Sri Lanka storm to 64-run win
Sri Lanka's progress to 147 for 5 was often tortuous and ragged, but the value of perseverance was amply illustrated as the bowlers made short work of Bangladesh on a sluggish pitch where batsmen rarely felt at ease
The Bulletin by Dileep Premachandran
18-Sep-2007
Sri Lanka 147 for 5 (Mubarak 31*, Jayawardene 30) beat Bangladesh 83 (Vaas 2-14, Jayasuriya 2-4) by 64 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out
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Sri Lanka's progress to 147 for 5 was often tortuous and ragged, but the
value of perseverance was amply illustrated as the bowlers made short work
of Bangladesh on a sluggish pitch where batsmen rarely felt at ease. While
it was the slow bowlers that starred for Bangladesh, the fast men did the
damage for Sri Lanka, with the new-ball duo of Chaminda Vaas and Dilhara
Fernando once again outstanding. The loss pushed Bangladesh out of
contention for a semi-final place, and left Sri Lanka needing to beat
Australia to progress to the final four.
Bangladesh were left to reflect on both some ordinary shot selection and
the final phase of the Sri Lankan innings, when Jehan Mubarak and
Tillakaratne Dilshan hustled the runs that had been at a premium as the
batsmen struggled in the middle overs. Their own reply started poorly,
with Nazimuddin trapped leg before in Vaas's opening over. And after the
spirited Aftab Ahmed clattered three fours in Fernando's opening over, the
bowler exacted retribution in the best possible fashion, having Tamim
Iqbal caught at third man before ripping through Aftab's defence with an
express yorker.
That wicket maiden set the tone, and when Mohammad Ashraful skied Vaas to
cover, Bangladesh were sinking fast. Sri Lanka's bowlers were backed up by
some terrific fielding as well, with Lasith Malinga's throw from deep
midwicket catching Mahmudullah short of his crease, and a superb
combination between Farveez Maharoof and Kumar Sangakkara running out
Mushfiqur Rahim.
Maharoof had earlier knocked over Shakib Al Hasan, whose was the only one
apart from Aftab to hint at an appetite for the fight. Mashrafe Mortaza's
stand-and-flail effort was terminated by Malinga's pace and Sanath
Jayasuriya then mopped up the rest as Bangladesh subsided to 83.
Earlier, Mubarak's unbeaten 31 saved Sri Lankan blushes after a
Scrooge-like opening spell from Syed Rasel and some clever slow bowling on
a sluggish pitch had sucked the momentum out of their innings.
Sri Lanka couldn't have made a worse start, losing Jayasuriya to the third
ball of the innings, cutting Mortaza to Mahmudullah at deep-backward
point. Upul Tharanga stroked a couple of boundaries, but with Sangakkara
once again struggling, Sri Lanka were never able to impose their will on
the proceedings.
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Their plight got worse when Tharanga fell in freakish fashion, with an
edge behind being trapped between Rahim's knees. Bangladesh could have
built on that even further, had Rahim not fluffed a run-out chance against
Mahela Jayawardene, before putting down a routine catch off Mahmudullah.
Mahmudullah conceded just 19 with his offspin, and the other slow bowlers
showed similar control as Sri Lanka's batsmen were kept on a leash.
Sangakkara was the first to lose his patience, charging Mahmudullah to see
his stumps rearranged.
Chamara Silva came in and smacked a six, but was then leg before to
Shakib, and with Jayawardene struggling, Sri Lanka were left to rely
entirely on singles and twos. Abdur Razzak finally got him, bowled off the
inside edge, but Mubarak injected some energy into the innings with a
slash over point, a straight loft for four and a carve over extra-cover
that Aftab could only tip over the rope for six. On a pitch that only got
slower, it was more than enough.
Dileep Premachandran is associate editor of Cricinfo