![]() From the publishers of THE HINDU
Vol. 24 :: No. 31 :: Aug. 04 - 10, 2001
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COCA-COLA TRI-SERIES/SRI LANKA V INDIA
Maintaining the tempoS. DINAKARTHE moment symbolised the agony of the Indians: Rahul Dravid throwing his bat down in sheer disgust after failing to score off a Sanath Jayasuriya delivery in the penultimate over.
N. BALAJI It was a match of intense disappointment for India, the side going down to Sri Lanka by six runs at the Premadasa Stadium, suffering its second successive defeat in the Coca-Cola triangular competition. "No excuses. We should have won this game," Indian skipper Sourav Ganguly fumed and he could not quite hide his disappointment. He had played his part, dropping himself down the order, handling Muttiah Muralitharan with aplomb, and coming up with a 105-ball 69, but it was his opposite number who had the last laugh. It was an inspired piece of captaincy by Jayasuriya that turned the game Sri Lanka's way. India was well placed at 151 for four in the 38th over when Jayasuriya introduced part-time off-spinner Russel Arnold into the attack. The fling of the dice worked, with the Indian captain sweeping Arnold straight into the hands of Jayasuriya at backward of square. The jubilation in the Lankan camp mirrored the importance of the wicket. Ganguly had been in an imperious mood in this innings - twice square-cutting Muralitharan to the fence and once dancing down the wicket to thump the offie through the covers - and the game was slipping away from the Lankans. Dravid played the anchor role in an admirable manner, first putting together an 80-run stand for the fifth wicket with Ganguly (123 balls) and then raising 27 off 30 balls and 22 off 26 deliveries for the sixth and seventh wickets with Reetinder Singh Sodhi and Virender Sehwag respectively.
N. BALAJI However, during the nail-biting stages towards the end, Dravid, for all his experience and ability, could not deliver the big hits when it mattered. In his case, it was a lot of hard work coming to nothing. He walked back a disappointed man, unbeaten on 49 (80 balls). India, which again lost the toss, had chased 222 on a pitch that played better than the ones for the earlier two games, but this did not bring about any change in its fortunes. The last two overs were dramatic. Jayasuriya, taking on the responsibility himself, pulled the game Lanka's way by conceding just five runs in the 49th - India required 17 off the last two. And when 12 were required in the final over, it was the unsung off-spinner Kumara Dharmasena who stood between India and a heroic victory, not allowing Dravid and Sameer Dighe to get under the ball for the huge hits. The Indian pair managed just five and the Lankans were celebrating to the delight of a much healthier Sunday crowd. The strategy in the climactic stages should have been to play out principal threat Muttiah Muralitharan and go after the rest, but both Reetinder Singh Sodhi and Virender Sehwag fell to the offie, dismissals that swung the match Lanka's way.
N. BALAJI Sodhi, stroking the ball fluently and running like a hare between the wickets, appeared in fine nick, but his attempted steer against the spin was a shot strewn with risks. He was bowled. And then, when just two balls remained in Muralitharan's final over, Sehwag thoughtlessly took the arial route and only managed to hole out in the process. Earlier, the Indian top-order had once again come apart with the new opening pair of Amay Khurasia and Yuveraj Singh failing to come good, the nippy Suresh Perera, also adjudged the Man of the Match, scalping both of them. Harbhajan Singh walked in as the pinch-hitter, but the Lankans had him removed early, the foxy left-arm seamer Chaminda Vaas being the bowler. And Laxman was a victim of a doubtful caught behind dismissal, even as he shaped to play a lifting delivery from the genuinely quick Dilhara Fernando. Earlier, left-handed Avishka Gunawardene's 63 was the highest individual score in the Lankan innings, but the opener was lucky too, dropped twice, by Sehwag and Yuveraj Singh, Zaheer Khan and Reetinder Singh Sodhi being the bowlers to suffer.
N. BALAJI It was at best a scrappy innings, he was all at sea against Harbhajan Singh, but on this day, Gunawardene's knock was worth its weight in gold for Sri Lanka. Once again the rapidly rising offie Harbhajan Singh delighted with the ball, bringing all his variations into play, and it was his spell of 10-1-29-3 that was clearly the bowling highlight of the match. In fact, Sri Lanka, reduced to 154 for seven, owed their final score to an enterprising eighth-wicket 49-run stand (58 balls) between Kumara Dharmasena and Suresh Perera. It was the partnership that ultimately cost India the match. The scores: Sri Lanka: S. Jayasuriya st. Dighe b Harbhajan 34; A. Gunawardene b Sehwag 63; M. Atapattu c Khurasiya b Harbhajan 5; M. Jayawardene c Dighe b Sodhi 0; R. Kaluwitharana c Dighe b Yuveraj 36; R. Arnold (run out) 1; K. Dharmasena c Ganguly b Zaheer 26; C. Vaas lbw b Harbhajan 1; S. Perera c Ganguly b Yuveraj 28; M. Muralitharan (not out) 6; D. Fernando (not out) 5. Extras (b-3, lb-4, nb-3, w-6) 16. Total (for nine wkts. in 50 overs) 221. Fall of wickets: 1-48, 2-60, 3-61, 4-144, 5-147, 6-149, 7-154, 8-203, 9-210. India bowling: Zaheer 9-0-42-1, Mohanty 5-0-27-0, Harbhajan 10-1-29-3, Sodhi 9-0-42-1, Sehwag 7-0-33-1, Yuveraj 10-1-41-2. India: A. Khurasiya lbw b Perera 12; Y. Singh c Muralitharan b Perera 12; V. V. S. Laxman c Kaluwitharana b Fernando 17; H. Singh c Jayasuriya b Vaas 1; S. Ganguly c Jayasuriya b Arnold 69; R. Dravid (not out) 49; R. S. Sodhi b Muralitharan 19; V. Sehwag c Perera b Muralitharan 12; S. Dighe (not out) 11. Extras (lb-1, w-6, nb-6) 13. Total (for seven wkts. in 50 overs) 215. Fall of wickets: 1-26, 2-29, 3-30, 4-71, 5-151, 6-178, 7-200. Sri Lanka bowling: Vaas 7-1-22-1; Perera 6-0-26-2; Fernando 7-0-29-1; Muralitharan 10-1-35-2; Dharmasena 10-0-46-0; Jayasuriya 7-0-44-0; Arnold 3-0-12-1.
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