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Thilan Walallawita interview: ‘This feels like day one of my career - there is more purpose to everything’

Last month, Thilan Walallawita was arriving at Middlesex training when his phone buzzed with the news he had been waiting years to receive.

It was from his lawyer. “No young cricketer should be spending as much time on the phone to their lawyer as I have,” the left-arm spinner jokes. The message confirmed that the Home Office had finally granted the 23-year-old British citizenship.

“I didn’t know what to do,” he tells Standard Sport. “I was sat there, screaming in the car! I called my family, who were over the moon. It was a huge weight off their shoulders, as well as mine. Then I saw the boys, and it was honestly one of the best feelings you could imagine. I was very emotional, and felt like I wanted to cry, but held it together. They would have been happy tears.”

Walallawita moved to the UK from Sri Lanka on December 1, 2010, when he was 12.

By then, he had already seen plenty. Six years earlier, he and his family were in Galle (they lived in Colombo) when the devastating Boxing Day tsunami struck in “terrifying” fashion. Dining at a beachside cafe, he was carried by his father as they fled for higher ground, where they waited until his grandfather arrived to rescue them. Fortunately they survived, but so many others did not.

In England, his father played club cricket as a professional for Potters Bar, and Thilan soon found himself in the Middlesex system. When, as a teenager, he reached the Second Team, it became clear that his eligibility would become an issue. In time, he would become a British citizen, but no-one knew when; until then, he could only play in the first team as an overseas.

It was expected that his passport would arrive in time for last summer, but delays due to Covid meant the wait went on. The ECB

Read more on msn.com