Sri
Lanka v India, 2nd ODI, Dambulla
20.8.2008
India
143 for 7 (Dhoni 39, Kohli 37) beat Sri Lanka 142 (Thushara
44, Zaheer 4-21, Praveen 3-34) by three wickets
Scorecard
India
fought back to level the series 1-1 with a three-wicket
win but the victory was far from convincing as they made
heavy weather of a modest target of 143. Zaheer Khan's dramatic
opening spell, which sent Sri Lanka's top order reeling,
was the highlight of the day as India restricted Sri Lanka
to a score four less than what India made on Monday.
The
contrast, however, was the manner in which victory was achieved.
While Sri Lanka coasted home in the first ODI, India lost
early wickets, grafted, lost few more, recovered, and later
limped to the target. Mahendra Singh Dhoni kept a cool head
and debutant S Badrinath showed maturity in supporting his
captain when he came in with 68 needed.
India's
batting in the first match forced a change of strategy,
but the paucity of specialist openers and the fact that
India were playing four medium-pacers forced Dhoni to "bowl
out of compulsion" despite a pitch that appeared good
for batting by his assessment. His decision in the end proved
a masterstroke.
Zaheer's
deliveries moved, sliced the batsmen in half, made run-scoring
an arduous task and India's body language perked up with
each wicket, reflecting their hunger to turn the tables
after an embarrassing drubbing.
In
his first over, Zaheer produced an inswinger to Kumar Sangakkara
which clipped the top of off stump after the batsman played
around the line of the ball. Mahela Jayawardene and Chamara
Kapugedera both fell to edges behind the wicket off deliveries
that landed on off stump and seamed away. Praveen proved
a good foil for Zaheer maintaining pressure with the new
ball, moving it in the air and cramping Sanath Jayasuriya.
He dismissed Chamara Silva off a leading edge, before Zaheer
sent back Jayasuriya lbw with a delivery that cut into the
left-hander. The decision was shrouded in doubt as it appeared
as if he was struck high on the pads.
Tillakaratne
Dilshan joined Jayasuriya with the score on 11 for 4 but
looked scratchy early on, failing to make contact with his
pulls. His frustration showed as he swished the air with
his bat. He eventually connected against a short ball from
Irfan Pathan but was caught by Badrinath who ran in from
deep midwicket and dived forward to take a low catch, leaving
Sri Lanka in an even bigger mess at 44 for 6.
An
unlikely revival came courtesy the pair of Thilan Thushara
and Nuwan Kulasekara. Once the ball had gotten softer, run-scoring
became easier. Thushara was the more adventurous of the
pair, freeing his arms when offered width and brought up
the fifty stand with a slash down to third man off Harbhajan
Singh.
Just
when it looked like India were letting them off the hook,
Praveen returned for a new spell and broke the 74-run stand.
Thushara tried to heave him across the line but didn't get
the elevation to clear Kohli at deep midwicket and three
balls later, Kulasekara chipped the same bowler to Badrinath
at midwicket. Harbhajan mopped up the tail to with 11 overs
to spare, giving India the ideal opportunity to stay alive
in the series.
India
were left to bat out a nervous five overs before lunch but
the experimental opening pair of Pathan and Virat Kohli
- India's 12th combination since January 2007 - failed to
click. Sangakkara snaffled a sharp catch to his left to
dismiss Pathan off Kulasekara and Raina followed soon after,
trapped lbw to the same bowler.
Kohli
was solid in defence and safely negotiated the several bouncers
dished out to him, before fetching boundaries through the
off side off Kulasekara. Yuvraj Singh found his groove with
crisply-driven fours off Thushara, but not surprisingly,
continued to be a sitting duck against Mendis, falling prey
to the carrom ball. Kohli took his chances against Mendis,
heaving him over midwicket but eventually fell to Thushara,
punching one straight to short extra cover. Rohit Sharma
was sent packing two balls later and Sri Lanka were back
in the match.
It
was an opportunity for Badrinath to impress after being
on the fringes of national selection for a while and he
didn't disappoint, negating the spinners by coming forward
and smothering the turn while rotating the strike. The singles
and twos never dried up - Dhoni in fact started scoring
at over a run-a-ball - as India steadily edged ahead. Muralitharan
bowled round the wicket, but the pair used their wrists
well to work the ball in the vacant areas on the leg side.
India
suffered a late hiccup with eight needed as Dhoni played
all over a full delivery from Dilhara Fernando, before Mendis
returned for one final scalp. Though India registered a
comeback win, it did nothing to allay the blaring frailties
in the batting line-up devoid of senior players.
Kanishkaa
Balachandran is a staff writer at Cricinfo
Courtesy - cricinfo
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