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Black Caps come a
cropper against Lanka |
Posted by BV Swagath on April
12, 2007 (Link to
Scorecard)
The
undefeated Black Caps have come a cropper
against a better opposition in the ever
energetic Sri Lanka. In the much awaited Super
Eights clash at the National Stadium in St
George's, the Kiwis were stuck by some crucial
breakthroughs which saw them post a moderate
219. The Lankans got to the target with six
wickets in hand and with 29 balls to spare. The
New Zealand attack looked very thin with only
Shane Bond looking close to being penetrative.
On a good batting track at Grenada, Stephen
Fleming decided to bat first only to be adjudged
leg before the wicket wrongly by umpire Asad
Rauf in the fifth delivery of the game. Fleming
gone for a nought to Chaminda Vaas with the
point of impact being outside off. Ross Taylor
making a comeback after his hamstring injury
replaced Hamish Marshall and he was also out for
a duck, caught behind brilliantly by a diving
Sangakkara off the good old Chaminda. The Kiwis
were 4 for 2 in the 3rd over and they were into
single figures until the 9th over! So a job was
done by Chaminda Vaas and his new partner
Dilhara Fernando. Farveez Maharoof was the third
seamer, the replacement for the injured Lasith
Malinga.
When
the chips are down, that is when the true
character of a batsman comes out in the open.
Scott Styris is one who relishes challenging
situations and he stayed at the wicket
importantly. He built a sound partnership of 67
with Peter Fulton, who was also taken by Vaas.
The tall opening bat scored 28 from 54 before
flicking one in the air and in the hands of
Chamara Silva. In fact, Kiwis could have lost
Styris very early but for an umpiring error that
didn't rule him out caught by the keeper after
he went for a paddle sweep off Vaas. Anyway
after another few deliveries of Fulton's
departure, New Zealand were stung badly by the
wicket of Craig McMillan, dismissed to an
adventurous sweep shot off Murali. The Kiwis
were back in the dumps at 77 for 4. Another man
who delivers the goods in a crisis is Jacob Oram
and like Styris he fought it out in the middle.
A good partnership followed with Styris which
only ended in the 38th over when Oram decided it
was time to get onto the top gear. The left
hander jumped to Dilshan, lofted him with just
the one hand, got lot of elevation, but not much
of a distance to be smartly caught by Farveez
Maharoof straight down the ground. The wicket
came after Oram had hit the previous ball for a
six over widish long on. Oram got 31 from 45
with that six to figure in a 64-run partnership
with Styris.
New Zealand could have gone onto make a good
score but for Murali who came up with two deadly
blows that left them in an ugly situation of 155
for 7. McCullum was the first of the two blows,
he was given out lbw to an off break from round
the stumps. McCullum wasn't happy with the
decision from Asad Rauf, because he reckoned
that the ball never hit his bat. And the reason
for this was that the ball was caught at silly
point and everyone around the bat were appealing
for a catch and not for the lbw. There was lot
of dissent shown by the New Zealand wicket
keeper, who had a rare failure, making just 1.
Vettori was out off a top edge in a needless
sweep. Sri Lanka missed a trick here, they
couldn't bundle out the Kiwis from here as the
resistance came from James Franklin while Styris
was always there at one end. Eventually they
made a great recovery to get to 219 for 7.
Franklin staying unbeaten on 25 from 27 with a
six but the hero was Scott Styris with an
undefeated 4th ODI hundred. He got 111 runs,
which is more than half of the New Zealand
total. He batted for 157 balls to get there with
8 fours. Chaminda Vaas finished with 3 for 33 in
9 and Murali with 3 for 32 in his 10.
The opening overs from Franklin and Shane Bond
were untidy ones with Sri Lanka getting 17 out
of the first two overs, 13 of which had come
through extras. Upul Tharanga was dropped at
point by Fleming off Franklin in the 5th over,
but the young left hander couldn't capitalize on
that to perish at the third man region. Tharanga
played an upper cut to a rubbish short and wide
one from Franklin which was taken outstandingly
by Bond, who kept his balance intact although he
had to fall backwards because of the momentum of
the shot. Sri Lanka lost its first wicket with
30 on the board, more wickets were needed for
the Kiwis, but they had to take cover as Sanath
launched an onslaught. One change Mark Gillespie
(playing his first World Cup match) was taken
for 18 runs in his first over which spoilt the
plans of Fleming. The second powerplay was
forced to be held back which got Vettori into
the attack soon.
Sri
Lanka steadied the innings as the fielders were
in the deep and Jayasuriya and Sangakkara picked
up singles with ease to get the scoreboard
ticking. It was only in the 31st over that New
Zealand could finally taste some success with
Jayasuriya chasing a wide off cutter from Oram
to be caught by the keeper. It was rather late
with Sri Lanka already getting 152 on board, 68
away from a win. Jayasuriya helped himself to
his first fifty of the cup along with the two
hundreds, he made 64 from 80 with 5 fours and a
six. The next two batsmen Mahela Jayawardene and
Chamara Silva played little cameos before
falling to soft dismissals, both off the bowling
of Vettori. Sri Lanka did get to victory in the
46th over with Sangakkara having the honour of
scoring the winning boundary. He remained right
till the end to get 69 from 104 balls with 3
fours, this one being his 39th fifty. Dilshan
was not out on 14. The outfield at this stadium
was a sluggish one with the batsmen not getting
full value to their strokes. For the first time,
the New Zealand bowling looked very weak with
the Bond magic not working and the support
bowlers not bowling enough wicket taking
deliveries. It was Chaminda Vaas who got the Man
of the Match for his effective spell with the
new ball. Both sides are in the Semis now and
their matches now will be more to test their
strengths and weakness.
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