Jayasuriya century fires Sri Lanka to easy win

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Posted on 22nd March 2007 by admin in Group B Match Reports


Hindsight is a beautiful thing – and if it is someone else’s cock-up that you can see in your rearview mirror, it’s even better.When doing its homework ahead of today’s key game against Bangladesh, Sri Lanka likely noticed a few things: one, that Bangladesh depends on a slew of slow left arm spinners to apply the choke after the seamers have done their stuff and two, that in the game against India, the Bangla spinners could weave such tight lines mainly because India hobbled in the initial overs, never making any attempt to take singles or otherwise proactively push the two lead seamers off their line and length.

On being inserted by Bangladesh at the Queen’s Park Oval, Trinidad, Sri Lanka sought to learn from India’s mistake, and went hard at Mashrafe Mortaza and Syed Rasel. Both openers were beaten, even embarassed, on occasion; both openers should, given a smidgen more luck for Bangladesh, have been out early.

Two Jayasuriya edges flew at catchable height through the second slip region; in the 4th over, Upul Tharanga took off as if he had heard the starter’s gun at the Olympic 100 meters final and Rasel, fielding on the follow through, missed the stumps with Tharanga yards out of his ground.

Rather than worry about the seaming ball or the near mishaps, the two openers threw their bats hard at anything even remotely in hitting range, and ensured that the Bangladesh bowlers did not have the luxury of bowling their favorite lines and lengths.

It was only in the 15th over that Bangladesh finally grabbed an opportunity: Mohammad Rafique dropped one short outside off, Tharanga rocked back and punched and Aftab, at backward point, timed his jump perfectly, plucking the ball one handed from overhead while fully airborne. Tharanga was not at his most convincing in the 26 off 37 knock; his idiosyncratic calling on quick singles created at least four run out opportunities during the first wicket stand that were missed.

Jayasuriya was his usual self, flat batting cuts, hoisting flicked drives over the infield and, when occasion afforded, smoking cut-drives through the covers off either foot. Like Tharanga, he too looked edgy early on, survived his share of edges and run outs, but kept hitting away anyway, and, as is usual with him, soon found his range, power and timing.

He was coasting along when Mahela Jayawardene sent him back on an attempted run; the batsman turned awkwardly and appeared to have injured/twisted something in the knee region – he limped away, in evident pain, with 83/77 to his name, 52 of those runs coming off six fours and four sixes.

While Kumar Sangakkarra played in his usual languidly stylish fashion, Jayawardene focussed on finding a measure of form, and produced a patchwork quilt of an innings. For the most part, he seemed unsure of whether to go forward or back; often he was caught on top of the crease, in an indeterminate position, he seemed to struggle to work the bowling, especially the spinners, off the square.

Every now and again, though, he would unfurl a lovely hit , down on his knee, bat scything through the hitting arc, and powering the ball a long way over midwicket. Those shots, however, masked considerable uncertainty; two lapses also extended his tenure beyond its natural course. In the 29th over, Rafique tossed one up, Jayawardene looked to go inside out over cover but didn’t hit it too well, Bashar timed his jump superbly and got his hand to it, but then failed to cling on, with Jayawardene 24/50 at the time.

An over later, Jayawardene stayed back looking to cut Saqibul Hasan, but only managed to edge it behind. On this occasion, the umpire turned down the ferocious appeal.

In the 36th over, Jayawardene came down to Hasan, tried to go inside out, and either checked his shot, or was foxed by a ball that held up a touch. He ended up chipping the ball, off the toe of the bat, to the fielder at long off, for the softest of dismissals. On paper, his 46/70 looks halfway decent; break it down, though, and you found 44 dot balls in there. Rafique in particular tied him up – of 32 deliveries bowled to the Lankan captain, 23 were unscored of.

Sangakkarra is at his best when he is batting unhurriedly; once he has to shift from his languid style to the frenetic thrash of the slog, he tends to look not so good. In the 45th over, he swatted at Rasel and was lucky to be put down, Bashar again the culprit. Off the very next ball, he went for another swat, straighter this time, and Tamim Iqbal held at long on (56/55; Lanka 261/3).

