluttony to score lots of runs. Sixteen, 17, 18 hundreds, that’s not going to make a difference to my life.

“I’m going to finish this game, I’ve got beautiful kids and family and I’ll try to give back as much as I can to the world as I can. But I just enjoy playing cricket. Hopefully I can score runs and contribute to my team, and the rest is up to God. It’s nice to get a hundred after the summer, because it was a tough summer.”

Khawaja said he saw both sides of arguments about whether or not to play Sam Konstas in Galle, but also acknowledged how destructive Travis Head was able to be to set up the day for Australia in the first hour of batting.

Usman Khawaja was out twice in one day in Galle in 2016.Credit: AP

“He’s proven in the past and in one day cricket too he can, a bit like Davey [Warner], change the momentum, whether he bats at five or up the top like here,” Khawaja said. “There’s no right and wrong decisions, there’s so many outlooks on what are you trying to achieve for the future, what are we trying to achieve for this series right now, no matter what happens every Test match is important.

“Heady got the nod and he batted beautifully today. Unfortunate for Sam but he’s so young, he’s got plenty of Test cricket left in him, we all know that. So it was good to watch today.

“We both went after it at the start, I took the offy over his head a couple times, and Heady was doing what he does, and we both put pressure on the bowlers in our own way. The field spread out and then it’s just a war of attrition – how long can you do it for. When there’s a partnership going on it might look a little easier than it is, but you never get ahead of yourself in Galle, we learned that last time.”

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Khawaja was at the crease when Steve Smith reached 10,000 runs and recalled his words of acclamation: “I just gave him a big hug and said ‘you’re an absolute legend, you deserve this, and you only get 10,000 runs once, so enjoy it, take your time, savour it’.”

There was humour, too, around the debutant Josh Inglis, who has a Yorkshire heritage, and had his parents Martin and Sarah on hand for his baggy green presentation from West Australian Geoff Marsh.

“Because I’m Pakistani I like to joke about his heritage. I asked him if Geoffrey Boycott was going to give him his cap today,” Khawaja said. “Then we just started throwing lots of Yorkshire players in there. It ended up being Swampy which was great from a WA guy and a great Australian cricketer.

“His Dad was tearing up as he was getting the cap and I made another joke about ‘was that because you weren’t playing for England’. I was really using the gag and running with it.

“But I know what it means because I know what it meant for my dad. The ones who love cricket are the heart and soul, all the Saturdays and Sundays that go into it, it’s very special. He’s a terrific player and I look forward to seeing him bat out there because these conditions will very much suit him.”

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