Bangladesh
v Sri Lanka, Super Four, Asia Cup, Karachi
The Bulletin by Dileep Premachandran
30.6.2008
Sri
Lanka 332 for 8 (Jayasuriya 130, Sangakkara 121) beat Bangladesh
174 (Raqibul 52, Nazimuddin 47, Muralitharan 5-31) by 158
runs
Scorecard
As birthday bashes go, this was pretty special, with Sanath
Jayasuriya bludgeoning Bangladesh into submission as Sri
Lanka sauntered into the Asia Cup final. Kumar Sangakkara's
elegant 121, just 24 hours after a century against Pakistan,
was the supporting act, and with Muttiah Muralitharan at
his supple-wristed best with the ball, Bangladesh were brushed
aside by a massive 158 runs. Nazimuddin and Raqibul Hasan
showed some defiance, but even against an attack missing
Lasith Malinga and Farveez Maharoof, 333 was never on.
Some
of the Bangladesh players were still in diapers when Jayasuriya
made his debut, and they must have felt as helpless as babies
when he celebrated his 39th birthday with the fluent shot-making
and power-hitting that typified his halcyon years. He raced
to a century off only 55 balls, and though it turned out
to be a two-man show, Sri Lanka still had enough to pull
off their fourth successive win of the tournament.
Having
added 201 with Sangakkara in only 27.5 overs, Jayasuriya
finally ran out of puff in the Karachi heat. A poor delivery
from Alok Kapali was lofted to deep cover where Tamim Iqbal
took the catch. There was scarcely any joy from the fielders,
because by then Jayasuriya had pounded 130 off only 88 balls,
with a heady rhythm of cuts, pulls and drives.
Sangakkara
carried on though, having been reprieved by Kapali off his
own bowling on 51. He drove beautifully down the ground
and made good use of both the orthodox sweep and the slogged
version. Occasionally, he would also come down the track
and loft the ball over the infield, and Bangladesh appeared
bereft of options.
When
Jayasuriya lashed Mashrafe Mortaza's opening delivery past
point for four, it appeared to be a sign of things to come,
but with Shahadat Hossain bowling a maiden first-up, Bangladesh
conceded only 20 in the first five overs. The trouble started
after that, with Jayasuriya dusting off his pull stroke
and driving over the infield with immense power.
Sangakkara
wasn't to be left behind, piercing the packed off-side field
cleverly occasionally, but after a while he gave up trying
to keep pace. Jayasuriya was unstoppable. When the bowlers
dropped short, he would pull over midwicket. If they were
too full, the disdainful flick was unveiled. Too much width
and the hoardings behind the point boundary were battered
with short-arm cuts. And if all that wasn't punishment enough,
he would also jump down the pitch before lashing the ball
over the covers.
The
half-century took only 31 balls, and when Abdur Razzak came
on, he was taken for 19 runs in his second over. Two crisp
fours off Farhad Reza and a single to long leg later, he
had a century, the 26th of an illustrious career. Sangakkara,
who had caressed some lovely drives himself, was the perfect
foil, and Bangladesh's cause wasn't helped when Mushfiqur
Rahim fluffed a catch behind the stumps off Razzak right
after Jayasuriya had got his hundred.
Five stats
Sanath Jayasuriya's 130 came on his 39th birthday. Only
Geoff Boycott has scored a ODI hundred at an advanced age:
his last century came when he was 39 years and 51 days old.
Jayasuriya added 201 runs with Kumar Sangakkara, the highest
opening stand in the Asia Cup, and only the third partnership
of over 200.
Jayasuriya and Sangakkara became the 18th opening pair to
score centuries in the same innings. Jayasuriya now has
five hundreds in the Asia Cup; Sangakkara is joint-second
with Shoaib Malik on three. All of Sangakkara's three have
come in this tournament, the best for a single edition.
Jayasuriya, though, lost hold of a record. With his ninth
five-wicket haul, Muttiah Muralitharan surged past Jayasuriya
to become the leading wicket-taker in the Asia Cup.
Mashrafe Mortaza suffered the brunt of Sri Lanka's onslaught.
He conceded 78 off his ten overs, the most he's given away
in an ODI.
His
eventual departure, after slamming 16 fours and a mere six
sixes, did stem the tide though, with the other batsmen
unable to support Sangakkara. Mahela Jayawardene eased to
20 before pulling a long hop from Kapali to midwicket and
neither Chamara, Kapugedera or Silva, could get going. Tillakaratne
Dilshan was run out by a direct hit from Raqibul, and when
Razzak finally sneaked one under Sangakkara's defence, Bangladesh
had managed a comeback of sorts. But thanks to their openers
becoming only the 18th pair to score centuries in the same
game, Sri Lanka were nearly out of sight by then.
Bangladesh
were notionally in the contest till the halfway stage of
their innings, with Nazimuddin and Raqibul playing some
fine strokes in the face of an imposing asking-rate. Nazimuddin
took his time to settle, but then launched into some delightful
cuts and drives. Ajantha Mendis, who had bamboozled the
Pakistanis, was thumped for a four and a six, and only a
miscommunication with Raqibul saw him run out when in sight
of a half-century.
By
then, he had already seen Tamim and Mohammad Ashraful, the
side's leading lights, depart. With Chaminda Vaas and Nuwan
Kulasekara giving nothing away early on, Tamim quickly became
restless, and a tame nibble at a Vaas delivery was easily
taken by Dilshan, deputising for Sangakkara behind the stumps.
Ashraful
came in and took three fours off a Vaas over, but then had
one of those brain-fades that he's become prone to. He was
in no sort of position to try and pull Thilan Thushara,
and the top-edge came down into Dilshan's hands.
But
with Raqibul starting in strokeful fashion and Nazimuddin
determined to tilt at windmills, the run-rate quickly soared,
with Thushara coming in for harsh treatment. Nazimuddin's
dismissal, halted the charge though, and after that it was
all about Murali.
Mushfiqur
edged one to slip and Kapali was trapped in front by a doosra.
Raqibul's brave innings was curtailed by another that went
the wrong way, and Razzaq cleaned up going for the sweep.
When Mortaza top-edged a sweep, he had five wickets for
the ninth time in ODIs. It may sometimes be a young man's
game, but it was the old hands that blew the candles out
on Bangladesh.
Dileep
Premachandran is an associate editor at Cricinfo
Courtesy - cricinfo
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