Any doubts about Jayasuriya’s fitness were laid to rest when he walked out to resume his innings – the lure of a looming century was apparently too much to resist. And the way he ran a second run at Olympic speed, his knee is absolutely fine, as is the rest of him.

A flicked six to get thgings stated, a paddled four as follow up, a mishit hook, then a waltz down the track to power the ball over wide long on, and the century – his 24th – was his. He celebrated by carting the hapless Razzak over long off. Jayasuriya was lucky, shortly after his return to the crease, to be given not out when he missed with an attempt to reverse sweep; one more such attempt, however, ended up in the hands of short fine leg (109/87; 300/4).

Chamara Silva was his usual busy self, starting out slowly, creaming a six over extra cover as his second scoring shot, then motoring on through a mixture of big hits and intelligent pushes and flicks into the outfield. As the innings wound down, he opened out – the shot of the match had to be a superb, almost Viv Richard-esque, flicked six off an attempted yorker by Mortaza.

Sri Lanka ended on 318/4 – a totally professional performance, fired at the top by Jayasuriya and at the end by Chamara Silva with Sangakkarra playing backbone.

Bangladesh on the day suffered on two counts: the first, that Jayasuriya never gave their pacemen time to settle and, equally crucially, that their fielding and catching, brilliant against India, could not recapture that fine rapture.

There were some spectacular saves and catches – the moment of the innings, for me, was the diminutive Mohammad Ashraful, right on the line at midwicket, going up like a dolphin and, while a good two feet or more off the air, getting a hand to the ball, and retaining enough presence of mind to realize that if he came down with ball in hand it would be six, and to palm it into the field of play before touching down. But such moments of brilliance were punctuated with some ordinary moments as well, and the dropped chances and run outs cost the fielding side dearly, diluting the pressure the bowlers, especially the spinners, brought to bear.

On balance, this is Sri Lanka’s game by a mile; the point of interest in the second half will be to see if the three teens at the top of the Bangla batting lineup, and the unpredictable Ashraful, can put on a feisty display against the Lankan array of pace and spin.


Sehwag sets up record-breaking win

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Posted on 20th March 2007 by admin in Group B Match Reports


Virender Sehwag hit a breezy 114 off 87 deliveries as India easily beat Bermuda in a crucial Group B match at the World Cup in Port of Spain on Monday.

Chasing a World Cup record total of 413, Bermuda were all out for 156 in 43.1 overs, handing India a 257-run victory, also a World Cup record.

India’ margin of victory could have been larger had David Hemp not scored a stubborn 76 not out.

India innings:

An optimum scenario for India, playing a key game at the Queen’s Park Oval in Trinidad under overcast skies, high humidity and a grassy track, would have been to bowl first, look to blast Bermuda out for a sub-100 score, then knock up the runs in one heck of a hurry.

The best laid plans, though, can come undone at the toss: Irvine Romaine won the toss, and opted to bowl first – leaving India with the task of batting up a storm.

Despite pre-match speculation that Sachin Tendulkar would open with Sourav Ganguly, it was Robin Uthappa who walked out – and, after just four deliveries, walked back.

The Malachi Jones delivery was well wide of off; Uthappa, without getting into position, opted for a clumsy last minute steer to third on, got the thick outer edge, and the portly policeman Dwayne Leverock, all 200-plenty pounds of him, took off like a flea at first slip, and latched on to a stunner (3/4; India 3/1).

Virender Sewhag walked out, and joined Ganguly in a partnership that was a study in contrasts. After an initial flirt outside off that, luckily for the batsman, did not connect, Sehwag pulled his horns in – and paradoxically, began batting in an approximation of his best.

Noticeably, he took to staying still and playing late; the premeditated swipes outside off that has characterised his prolonged spell of misfortune were absent. He picked his shot and space only after being sure where the ball was landing, he played his shots as late as he possibly could, and promptly began timing and hitting them better – and better as his innings wore on.

