India
v Sri Lanka, Asia Cup final, Karachi
Sidharth Monga in Karachi
July 6, 2008
A tournament deserves the final it gets, it is said sometimes.
On the surface, the Asia Cup, with its long-drawn format
featuring as many minnows as regular teams, got the final
it deserved: another one-sided contest. But scratch the
surface and you find a match that ebbed and flowed, one
with three individual performances of sheer genius which
the tournament badly needed.
"After
the game it looked one-sided," Mahela Jayawardene said.
"Going into the game it wasn't one-sided at all."
India
appeared to have run away with both bat and ball at the
start but Sri Lanka fought back. Ishant Sharma took quick
wickets to reduce Sri Lanka to 67 for 4 and Virender Sehwag's
opening salvo tore their new-ball attack apart. However,
while India's bowlers recovered from Sanath Jayasuriya's
onslaught to restrict Sri Lanka to 273 their batsmen were
unable to decode Ajantha Mendis and the run-chase never
recovered from his mesmerising opening spell.
"Sanath
took his chances even when they were four down," Mahendra
Singh Dhoni said. "They took chances because they had
in their minds that we were capable of chasing 300. It was
a brilliant innings." Jayawardene said that although
Mendis deservedly stole the glory, it was Jayasuriya's knock
that kept them in the final.
Virender
Sehwag's innings, a 36-ball 60 that would in most circumstances
be enough to chase of 274, threatened to eclipse Jayasuriya
before it was cut short. He flicked, glanced, pulled, drove
straight and through covers, late-cut, and kept everyone
rapt.
"I
had no option at that time [but to introduce Mendis in the
ninth over]," said Jayawardene. "Virender was
batting very well, and we needed to take a wicket. I knew
the ball would be too new for Murali [Muttiah Muralitharan].
We just took a gamble."
The
contest had a tantalizing build-up. Sri Lanka had rested
Mendis in their Super Four match against India, which, if
they had won, would have virtually knocked India out of
the competition. Instead they chose to rest Mendis, perhaps
in order to spring a surprise in the final. It was only
his eighth ODI and the challenge facing Mendis was formidable:
he had to try and end Sehwag's aggression during the first
Powerplay in a tournament final.
Perhaps
out of over-confidence or merely because he treats spin
with disdain, Sehwag tried to step out to Mendis' first
ball but had to defend. He tried to do it again the very
next delivery but this time Mendis beat him in flight and
cut the leg break past the bat, leaving Kumar Sangakkara
with an easy stumping.
In
the overs to come, as if every wicket that fell to Mendis'
guile enhanced his mystery in the Indian dressing-room,
the batsmen played a succession of injudicious shots. Mendis'
simplicity prevailed over all of them. He stuck to an immaculate
in-between length, which made the batsman uncomfortable
playing on either on the front or back foot. His stock delivery
remained the straighter one, and the Indian batsmen reacted
like rats to the Pied Piper.
Dhoni,
whose innings stood out for its sensible approach, was mesmerised
even at the press-conference. For every question demanding
explanations for the defeat, he the same answer: Mendis.
"Most
of our batsmen couldn't pick him," Dhoni said. "We
had never played him before. We had only seen videos and
you can visualise and all, but he was difficult to pick
out there in the middle. We never had any real reply against
him."
Why
did they make the defensive move of playing an extra batsman?
"The main reason to add one batsman was Mendis,"
Dhoni said. "Our bowlers did well to restrict them
to 273, and Mendis bowled well and that was the reason we
lost.
"It
was like you were playing something else, and the ball was
something else. I won't really blame the batsman, we couldn't
pick the deliveries. If you see our bowling, it was the
best bowling line-up we could offer when we wanted one more
extra batsman in the side. They tried their best and we
could have got 274 but for the Mendis factor."
Sidharth
Monga is a staff writer at Cricinfo
Courtesy - cricinfo
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