Karien
Jonckheere (Sportz Interactive)
A
101-run partnership between Younus Khan and Shoaib Malik and some
inspired bowling from Shahid Afridi proved to be the key to Pakistan’s
first victory of the super eight stage, by 33 runs, at the ICC
World Twenty20 in Jo’burg on Monday night as for the first
time in the tournament, Sri Lanka did not look quite as composed
as usual.
Having been sent in to bat after Sri Lanka won the toss, Pakistan
did not have the greatest of starts, losing three wickets with
33 runs on the board by the end of the sixth over. But Khan and
Malik set to work steadying the ship with some glorious batting.
Sri Lankan veteran Sanath Jayasuriya was at the receiving end
of much of this, having 64 runs blasted from his four overs with
no wickets for consolation.
The devastating duo finally both fell to Lasith Malinga (both
caught by TM Dilshan), Khan for 57 (off 36 balls) and Malik for
57 (off 45) with Pakistan eventually finishing their innings on
189-6.
Dilhara Fernando was by far the stand-out bowler for Sri Lanka,
conceding just 17 runs from his four overs and taking the wickets
of both Salman Butt and Mohammad Hafeez. Despite his heroics,
however, 190 was always going to be a challenging target for victory.
And it was a nervous start for the Sri Lankans who had looked
completely composed in this tournament until this point. But at
5-2 at the beginning of the second over they had cause for concern.
Upul Tharanga was the first to go (caught by Umar Gul off Mohammad
Asif without scoring) and Jayasuriya soon followed after being
bowled by Sohail Tanvir for five.
The early wickets seemed to provide the fire for Pakistan who
kept the pressure on. While captain Mahela Jayawardena and Chamara
Silva looked like they would be the ones to save the day for the
Sri Lankans, putting together a partnership of 50 off 31 balls
(after Kumar Sangakkara went for 18 after a ball from Asif dribbled
on to his stumps), the comeback wasn’t to last and the wickets
kept tumbling. Afridi dismissed both Jayawardena and Silva, for
28 and 38 respectively and while Dilshan gallantly tried to hang
on, scoring 38 off 28, he couldn’t keep up with the soaring
required run-rate, as the Sri Lankans eventually needed 60 off
the final two overs for victory.
After losing Dilshan to Hafeez (caught by Khan), that was reduced
to 39 off the final over, but in the absence of a Herschelle Gibbs-esque
performance and the help of a few no-balls, that was never going
to happen and the Sri Lankans lost by 33 runs.
Pakistan: Salman Butt, Mohammad Hafeez, Imran Nazir, Younus Khan,
Shoaib Malik (capt), Shahid Afridi, Misbah-ul-Haq, Kamran Akmal
(wk), Umar Gul, Sohail Tanvir, Mohammad Asif.
Sri Lanka: Upul Tharanga, Sanath Jayasuriya, Kumar Sangakkara
(wk), Mahela Jayawardena (capt), Chamara Silva, Jehan Mubarak,
Tillakaratne Dilshan, Kaushal Lokuarachchi, Chaminda Vaas, Lasith
Malinga, Randi Dilhara Fernando.
Officials
Chris Broad (match referee)
Nigel Llong and Daryl Harper (umpires)
Mark Benson (third)
Karl Hurter (fourth)
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