He began with an on-the-rise punch through extra cover, and by the 6th over, was feeling good enough to play his favorite cut through point, twice, with laser precision. Jones, the bowler to suffer on that occasion, had more misery in the tenth when Sehwag drove through extra cover, flicked fine, cut through point for successive fours, then ended the over crashing another one through cover point.

Romaine sought to slow the pace down by bringing the experienced David Kemp on, and Sehwag promptly powered him over the straight boundary, waited a couple of deliveries, then smashed one inside out over the extra cover boundary.

His 50 came up in the 12th over, off 43 balls, in a score of 74/1, with 11 fours – and he showed every sign of wanting to go on and on.

Is this a return to form? Early days – the plus point, though, is that he finally has runs in the middle; the ball is coming off the bat nicely, and if confidence is the name of this particular game, he has done enough to get that confidence back.

At the other end, Sourav Ganguly looked, initially, to guage the wicket and batted well within himself. He was lucky to see an outer edge flash past the sole slip in the 4th over of the innings. From then on, he batted himself in, but remained static for long periods, seemingly unable either to pierce the field, or work the singles.

The Bermuda bowlers worked out that by bowling very full on off and middle, with a packed off field, they could keep him from breaking free – and the ploy worked, much to the batsman’s increasingly visible frustration.

In the 13th over, Ganguly gave Kevin Hurdle a premeditated charge, but toed the attempted loft over the off side field high in the air. Borren, running back from mid off, covered ground well and got the ball in both hands – only to watch it bounce off.

After that mishap, Ganguly quietened down again, letting Sehwag do the bulk of the scoring and eschewing any attempt to force the pace; as late as the 18th over, he played out a maiden off Janeiro Tucker’s gentle medium pace.

A rare moment of belligerence came in the 19th, when he came down the track to Leverock and lofted him over the long off fence; the same bowler was targeted again, in the 23rd over, with Ganguly this time coming down and swinging the ball high over the wide long on ropes and into the stands. Ganguly got to his 50 in the 25th over, off 80 deliveries with a four and two sixes.

At the halfway mark, India has, without really going berserk, gotten itself into assault mode by laying an impeccable platform. The run rate is in excess of 6 an over; the runs have been scored without overt risk, there is plenty of batting to come and the 350-plus score (Saurabh Wahi, one of our regulars and the man behind the graphical analysis of ODIs on our site, points out that if the Duckworth Lewis charts are on the money, India after 20 overs was on course for a 400-plus score)that India needs to kick start its run rate looks gettable. Keep in mind, too, that Bermuda still has to take one power play, which it eschewed at the height of the Sehwag blitz.

Overs 26 – 50

Bermuda skipper Romaine had delayed his last powerplay in the hope of getting some breathing space from the Sehwag blitz. With the innings past the halfway stage, and a late assault almost a certainty, Romaine had no option – the power play was taken in the 26th, and Sehwag greeted it by powering Hurdle high over the midwicket boundary.

With Ganguly too finding the range and, more importantly, timing on his forays down the track, the two capitalized to the tune of 57 runs in the critical five over period. The sole silver lining for the hapless Bermuda attack was the departure of Sehwag, with just two balls to go for the power plays to end.

Having smashed Hurdle straight back over his head, Sehwag looked to power one over midwicket, but was a touch too early into his shot (or did the ball hold off the deck a fraction?). He managed only to flare it off the edge of the bat, high in the air for Jones to back-peddle and hold at mid off (114/87 with 17 fours, three sixes, 44 dot balls, 22 singles, three twos; partnership of 202 runs at 7.04; India 205/2).

For the statistically minded, this was Sehwag’s first century since his 108 versus Pakistan, in game one of the 2005 series at the Nehru Stadium in Kochy; it was his first 50 since October 2006, against the Aussies at Mohali; and it was his highest World Cup score by a distance, outclassing the 82 he scored against Australia in the 2003 final.

With Mahendra Dhoni, sent in to keep the accelerator pressed down, taking a while to suss out the slow nature of the pitch, exacerbated by bowlers who took the pace right off the ball, Ganguly had to play aggressor.

The southpaw had no pace on the ball to work with, especially on the drives – his only real option was to come down the track and use the bottom hand to loft over the infield, as he had done often and well during the third power play period.

