In a result that will
only make the tournament more interesting in the days ahead, self-confessed
underdog Sri Lanka thumped India by seven wickets after successfully
chasing a stiff target of 322 at The Oval on Thursday (June 8).
Victory was made
possible by aggressive batting, as promised by captain Angelo Mathews. The
personnel who did that were Kusal Mendis (89) and Danushka Gunathilaka (76),
who wasn't even in the squad until an injury to Chamara Kapugedera on the eve
of the game.
The pair added 159 in
139 balls for the second wicket to set up the chase before passing on the baton
to Mathews (52) and Kusal Perera (47), who took the game away from India with a
75-run stand for the fourth wicket before the latter was forced to retire hurt.
Asela Gunaratne then played his part with an unbeaten 34 as Sri Lanka won with
eight balls to spare.
The impeccably timed
chase meant Shikhar Dhawan’s third century (125) in seven ICC Champions Trophy
innings that powered India to 321 for 6 went in vain. It also meant that after
two matches each, all the four teams in Group B have one win each, rendering
the last two league games virtual quarter-final clashes.
Sri Lanka’s chase
started with Niroshan Dickwella misreading a knuckle ball from Bhuvneshwar
Kumar and popping a leading edge to point. With Bhuvneshwar and Umesh Yadav
finding swing, Sri Lanka managed only 22 runs in the first seven overs.
But it all changed
quickly when when Gunathilaka pulled Umesh into the stands at the beginning of
the eighth, signalling a shift in fortunes. Gunathilaka took charge with some
glorious drives, particularly down the ground, while Mendis too started
confidently, shifting the pressure on to India gradually.
India could have had
Mendis in the 15th over but Hardik Pandya could not hold on to a sharp return
chance. Gunathilaka rubbed salt into Pandya’s wounds by heaving him for a
massive six to get to his half-century, in the process taking Sri Lanka to 108
for 1 in 20 overs. It was one run ahead of where India was at the same stage.
But a good beginning
is not even a job half done, as Sri Lanka found out the hard way against South
Africa. The middle-overs batting was the most crucial phase of the chase, and
how Sri Lanka handled Ravindra Jadeja was in particular important, given that
it had crumbled against Imran Tahir’s leg-spin.
Mendis took that task
upon himself and dismantled the left-arm spinner’s threat with smart batting.
With only four fielders allowed inside the ring, Mendis targeted the mid-wicket
boundary to perfection, getting past fifty with one such massive swipe into the
crowd.
Jadeja conceded 36
from four overs, the partnership crossed 150, and India’s shoulders began to
drop. It didn’t help that Rohit Sharma could not hold on to a very tough chance
in the deep when Gunathilaka was on 70.
India’s desperation
was evident when Kedhar Jadhav and Virat Kohli came on to bowl, but the
breakthroughs came via run outs.
Umesh and MS Dhoni
first combined to catch Gunathilaka just short of his second run in the 28th
over before Bhuvneshwar’s quick work and accurate throw on his follow through
got Mendis.
A run-out had changed
Sri Lanka’s fortunes for the worse in its previous game but this time, it had
the experience of Mathews and a calm Kusal Perera. They knew exactly what to
do, and with some controlled aggression, got the equation down to 51 off 42 from
the 126 off 104 when they had joined hands.
India was also
becoming increasingly impatient and sloppy on the field, but it got an opening
when Perera was forced off the field with a hamstring injury after 43 overs. It
only resulted in Gunaratne playing some unbelievable shots in a cameo that
clinched the game.
Earlier, Dhawan added
138 with Rohit (78) – their third century and sixth 50-plus stand in seven ICC
Champions Trophy innings -- before Dhoni applied the finishing touches with a
52-ball 63.
Sri Lanka’s bowlers
were in the firing line with all the three frontline pacers including Lasith
Malinga conceding more than 70 runs each.
After opting to
field, the Sri Lankan bowlers tried to restrict India’s openers with straight
lines but the lengths weren’t as tight, resulting in the odd boundary to go
with plenty of quick singles.
Rohit pressed on the
accelerator, swatting Thisara Perera for two sixes in the 20th over to go past
his half-century but perished to the mood, pulling Malinga to long-leg one ball
after successfully hitting a similar one for six. One brought two when Virat
Kohli edged Nuwan Pradeep to the wicketkeeper in the next over without scoring.
All of a sudden, India had to rebuild after slipping to 139 for 2.
Dhawan wrested the
momentum by hitting five boundaries in the next three overs, but with Yuvraj
Singh settling in, India scored only 13 runs between the 30th and 34th overs.
Dhawan slowed down, going 26 balls without a boundary in that period, and India
also lost Yuvraj.
The innings got the
impetus once again with Dhoni’s arrival. His calculated aggression rubbed off
on Dhawan, who went past his century by cutting Pradeep to the deep point
fence. Once the landmark was out of the way, there was attack from both ends,
aided by plenty of full tosses.
Dhawan holed out in
the 45th over, but Dhoni and Jadhav finished powerfully as India added 103 runs
in the last ten overs. As things turned out, even that wouldn’t be enough.
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