Sad day for Sanath and scintillating Silva
S Rajesh presents the Plays of the day for the match between Sri Lanka and Pakistan at the Wanderers
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Nice and slow
Imran Nazir had just pulled a fabulous six off Dilhara Fernando -
swivelling on one leg and sending the ball over the square-leg boundary
with what seemed like an effortless flick of the wrists - but the canny
Chaminda Vaas had his number in the next over. A superbly disguised slower
ball forced Nazir to play too early, and he stood transfixed as the ball
hit the splice of the bat and ballooned to cover. Strike one for Sri
Lanka.
Fernando gets a wicket-maiden
The sixth over is the last one with the fielding restrictions in place,
but instead of Pakistan's batsmen capitalising, Dilhara Fernando made it a
special one for Sri Lanka. A couple of slower ones defeated Mohammad
Hafeez's attempted pull shots; a desperate Hafeez tried a cheeky
paddle-sweep next but failed; the fourth ball was driven crisply but only
straight to mid-on. After four dot balls, it was time for a wicket: a
quick yorker on leg stump was too much for Hafeez, who played all around
it and lost his leg stump. When Shoaib Malik guided the next ball to
point, Fernando finished with a rare wicket-maiden.
Sad sad Sanath
Sanath Jayasuriya has hammered many a bowler far and wide during his
illustrious career, but on this evening he was forced to cop what he has
dished out to others. Pakistan's batsmen - particularly Younis Khan and
Shoaib Malik - relished his offerings, and the agony didn't stop till the
end: his final ball was smashed over long-off, ensuring he joined James
Anderson as the most expensive bowler in an innings in Twenty20 cricket.
And when Sohail Tanvir yorked him off the fifth ball he faced, it
completed an entirely forgettable match for Sri Lanka's most experienced
cricketer.
Silva scintillates
Mohammad Asif hasn't been fazed by this hit-or-miss game, but he finally
met his match in the Wanderers pitch, and the Sri Lankan batsmen. In his
fourth over, Chamara Silva took a special liking for his pace: a superbly
executed short-arm pull was followed by an even better cut as he gave
himself room on the off side. A top-edged pull for six added to the
misery, as Asif ended with 47 runs from his four overs.
S Rajesh is stats editor of Cricinfo
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