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Sri Lanka looking for consolation win over Dutch

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Wanidu

Rex Clementine in Miami

Sri Lanka’s World Cup campaign ended in bitter disappointment even before they departed to the Caribbean island of St. Lucia on Thursday. Their game on Sunday against the Netherlands is a dead rubber, but pride is at stake against the Dutch.

It’s been a campaign filled with hurt and disappointment for a team that had done reasonably well in white ball cricket this year. Sri Lanka simply failed to get going in the World Cup the moment Wanindu Hasaranga won the toss and opted to bat against South Africa.

It has been discussed over and over again how the team set themselves bigger totals and failed to realize that US wickets weren’t going to produce high scoring games.

Another issue that has gone unnoticed is how bowling let the side down. True, bowlers did well to put up a fight defending below par totals, but the 12 wides bowled in the Bangladesh game was costly. Apart from the runs, it obviously means that they sent down two additional overs due to the excessive amount of wides and the second game was lost with an over to spare. Then, obviously, the number of full tosses that were sent down during crucial stages of the game was a bitter pill to swallow.

The team’s strategy of banking on just two quicks didn’t work and perhaps the addition of Dushmantha Chameera may have helped them although the games were lost with batting.

While the selectors expressed confidence that they have enough fire power to clear boundaries, a requirement in T-20 cricket, it was evident that the batters chosen for the 20-nation competition weren’t capable of executing the big hits.

Wanindu Hasaranga had promoted himself up the order and had done quite well in his role as a ‘floater’ but he was a flop during the World Cup picking consecutive ducks.

Hasaranga’s handling game situations too has a lot to be desired, especially his bowling changes. Nuwan Thushar looked to be the most threatening of all bowlers against Bangladesh. The captain instead of holding onto his overs to be used in the death overs exhausted all his four overs and was forced to rely on Dasun Shanaka to send down the penultimate over. The Sri Lankan captain has much to learn from the likes of Rohit Sharma. The Indian captain used Jasprit Bumrah superbly during the epic clash against arch-rivals Pakistan.

When Sri Lanka lost the warm-up game to Netherlands all lead bowlers had been rested. You would expect all of them to be on show for Sunday’s game.

Conditions in St. Lucia might tempt the team to back the two-spin combination, but it will be tough to leave out Chameera after back to back losses. He was expected to play the Nepal game which was rained out in Florida.

Sri Lanka’s players were left stranded in Florida due to the floods. They were expected to fly out from Fort Lauderdale airport on Wednesday evening, but due to torrential rain and subsequent floods they were unable to leave their hotel rooms. They were expected to fly out to St. Lucia at 8:30 pm on Thursday on a chartered flight.

Their luggage had been already dispatched to the airport on Wednesday so the players had to live on the stuff that were there on their hand luggages.St. Lucia is a tiny Caribbean island that has a population of 180,000. The size of St. Lucia is 617 square kilometers but the country has its own Prime Minister and currency; East Caribbean Dollar.

St. Lucia is not a stronghold of West Indian cricket like Barbados, Antigua, Guyana or Trinidad. The only notable cricket from there is former captain Darren Sammy. In fact, the cricket ground in St. Lucia is named after him.



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Dottin out obstructing the field as Sri Lanka clinch series

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Vishmi Gunaratne top scored for Sri Lanka (file photo)

Deandra Dottin was given out obstructing the field as West Indies suffered their second narrow defeat as Sri Lanka clinched the ODI series 2-0.

In the 30th over, Dottin went for a sweep against Chamari Athapaththu, the ball slipped down the leg side and was called wide. But it ballooned off the pads of wicketkeeper Kaushini Nuthyangana back towards Dottin who tapped it away with her bat then caught the ball. Umpires Candace la Borde and Vrinda Rathi conferred and Dottin was given out.

It left West Indies 116 for 6 chasing 209 and they fell further to 146 for 8. However, Janiellea Glasgow nearly hauled them over the line with her second half-century in consecutive matches. She added 45 for the ninth wicket with Afy Fletcher, before she was last player dismissed, brilliantly held on the rebound at cover by Kavisha Dilhari.

Sri Lanka had produced some impressive pieces of fielding throughout the innings with Hasini Perera taking a sharp catch at slip to remove Chinelle Henry and Nilakshika Silva taking a brilliant catch at long-off from Shawnisha Hector’s lofted drive.

Vishmi Guneratne’s half-century had been the main contribution of Sri Lanka’s innings. A series of useful top-order partnerships had taken them to 166 for 4 in the 36th over before the last six wickets fell for 42 as Karishma Ramharack finished with 3 for 26.

Brief scores:
Sri Lanka Women 208 in 47.1 overs  (Chamari Athapaththu 32, Harshitha Samarawickrema 35, Vishmi Gunaratne 58, Nilakshika Silva 29; Hayley Matthews 2-44, Karishma Ramharack 3-26, Afy Fletcher 2-40) beat West Indies Women 194 in 48 overs (Shemaine Campbelle 30, Stefanie Taylor 27, Jannillea Glasgow 50, Afy Fletcher 20; Inoka Ranaweera 3-44, Sugandika Kumari 3-38, Dewmi Vihanga 2-33, ) by 14 runs

[Cricinfo]

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England turn the heat on Sri Lanka with 51 run rout

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Will Jacks ran through the Sri Lankan middle order claiming three wickets as England secured a big 51 run win over Sri Lanka in a Super Eight game of the T20 World Cup at Pallekele yesterday

England’s bowlers turned the screws after their batters had spluttered, skittling Sri Lanka for 95 in under 17 overs to seal a commanding 51-run victory and open their account in the Super Eight stage of the T20 World Cup at Pallekele on Sunday.

