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Beleaguered Sri Lanka look to pull one back

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Sri Lanka would hope for a better show from their batters in the third and final T20I in Southampton.

Two modest totals and two losses – Sri Lanka’s sorry tale in the three-match T20I series against the formidable England side. In the first game, Sri Lanka ended up with 129 for 7, and in the next match, the visitors could muster only 111 for 7. It is true that the conditions for both the matches in Cardiff were tricky, but Sri Lanka would hope for a better show from their batters in the third and final T20I in Southampton.

If Sri Lanka have to pull one back, the visitors’ batting unit would have to find a way to counter Mark Wood. The fast bowler troubled the Sri Lankan middle order with his extreme pace in the middle overs in the second T20I. Amidst the doom and gloom, the bright spot for Sri Lanka in the second game was their pace bowling. In relatively helpful conditions, their tall pacemen – Binura Fernando and Dushmantha Chameera – found movement and bowled zestful spells to pick up early wickets. Leg-spinner Wanindu Hasaranga also made his presence felt in Thursday’s game.

On the other hand, England have most of the bases covered. However, they would be a tad concerned by the top order collapse in the second match. At one point of time, the hosts were in a spot of bother at 36 for 4. Sam Billings and Liam Livingstone then joined forces and played more of attritional cricket – a brand of cricket that isn’t exactly associated with the current England limited overs side – to help them recover.

One of the concerns in their batting order would be the form of Dawid Malan. Since cracking an unbeaten 99 in South Africa, he has mostly struggled to notch up big scores in the shortest format. Even in the second T20I, he was caught on the shuffle and was trapped in front by Chameera. England, though, would be pleased with the form of their bowlers, especially Wood, Sam Curran and Adil Rashid. Livingstone too has chipped in with the occasional scalp in the series.

Teams

Sri Lanka (Probable):

Danushka Gunathilaka, Avishka Fernando, Kusal Perera (c), Kusal Mendis, Niroshan Dickwella, Dasun Shanaka, Wanindu Hasaranga, Isuru Udana, Akila Dananjaya, Dushmantha Chameera, Binura Fernando.

England (Probable):

Jason Roy, Jonny Bairstow, Dawid Malan, Eoin Morgan (c), Sam Billings, Liam Livingstone, Sam Curran, Chris Woakes/David Willey, Chris Jordan, Adil Rashid, Mark Wood.



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An opportunity missed for Sri Lanka

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Charith Asalanka has been instrumental in so many successful run chases and the captain’s dismissal in the first ODI proved to be costly.

Chasing down 300 these days is no longer rocket science. On the belters of the subcontinent, sides regularly mow down such totals with the ease of a Sunday stroll. Sri Lanka looked well on track to do just that in Rawalpindi on Tuesday when the openers set the tone with a brisk 85-run stand. Pathum Nissanka and Kamil Mishara were striking it sweetly, while Pakistan’s quicks lost their radar, spraying wides like confetti. Then came the fatal rush of blood — Mishara went for one shot too many, and Pakistan sniffed a chance. Once they had an opening, they pounced like a pack of wolves.

Not that it was a full-blown collapse. Barring Kusal Mendis, who bagged a golden duck, every other batter got a start but failed to carry on. Too many soft dismissals, too few partnerships — the story was all too familiar. When the dust settled, Pakistan held their nerve to scrape home by six runs, leaving Sri Lanka to rue another opportunity gone begging.

Wanindu Hasaranga was the lone bright spark. Earlier in the day, he bamboozled Pakistan with a three-wicket burst and was unlucky to miss a fourth when Hussain Talat survived a tight call. Later, with bat in hand, Hasaranga mounted a valiant rearguard, top-scoring with 59 to take the chase deep. But the top order had left too steep a hill to climb.

Pakistan, aided by a slippery outfield and heavy dew, will be the happier side — the early series lead gives them the inside track in the race for the coveted fourth spot in the ICC rankings.

For Sri Lanka, the biggest letdown was the dismissal of Charith Asalanka. Ranked sixth in the world and the team’s go-to man under pressure, Asalanka has built a reputation for shepherding tricky chases. On this occasion, he danced down the track to the left-arm spinner and paid the price — stumped in rather uncharacteristic fashion. The captain, usually the calm in the storm, lost his head when composure was needed most.

There are quiet murmurs about his fitness, though officials insist his skinfolds are within acceptable limits. Still, on television, he did appear a touch heavier around the midriff — not quite what you’d expect from Sri Lanka’s standard-bearer.

Make no mistake — Asalanka remains the brain and heartbeat of this side. No one in the current setup reads a game better or finishes with the same assurance. Since taking over the reins in turbulent times, he has built this team brick by brick — a unit that has toppled both India and Australia. The next step is consistency, the mark of a truly formidable outfit.

Sri Lanka must now dust themselves off, pick up the pieces and square the ledger in today’s game. And nothing would be sweeter than seeing Asalanka himself steering the chase home.

by Rex Clementine

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LPL franchise owner in hot water over fixing bid

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The Attorney General yesterday filed indictments in the Colombo High Court against Tamim Rahman, the owner of the Dambulla Thunders, for allegedly attempting to influence a player to fix a match during last year’s Lanka Premier League (LPL).

High Court Judge Udesh Ranatunga ordered the Bangladeshi-born British national to be released on cash bail of Rs. 200,000 with two sureties of Rs. 10 million each.

Appearing for Rahman, President’s Counsel Kalinga Indatissa told court that his client had already spent more than 18 months in Sri Lanka due to the ongoing case, which had caused serious disruption to his business and personal life.

The defence informed court that Rahman was prepared to plead guilty and sought an early conclusion to the proceedings, adding that formal representations had been made to the Attorney General.

State Counsel, appearing for the Attorney General, requested time to obtain further instructions.

The matter was fixed for further hearing on December 8.

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Sandaruwan, Menula shine for Isipatana

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Under 19 Cricket

An unbeaten century by Maleesha Sandaruwan and a five wicket haul by Menula Dambakumbura were the highlights as Isipatana took first innings honours against St. Servatius’ in the Under 19 traditional cricket encounter which ended in a draw at the BRC ground on Wednesday.

‎Dambakumbura took five wicket to restrict the visitors to 170 runs in reply to their 209.

‎In their second essay Isipatana reached 207 for four wickets at close as Sandaruwan remained unbeaten on 101 runs. He scored five fours and two sixes.

‎Scores:

Isipatana 209 all out in 70.1 overs (Navindu Umeth 57, Yuveen Keshan 26, Menula Dambakumbura 22; Samiru Gimhan 3/76, Muhammadu Sadhik 3/29, Risinu Kithmuka 2/30) and 207 for 4 in 50 overs (Tharun Perera 54, Maleesha Sandaruwan 101n.o., Menula Dambakumbura 25n.o.; Muhammadu Sadhik 2/31)

‎St. Servatius’

170 all out in 46.1 overs (Heshan Madushanka 31, Risinu Kithmuka 20, Praveen Madusaka 21, Chamod Mihiranga 50; Menula Dambakumbura 5/46, Dasith Senal 3/29) (RF)

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