SRI LANKA BEAT ZIMBABWE FOR 1ST WIN IN TRI-SERIES IN BANGLADESH
Zimbabwe batsman Chamunorwa Chibhabha walks back after being dismissed photo -AFP |
Sri Lanka 202 for 5 (Kusal
Perera 49, Thisara 39*, Muzarabani 3-52) Zimbabwe 198 (Taylor 58, Thisara
4-33, Pradeep 3-28) .
Thisara Perera
blasted out Zimbabwe's top order, Nuwan Pradeep cleaned out the tail, and
Dinesh Chandimal shepherded home a stilted chase, with five wickets and 31
balls to spare. This first victory of 2018 was that very rare Sri Lanka
phenomenon - an occasion in which the team's supposed senior players played in
a manner befitting their station. Their efforts mean all three sides stay alive
in the tournament, with two matches to play before the final.
For Zimbabwe,
Brendan Taylor stitched together a measured 58 and seam bowler Blessing
Muzarabani shot out three top-order batsmen in the middle overs, but these were
lone performances. The next-highest score in Zimbabwe's innings was Graeme
Cremer's 34, while lower-order wickets were falling around him. The game's
tone, in effect, was set down in the first 17 overs, inside of which Zimbabwe
slipped to 73 for 4.
It was Thisara who
was responsible for those early dismissals. Now clearly in the midst of one of
his hot streaks, he has rediscovered the bowling weapon that was responsible
for his early success: the short ball. With it, he had Hamilton Masakadza
miscuing a pull to midwicket, Solomin Mire top-edging a hook to the keeper, and
later, Taylor himself caught at fine leg thanks to another mis-hit hook. Only
the dismissal of Craig Ervine - caught at slip - was the result of a fuller
delivery. Thisara's figures of 4 for 33 were his best since 2012. So often a confidence
player, Thisara's batting was also important to the victory. He hit 39 not out
off 26 balls, and sealed the game with a thumping six into the empty stands
beyond deep midwicket.
Though no other
bowlers were as penetrative as Thisara, the Sri Lanka attack, nevertheless did
hunt together to produce a performance of rare quality. That Zimbabwe were
bowled out in 44 overs was down to the attack's discipline, almost all the way
through the innings. The new-ball operators largely kept to good lines. The
spinners were swept efficiently again, but thanks to Thisara's early wickets,
were not overwhelmed by the match situation. In fact, Lakshan Sandakan and
Akila Dananjaya were proficient in tandem - the latter focusing on containment,
while the former went hunting for wickets. Pradeep's finishing blows came
quickly and suddenly, the opposition slipping from 191 for 7 to 198 all out, as
reverse-swinging deliveries sped through lower-order defences.
Taylor's had been a
rebuilding innings, and the match situation never really allowed him to break
into a high gear. All but seven of his runs came on the legside, with Sri
Lanka's bowlers often targeting the stumps. He appeared comfortable at the
crease, especially during a 66-run association with Malcolm Waller, but perhaps
he was hampered by a stiff back. Taylor had treatment during his innings, but
did not take the field, handing over wicketkeeping duties to sub-fielder Ryan
Murray.
There was hope for
Zimbabwe when Upul Tharanga played on to a Tendai Chatara delivery in the 10th
over, but Kusal Mendis and Kusal Perera strung together a 70-run stand. And
despite three quick wickets later on, Sri Lanka seemed to have the measure of
the chase. Kusal Perera was the busier player, finding regular singles square
of the wicket, and venturing the game's first six in the 11th over, over long
off. Mendis showed glimpses of form, without ever really announcing a return to
it. With just under 100 runs to get, Muzarabani had them both dismissed in
quick succession to spark a minor stutter. Sri Lanka would go 52 balls without
a boundary, but so long as Chandimal was at the crease, there was no cause for panic.
He inched Sri Lanka close, before Thisara's blows lurched the side to the
target.
Zimbabwe will regard
the match as a missed opportunity, for a total of 250 might have been enough to
crack this brittle Sri Lanka batting line-up. They would have progressed to the
final had they won, but now, not even victory against Bangladesh - the form
team of the tournament so far - will see them claim a place in the final for
certain. Where on Wednesday, the contributions of Zimbabwe's spinners were
vital to taking Sri Lanka down, neither Sikandar Raza nor Cremer could make a
breakthrough in this match.
SOURCE
: ESPNCricinfo
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