Thursday, January 14, 2010

Sri Lanka overcome India to win Mirpur final

Tri-nation tournament final, Mirpur:
Sri Lanka 249-6 beat India 245 by four wickets

Scorecard

By Oliver Brett for BBC

Chanaka Welegedara
Sri Lanka newcomer Chanaka Welegedara impressed with 3-53

Sri Lanka won the triangular tournament in Bangladesh, beating India by four wickets with a strong team performance.

India tossed away wickets freely early on in Mirpur, and without Suresh Raina's brilliant 106, they would have struggled to put up any sort of total.

However, their modest 245 all out was overhauled with nine balls remaining.

Former skipper Mahela Jayawardene played the key innings, making 71 not out from 81 balls after India seamer Ashish Nehra had limped off injured.

Questions will be raised about the wicket for the event in Mirpur. In all seven matches the team batting second won with some ease.

But really India could not blame the conditions. With Raina (106 off 115 balls) picking up the baton from Virender Sehwag (42 from 27), the opportunity for a big total was there if only the other batsmen could seize it.

The first Indian wicket to fall was unfortunate, Gautam Gambhir bowled off his thigh-pad in the first over, but the next four were entirely avoidable.

606: DEBATE
Bath Maruwa

At a time when they should have been taking stock and waiting for the moisture in the wicket to dry out, Yuvraj Singh, Virat Kohli and Mahendra Dhoni tried a succession of extravagant shots outside off-stump, and nicked a succession of catches.

Worse was to come when Sehwag, whose firebrand innings demonstrated there were few demons in the wicket, tried to deflect Nuwan Kulasekara through the vacant slip cordon only to give wicketkeeper Kumar Sangakkara a straightforward catch.

India were 60-5 in the 11th over and in huge trouble. Thankfully, they had Raina, who cut, pulled and then produced some wonderful drives over extra cover as Sri Lanka's inexperienced bowling line-up was finally asked a few questions.

But they emerged with some decent figures, not least Kulasekara (4-48) and the newcomer Chanaka Welegedara (3-53).

India's late renaissance suggested a total of at least 260 might be on the cards, but Zaheer Khan holed out to extra cover after smacking two fours and a six and soon afterwards Raina played across the line and was bowled by Welegedara.

Still, the left-hander had registered his third ODI century and first since mid-2008. Ten balls went unused after Sreesanth was the last man out.

Suresh Raina
Raina played the innings of the day, but India lost the final

Sri Lanka matched India by losing a wicket from the third ball of their own innings, Upul Tharanga's feet glued to the surface as he nicked Nehra to slip.

A 93-run stand between Sangakkara (55) and Tillakaratne Dilshan (49) featuring some eye-catching strokeplay was ended by a brilliant catch from Dhoni, clinging onto a bottom edge off Dilshan.

India were just getting back into the contest when Sangakkara edged a wonderful Harbhajan Singh off-break to slip, but Jayawardene batted coolly and India's bowling resources were limited.

Nehra got through just two legal deliveries of his second over before creasing up in pain and was unable to continue. Sreesanth was out of sorts, and the back-up spin of Yuvraj and Ravindra Jadeja was not testing enough.

Jayawardene picked the gaps intelligently, finding twos where other batsmen would have settled for singles.

There was a brief panic when Suraj Randiv became the sixth man to be dismissed, given the weakness of the Sri Lankan tail.

But Jayawardene pulled the first two balls of the penultimate over, bowled by Sreesanth, for four to level the scores - and sealed the deal from the third with another boundary.

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