Jayawardena and Herath to the fore as
Sri Lanka enters final
Pakistan batsmen self-destruct as Sri Lanka sails through to the final of the ICC World Twenty20 2012
Sri Lanka wasn’t at its best, either with the bat
or in the field, but it still had enough in reserve to overwhlem Pakistan and
make it to the final of the ICC World Twenty20 2012. In a low-scoring thriller that kept a capacity crowd on the edge of
their seats throughout the three-and-a-quarter-hour shootout, Sri Lanka kept
its nerve to conjure a remarkable 16-run win at the R Premadasa Stadium on
Thursday night. It now awaits the winner of the second semi-final between
Australia and the West Indies in Sunday’s final.
It was anything but a comfortable victory for the host
nation, though the final margin appears reasonably commanding in the context of
the scores. Sri Lanka found heroes at the most opportune moments to
send Pakistan crashing to a demoralising defeat.
Mahela Jayawardena had played outstandingly after
winning the toss to steer Sri Lanka to 139 for 4, competitive on a
slow turner that was a poor advertisement for the Twenty20 game, but it was far
from intimidating for Pakistan’s unpredictable batting line-up.
Pakistan was in the hunt at various stages, as most
teams will be when up against such a middling total, but twin strikes by Angelo
Mathews and Rangana Herath, whose left-arm spin was preferred to Akila
Dananjaya’s varied mix, pegged Pakistan back irrevocably.
Lasith Malinga, who had had a poor day in the field,
sending down eight wides, misfielding on more than one occasion and putting
down Mohammad Hafeez at long-on, redeemed himself with a brilliant 19th over
that produced just four with 27 needed off 12 deliveries. Nuwan Kulasekara gave
away no more than six in the last as Pakistan limped to 123 for 7.
Without ever looking convincing, Hafeez had
kept Pakistan in the hunt with the only meaningful innings until Umar
Akmal in the end, but wickets kept tumbling around him as the Pakistani batsmen
allowed big-stage nerves to get to them. As well as Sri Lanka bowled, with
Mathews, Herath and Ajantha Mendis to the fore, and Malinga and Kulasekara playing
good support roles, Pakistan had itself to blame for poor shot selection, as
was the case four nights ago when India bowled it out for 128.
Pakistan was handily placed at 55 for 1 after
nine overs when Mathews, brought back for a second spell, won a fortuitous leg-before
shout against Nasir Jamshed. That triggered a rush of wickets at regular
intervals and the exodus continued unabated as, driven by a baying
crowd, Sri Lanka bore down inexorably to fashion a sensational
victory.
Tillakaratne Dilshan’s inability to both force the
pace and rotate the strike had left Jayawardena with too much to do at the
start of the Sri Lankan innings. Dilshan failed to adapt to the lack of pace in
the pitch, never finding his timing even after spending more than an hour in
the middle, but Jayawardena batted as if on an entirely different surface.
Jayawardena is quite the classicist in Test cricket,
but has come on by leaps and bounds as a Twenty20 player too. Sohail Tanvir,
brought in for Abdul Razzaq because he troubled Sri Lanka in the
Twenty20 International series in Hambantota in June, bowled extremely tidily
and got reasonable carry as well, while Raza Hasan continued to hold his own,
firing the ball in and not allowing the batsmen to get under the ball or free
their arms.
Even so, Jayawardena found ways of keeping the scoreboard
ticking over. He had to do the scoring not only for himself but also for
Dilshan, and till he was dismissed, he did that quite adequately, playing the
sweep as well as the reverse sweep with authority and assurance.
Saeed Ajmal had been expected to pose the biggest
threat from a Sri Lankan perspective, but Jayawardena quickly showed him who
was boss with two boundaries in the off-spinner’s first over. Ajmal didn’t have
the best night – 1 for 33 from four overs – but the rest of the bowling pack
rallied around him, ensuring that Sri Lanka never got out of sight.
Jayawardena had progressed to 42 with seven brilliant
fours when he scooped Shahid Afridi to short fine-leg, having done all the
running in a stand of 63 with Dilshan. Kumar Sangakkara then took over, oozing
class and quality as he wasted no time in imposing himself on the Pakistani
bowling.
Like Jayawardena before him, though, Sangakkara too fell when he had the bowling at his mercy, outfoxed by clever bit of bowling from Hafeez. Seeing the batsman advance, Hafeez bowled the ball wide; Sangakkara, opting to go ahead with his stroke, was forced to reach out and drag the ball, only for Shoaib Malik to take a very good catch running to his right from long-on.
Like Jayawardena before him, though, Sangakkara too fell when he had the bowling at his mercy, outfoxed by clever bit of bowling from Hafeez. Seeing the batsman advance, Hafeez bowled the ball wide; Sangakkara, opting to go ahead with his stroke, was forced to reach out and drag the ball, only for Shoaib Malik to take a very good catch running to his right from long-on.
At 84 for 2 in 13 overs, Sri Lanka was well
set for a final assault, which never materialised. Dilshan continued to scratch
around and Jeevan Mendis at No. 4 too hardly hit a shot in anger. Their efforts
to kick on further were foiled by an excellent first couple of overs from Umar
Gul, only brought on in the 16th over.
It was
left to Mathews and Thisara Perera to give the total some meat right at the end
as they put on 21 in just 12 deliveries. The last over of the innings, Gul’s
third, was the most productive as it yielded 16. It was precisely the
difference between victory and defeat.
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