Over half of those 30-plus innings, 19 to be exact, were 50-plus totals, and a further two were centuries. This means that in nearly 40% of his ODI innings against Sri Lanka, Dhoni would score a half-century minimum. The next closest he comes to this level of dominance with against any other opposition is Australia, against whom he scored at least a half-century 28% of the time.And then there’s his aforementioned home record, which, leading up to the 2011 World Cup final, saw him batting at a preposterous 106.66 from 14 matches against Sri Lanka at home. To put that into context, in that same period his overall home average stood at 50.97.Forget Big Bad, he was the Bogeyman.***For the Sri Lankans in the ground, on the field and watching at home that day in April 2011, the dream was now a nightmare. Dhoni had walked in with the game finely poised, and now the job was almost done.ALSO READ: Stats: MS Dhoni, the most successful wicketkeeper-batsman to captain in ODIsTo most, that final swing down the ground stands tall as an iconic moment in cricket history, though many Sri Lankans probably haven’t even seen it – and the ones that have, have likely expunged it from their collective memory.Like with all great setbacks, hindsight offers clarity. For Sri Lanka and their fans, the 2011 final was a necessary part of the narrative arc that would bring their budding band of protagonists much needed closure, albeit three years later.In 2014, the two sides would square off again, this time in the World T20 final, and for once, Dhoni would not be able to perform his customary heroics; limited to just the seven deliveries, he managed a measly four runs, unable to offer the death-overs flourish that Sri Lanka had been at the receiving end of more often than most.An almighty payoff for the helplessness of 2011, and one that for many members of that victorious 2014 squad would have gone a long way towards vanquishing the demons of three years prior.But nights such as those, while staying long in the memory, were rare. Indeed, for the most part, for a Sri Lankan to remember Dhoni is to remember pain – or more specifically, the pain of the inevitable – though it did make the odd triumph all the more sweet.

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