Defending a modest 147, England hit the right lengths from ball one. Their quicks bent their backs and their spinners gave the ball a rip as Sri Lanka were reduced to 34 for five inside the Powerplay, a collapse that all but signed the death warrant.

Once half the side was back in the hutch within six overs, there was no Lazarus act from the lower order. England wrapped things up clinically, boosting a healthy Net Run Rate that could yet prove gold dust in the race for the semi-finals.

England’s stranglehold over Sri Lanka in this format continued unabated. This was their 12th straight win against the former champions. Earlier this month they had whitewashed them 3-0 and Sri Lanka’s last T20 win over England dates back to 2014 at The Oval. The hoodoo shows no signs of lifting.

Joffra Archer set the tone with thunderbolts that kissed 150 kmph on the speed gun. He removed both openers, but the prize scalp was that of the in-form Pathum Nissanka, who had lit up the tournament with its first hundred against Australia. Archer lured him into the trap, a fuller delivery inviting the flick. Nissanka took the bait but failed to clear deep mid-wicket and with that wicket, the rot set in.

Will Jacks then put the game beyond doubt, weaving a web with his off-spin to snare three middle-order wickets. The packed Pallekele crowd, buoyant at the start, fell into a hush as the middle order caved in.

Dasun Shanaka waged a lone battle, striking 30 off 24 balls, but his counterattack was snuffed out by Adil Rashid. Attempting to take on the leg-spinner, Shanaka holed out to Jacks in the deep. Losing his balance near the ropes, Jacks showed sharp presence of mind to flick the ball back to Tom Banton before tumbling over.

Earlier, Sri Lanka had done well to restrict England to 146 for nine after opting to bowl. Left-arm spinner Dunith Wellalage was the pick of the attack with three for 26, applying the brakes just when England threatened to shift gears.

Phil Salt provided the early impetus with a brisk 62 off 40 balls, peppering the boundary with six fours and two sixes. But with Sri Lanka missing three frontline bowlers, their attack punched above its weight to ensure England never ran away with the game.

Wellalage struck in the Powerplay, trapping Jos Buttler and Harry Brook leg-before as England stumbled to 68-4 at the halfway mark.

Jacks (21) was the only other batter to cross 20 as wickets fell at regular intervals. Dilshan Madushanka kept it tight up front, finishing with two for 25, while Maheesh Theekshana impressed with two for 21, varying his pace cleverly on a surface that offered grip.

Rex Clementine at Pallekele

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High stakes for a rare West Indies-Zimbabwe clash

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Shimron Hetmyer gets out the slog sweep [Cricinfo]

Two years ago, Zimbabwe failed to qualify for the T20 World Cup. Not only did they make the competition this time, they entered the Super Eights unbeaten.

First, it was Blessing Muzarabani who shut Australia down on a slow pitch in Colombo. Then their top four silenced the Khettarama crowd by chasing down 189 against Sri Lanka. The common factor in those wins were also Brian Bennett’s fifties and Sikandar Raza’s quick cameos. Muzarabani and Brad Evans are also among the top ten wicket takers in the tournament.

With contributions from several players, Zimbabwe could prove a handful for West Indies in Mumbai. They will have to make a quick adjustment, though, having played all their group matches in Sri Lanka, while West Indies have already played twice at the Wankhede.

These two sides have faced each other only four times in T20 internationals. When lined up player-against-player, West Indies – also undefeated – look stronger with bat, with an in-form Shai Hope, a rejuvenated Shimron Hetmyer at No. 3, and a solid finisher in Sherfaine Rutherford.

Having as many as three allrounders – with Romario Shepherd in line to return after injury – gives them the option of playing three fast bowlers and three spinners. It’s an ideal mix in Mumbai, where the quicks (35 wickets) and spinners (34) have been equally effective, averaging 26.28 and 26.25 respectively this tournament.

It’s a big game for both sides, with matches against India and South Africa to follow next. Who will get on the points table first?

Blessing Muzarabani is an early wicket-taker and a serial wicket-taker. He has height, pace and discipline on lengths that can be threatening, especially with the new ball. He also bowls at the death where he generally goes on the shorter side peppered in with the odd slower ball. That’s as all-conditions as it gets in T20s, and form is on his side too.

West Indies have a clear batting approach outlined by regular boundary hitting, and Shai Hope is the initiator and the glue as he sets up and builds innings. He has the virtues of an upgraded anchor who doesn’t have to shut down when the team is on the back foot. He is coming off two fifties, the second of which against Nepal saw him power through even as wickets fell at the other end.

Shepherd is fit again. He had strapping on his right leg as he bowled and batted for a while on Saturday. He hit one over the roof, but wasn’t as comfortable while bowling. If fit, he could replace  Matthew Forde.

Zimbabwe haven’t tinkered with their squad much and that’s likely to remain the case. They could bring back Richard Ngarava for Graeme Cremer if they feel the need for pace.

West Indies (probable):  Brandon King, Shai Hope (capt & wk), Shimron Hetmyer, Roston Chase, Rovman Powell, Sherfane Rutherford, Jason Holder, Romario Shepherd/Matthew Forde, Akeal Hosain,  Shamar Joseph,  Gudakesh Motie.

Zimbabwe (probable): Brian Bennett, Tadiwanashe Marumani (wk), Dion Myers, Sikandar Raza (capt),  Ryan Burl, Tony Munyonga Tashinga Musekiwa,  Brad Evans, Wellington Masakadza,  Graeme Cremer/Richard Ngarava,  Blessing Muzarabani

[Cricinfo]

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