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From where’s the power hitting coming?

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Kusal Mendis was Player of the Series in Sri Lanka’s last T-20 series win. He is expected to give the team quick runs during the Power Play.

by Rex Clementine

You’ve got to appreciate the frankness with which Upul Tharanga has gone about his business as Chairman of Selectors. The clarity the former captain has shown had it been followed by his predecessors, Sri Lanka wouldn’t have got knocked out of next year’s Champions Trophy.

One question that everyone seemed to be asking when the Sri Lankan squad for the T-20 World Cup in the United States and West Indies was announced was from where the power hitting is coming.

Tharanga was confident that the squad chosen for the 20 nation tournament had enough power hitting options. He didn’t go into minute details about the thought process that went in when the selectors met to pick the squad. Maybe he’s playing his cards close to his chest.

When you talk of power hitting, the immediate names that come to your mind are those of Kusal Perera, Avishka Fernando and Bhanuka Rajapaksa. Kusal and Avishka got a fair run lead up to the World Cup before being discarded, Bhanuka although couldn’t make it to the squad, he’s among the travelling reserves.

When the selectors said that they have power hitting aspect covered, they would have probably talked about sticking to the strategy of sending Wanindu Hasaranga as the floater. Although slotted in to bat at number eight, Hasaranga during recent bilateral series has promoted himself to number four or five and has given some quick runs in the matter of a few balls. It’s a risk that Sri Lanka can afford to take since they can bank on other established batters.

During the Power Play of course they have Kusal Mendis, who can make use of fielding restrictions. In Sri Lanka’s last T-20 series win, Mendis was Player of the Series having scored 56, 36 and 86.

In the death overs of course they have the options of Angelo Mathews and Dasun Shanka, both of whom can clear the boundary with their clean hitting.

Pathum Nissanka is expected to play the anchor role while Charith Asalanka, Sadeera Samarawickrama and Kamindu Mendis hold the innings together while the likes of Hasaranga, Mendis, Mathews and Shanka play around them.

All in all, there’s lot of thought process gone into the selections and credit to the selectors.

It always seems that bowling is Sri Lanka’s strong point. This time around batting could prove to be the game changer. Can’t wait till the World Cup gets underway. An exciting tournament is on the cards.



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Doug Bracewell serves one-month ban after testing positive for cocaine use

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Bracewell last appeared for NZ in a Test against Sri Lanka in March 2023 in Wellington [Cricbuzz]

New Zealand fast-bowler Doug Bracewell has served a one-month backdated ban from cricket after being found to have consumed cocaine. The 34-year old had tested positive for the banned substance back in January this year following a T20 game between Central Stags and Wellington. Bracewell had won the Player of the Match award for figures of 2 for 21 with the ball while also scoring 30 runs off just 11 balls with the bat.

The Sports Integrity Commission Te Kahu Raunui handed the ban to the cricketer. However, it was also found that the consumption of cocaine was before the start of the tournament and hence, he received a reduced sentence. The sentence which was initially three months long was reduced to one month after the bowler completed a treatment programme to address the substance use.

The one-month suspension was backdated to April 2024 and as a result, the bowler has already served his ban thereby allowing him to resume playing cricket at any given time.

Bracewell last appeared for New Zealand in a Test against Sri Lanka in March 2023 in Wellington. He has made 69 appearances (28 Tests, 21 ODIs, 20 T20Is) for the nation across all three-formats of the game.

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Zampa, Stoinis trounce Pakistan to seal clean sweep

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Adam Zampa sent back the big fish, Babar Azam [Cricinfo]

Australia signed off their T20I series against Pakistan as they played the rest of it: with a decisive seven-wicket win that also sealed the series 3-0. Pakistan limped to 117 before being bowled out in 18.1 overs, losing their last nine wickets for 56 runs. Adam Zampa ran rings around them after the Powerplay, his 2-11 in four overs the catalyst for their collapse. Babar Azam – who top-scored with 41 off 28, had led Pakistan to a good position in the first six overs; by that time, the visitors sat relatively pretty at 58 for 1.

Marcus Stonis put any jeopardy out of the contest in the chase when he smashed Haris Rauf for 22 in an over. His 27-ball 61 meant Australia got to the target with almost nine overs to spare after Pakistan had made a respectable start in their attempt to defend a below-par target. Jake Fraser-McGurk and Matthew Short fell early, while Jahandad Khan’s variations made life tricky for Australia in the powerplay. But, as Stoinis later guaranteed, the visitors were merely delaying the inevitable.

Pakistan’s bright start

Pakistan came out with clear intent after they had shown precious little of it when trying to chase Australia down in the previous game. Sahibzada Farhan fell early, but what Pakistan were trying to do was obvious: take advantage of the Powerplay. Even Babar, usually a slow starter, found the boundary off the first ball and carried on in that vein. Haseebullah Khan was riding his luck somewhat, his edges finding the boundary, but that, too, was a product of flashing hard. The upshot was Pakistan racing to 58 – their highest powerplay score in an innings against Australia.

Zampa’s sorcery

Zampa’s impeccable control and skill makes him little short of a sorcerer in this format. For Pakistan, today, he was also their torturer – toying with batters at will as he varied pace, line, and variations, keeping batters second-guessing all the time.