The trouble with that though is it gets predictable. In the 35th over, he charged the off spinner Delyone Borden and lofted a four to long on; charged again, missed, and escaped being stumped down the leg side; waited for a ball and came charging again�

This time, Borden fired it wide of the batsman, Ganguly missed and was stumped by a mile (89/114; six fours, two sixes, 70 dot balls, 39 singles, seven twos; partnership 33 runs at 6.6; India 238/3).

Yuvraj Singh preceded Sachin Tendulkar to the crease, and Dhoni took over the responsibility of motoring along. An inside out shot to the extra cover fence, a bottom handed punch at a slower ball, back past the bowler, and an enormous waft over wide midwicket after a charge at Borden got things going, but an attempt to clear the straight boundary off the very next Borden delivery flared off the outer edge.

It went high, and straight, and seemingly out of reach of the fielders. Tucker sprinted frantically from long off, saw the ball dropping ahead of him, dived headlong – and incredibly, came up with the ball clutched in one hand. It was the kind of catch no one even attempts – an incredible effort (29/25; 11 dot balls, 13 singles, 1 two, two fours, one six; partnership 31 at 8.85; India 269/4).

Yuvraj Singh was very lucky, in the 42nd over, to be ruled not out by the third umpire off a stumping call off Lionel Cann. Yuvraj flashed a big grin – and began batting as if he were on the highlights package on tv.

Leverock was the first bowler to suffer – in the very next over, Yuvraj went low to the ground, set himself for the slog-sweep and swung high over midwicket; played the shot even better off the next ball to get India past 300, then came dancing down to smash straight past the bowler for a four. In the bowler’s next over, he played the shot of the game – a flicked on drive, off his toes, that powered the ball flat, skimming the ground around 8 feet high, and over the wide long on ropes; to hit flat like that, through pure touch and timing and an absence of overt power, took immense skill.

On a day where the Bermuda fielders caught flies, David Hemp outdid his colleagues in the 47th. Sweeping at very deep midwicket, Hemp went airborne and snatched a fierce Yuvraj hit with one hand extended high overhead. He was an inch inside the line when he took off, however – and even a superhuman effort couldn’t keep him inside the line with ball in hand.

That midwicket boundary was like a magnet – time and again, Yuvraj went down on his knee, to pace and spin, and kept slog-sweeping; the chairs took a fearsome pounding. Tucker in the 48th was blasted over midwicket, flick-driven over long on; then pulled through midwicket.. it was, put simply, merciless power-hitting by a batsman feeling his oats.

At the other end, Tendulkar went run a ball without any dramatics, intent on keeping Yuvraj on strike all he could – except an inside out over extra cover, off Cann, in the 44th. The same shot, hit better, cleared a desperately lunging long off – and the ropes – in the 46th. Tendulkar celebrated by going inside out again – this time running a long way around the line to loft over the wide long off fence.

Leverock bowled the 49th over. Tendulkar blasted the first ball, inside out, high over wide long on. A single later, Yuvraj went on his knees and went a mile over long on. The next ball was pulled wider, Yuvraj tried to clear the straight fence, and was caught on the line, again, Jones had to sprint to his left from a wider position, but made another lovely outfield catch look simple (83/46; 11 dot balls, 19 singles, 5 twos, three fours, seven sixes; partnership 122 runs at 12 runs per over; India 391/5).

Hemp came on for the final over, Tendulkar went on his knee, and swung over long on to bring up the 400 – and break Sri Lanka’s record, against Kenya, for the highest score ever in World Cups. The shot also brought up his 54 – off 26 deliveries. Dravid weighed in with a last ball six – the 18th of the Indian innings – and India finished up on 413/5. (Tendulkar 54 not out off 27; 4 dot balls, 12 singles, 5 twos, 1 three, 2 fours, four sixes).

India here is chasing more than a win – the run rate matters, perhaps even more. Sri Lanka, in its game against Bermuda, had managed 321/6 in the allotted 50 overs. India has shaded the Lankans by 92 runs. Lanka bowled Bermuda out for 78 – that has to be India’s target in the second half of the innings.


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