Sri
Lanka v India, 1st ODI, Dambulla
18.8.2008
Sri
Lanka 147 for 2 (Mahela 61*, Kapugedera 45) beat India 146
(Mendis 3-21, Murali 3-37) by eight wickets
Scorecard
The
actors were different from the Test series but the script
remained the same. India were injected with fresh blood
but couldn't escape the slow poison of M&M. Chaminda
Vaas and Nuwan Kulasekara did the initial work before Ajantha
Mendis and Muttiah Muralitharan blew away the rest to bowl
out India for 146. Without having to contend with the pressure
of a high asking rate, a serene Mahela Jayawardene weathered
the minor hiccup of the loss of the openers and steered
his side home in the company of Chamara Kapugedera.
You
couldn't escape the sense of deja-vu. Having lost the toss,
Jayawardene delayed the introduction of the spinners till
the 20th over, but when Mendis finally appeared, it was
evident his spell over the batsmen remained unbroken.
India's
plight was best exemplified by the dismissal of Yuvraj Singh.
He had struggled against the seamers, surviving a dropped
chance at five against Kulasekara, before Mendis swallowed
him in a spectacular first over. It was quite a sight. The
first ball hastened past a mystified Yuvraj, the second-ball
skidder fetched a plausible appeal for lbw, and the third
saw a desperate counterattack clear the field and the boundary.
The fourth was the carrom ball; thinking it would spin away,
Yuvraj pushed his bat well outside the line but the ball
straightened to sound the death knell.
And
Mendis dealt the killer blow almost immediately when he
drew Mahendra Singh Dhoni into edging his legbreak to slip.
The tailenders resisted briefly but India folded up for
a measly score. It was the culmination of the good start
provided by the seamers. Aided by the seam movement on a
two-paced track - grassy areas punctuated by patches of
dry areas - both new-ball bowlers kept it simple: Vaas interspersed
his angling full-length deliveries with ones that straightened
while Kulasekara troubled the batsmen with his incutters
to the right-hand batsmen.
Vaas,
overshadowed by Mendis and Murali during the Test series,
reminded India just why he is the highest wicket-taker in
India-Sri Lanka ODI encounters by breaching the defences
of the in-form Gautam Gambhir with the second ball of the
match. Kumar Sangakkara stood up to the stumps right away
to prevent Gambhir's usual walk down the track and Gambhir
drove completely outside the line.
One
by one, they stumbled. Suresh Raina never looked in, constantly
flirting outside off, eventually succumbing to his urge
to drive on the up. The debutant Virat Kohli, replacing
Virender Sehwag who'd twisted his ankle in practice, was
no better. He was unsure of whether to go forward or back
during his stay and was caught dead in front by an incutter
from Kulasekara.
Kulasekara
should have got the next man, Yuvraj but Jayawardene fluffed
a regulation chance at second slip. Yuvraj's start was typical:
the bat was tentatively pushed away from the body a few
times before he broke free with a well-timed clip through
the on side. Emboldened, he went for the on-the-up flash
and the resultant edge should have terminated his stay.
After that, though he never looked completely at ease, he
started to play close to the body. That was until Mendis
arrived.
Rohit
started cautiously, opening the bat face to pinch singles,
before he suddenly, and against the run of play, walked
down the wicket and swung a short-of-a-length delivery from
Vaas over deep midwicket in the 16th over. However, immediately
after Mendis sent Yuvraj packing, Rohit steered a delivery
slanted across him straight to the solitary wide slip and
India continued to free fall.
Sri
Lanka, too, wobbled initially in the run chase against some
disciplined bowling from Munaf Patel - who prised out the
openers - and Zaheer Khan. On a day when the Indian batsmen
were shamed, their bowlers provided brief moments of consolation.
After six overs of stalemate, Sanath Jayasuriya lost his
patience. He skipped down the track but skied the lofted
carve to mid-on. Sangakkara, too, fell to the urge to dominate,
getting a leading edge from an attempted whip across the
line.
However,
Jayawardene took charge, looking good from the go. He creamed
the seamers through the covers, a gorgeous on-the-up off
drive off Munaf in the 17th over being the highlight. Dhoni
introduced spin in the 23rd over but even he would have
known that neither Harbhajan Singh nor Pragyan Ojha could
have produced any miracles. The target was simply not enough
on this track.
Munaf
was the best Indian bowler on the view. He repeatedly whipped
the ball down from a loose-limbed action and got the ball
to either cut back in or shape away from the off stump.
He might have even bowled the best ball of the day by a
medium-pacer when he got one to seam away late past Jayawardene's
bat but, as in the Tests, the Indian batsmen hardly gave
the bowlers any cover to fire. The Sri Lankan summer of
mystery continues to taunt and tease the Indians.
Sriram
Veera is a staff writer at Cricinfo
Courtesy - Cricinfo
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