It took him just five balls before he saw to it that Haseebullah’s luck ran out, the flash outside off stump finding short third. In his third over, he put an end to Babar’s entertaining knock, adjusting the flight of his delivery as he saw the batter running down the wicket, and cleaning up his stumps.

Even when he wasn’t taking wickets, he was piling on the pressure at the other end. Pakistan’s stand-in captain Salman Ali Agha played out five dot balls against him before he was put out of his misery by Aaron Hardie in the following over, and his figures of 4-0-11-2 didn’t remotely flatter him.

Pakistan’s balance

It’s difficult to expect the batters to play high-risk cricket when you simply don’t have enough batters. Pakistan had clearly briefed the team they expected aggression from the outset, even from players to whom it doesn’t come naturally. Usman Khan tends to take a few balls before being able to launch, but he came out from ball one looking to slog – even when the shot was never on. It never looked sustainable, as was demonstrated when he holed out off his fourth delivery, triggering a Pakistan collapse.

Every fall of wicket was made all the more concerning for the visitors because of the extreme length of their tail; they effectively ran out of batters when the fifth wicket fell, with Abbas Afridi coming out at No. 7. It proved a problem for them in the second game, too, and remains an issue they need to find a way to resolve.

Australia get on top of Haris – finally

A running theme in this series is Haris Rauf coming out and dominating whichever Australian batter he finds at the other end. This has been especially true of Glenn Maxwell, but Stoinis said post-match he told Haris this was the only time “one of us” got Haris’ number.

And Stoinis did so in enthralling fashion. At the end of the eighth over, Australia were 57 for 2, and Pakistan still believed they had time to insert jeopardy into the game. But the ninth over saw him clobber Haris for two fours and two sixes off the first four balls, with the final six flying out of the Bellerive Oval altogether. It began a passage of play that saw Stoinis plunder 45 off his next 12 deliveries, including a 25-run over off Shaheen Afridi. The following over, Abbas had Stoinis caught at deep square leg but had overstepped. Sixty-one runs came off the final 21 balls to draw curtains to the match and the series.

Brief scores:
Australia 118 for 3 in 11.2 overs (Marcus Stoinis 61*, Josh Inglis 27, Shaheen Sha Afridi 1-43, Abbas Afridi  1-14, Jahandan Khan 1-17) beat Pakistan 117 all out in 18.1 overs (Babar Azam  41, Haseebullah Khan 24; Xavier Bartlet 1-25, Spencer Johnson 2-24, Nathan Ellis 1-20, Aaron Hardie 3-21, Adam Zampa 2-11) by 7 wickets

[Cricinfo]

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Washout in St Lucia after five overs as England take series 3-1

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Ground staff bring on the covers as rain stops play [Cricinfo]

Match abandoned West Indies 44 for 0 (Lewis 29*, Hope 14*) vs England

England leave West Indies with a 3-1 T20I series victory after the final match of their Caribbean tour was washed out.

Play was abandoned after just five overs in the fifth and final T20I with Evin Lewis and Shai Hope steering the hosts to 44 without loss before a heavy storm set in at Darren Sammy Stadium in St Lucia.

It wasn’t quite the start West Indies’ opening pair had staged less than 24 hours earlier,  when they raced to 56 for nought in the first five overs and 136 for 0 in nine, on their way to chasing down a record 219 in Saturday’s dead rubber. But it wasn’t far off, with Lewis striking two sixes and three fours on his way to 29 not out before the rain arrived.

Lewis had just pulled a John Turner delivery for a thunderous six over deep midwicket and sent the next ball in the air wide of mid-on for four before he was rapped on the helmet by a steepling bouncer attempting another pull on the last ball of the over – and ultimately the match.

The rain arrived just as he was about to undergo on-field concussion checks, but he walked off smiling with the rest of the players.

With Hope unbeaten on 14 off 10 balls, it was an abrupt end to what had loomed as another entertaining encounter to end the series after the same pitch had yielded 32 sixes on Saturday.

On that occasion, West Indies had won the toss for the only time in this series, but they made a strong start in the face of Jos Buttler’s decision to bowl first on Sunday.

Turner, who was playing just his second T20I after making his debut in the fourth game of this series, conceded 22 runs from his two overs while Jofra Archer, replacing Saqib Mahmood for this match, went for 16 off 2. Jamie Overton, who didn’t bowl despite taking the field on Saturday, conceded five runs off his solitary over on Sunday.

Player of the Series Mahmood was comfortably the leading wicket-taker for the series with nine at an average of 10.55 and an economy rate of 6.33 with a best of 4 for 43 in the 1st T20I, eight of his wickets coming in the powerplay. Next best was West Indies’ left-arm spinner Akeal Hosein with five.

“The one thing I noticed being here previously is the crosswinds at most grounds,” Mahmood told the post-match presentation. “I felt that if I wanted to take the new ball, I’d have to work on my away-swinger a little bit just because Reece Topley and Jofra [Archer] would want the new ball from the other end to swing the ball back in. That’s something I worked on. To perform and show that in a game was nice.”

Phil Salt was the leading run-scorer with 162 including 103 not out in the first game and 55 in the fourth. Jacob Bethell, his 21-year-old team-mate, also impressed with 127 runs for once out, and at a superior strike rate of 173.97. The England duo were split by West Indies captain Rovman Powell on 153 runs.

[Cricinfo]

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