Sri Lanka 223 for 9 (Dilshan 43, Chandimal 43, Morkel 3-34) beat South Africa 104 for 5 (Herath 2-16) by 17 runs (D/L method)
A second, successive sub-standard performance with the bat saw South
Africa undo their significantly improved showing with the ball to go 2-0
down in the series. On a slow surface, batting was laboured, and Sri
Lanka's attack was able to defend with ease, the spinners getting the
opposition batsmen into a tangle, again.
South Africa's challenge was dealt a serious blow before it even began.
Hashim Amla, who missed the first match with a neck niggle but recovered
in time for this one, was injured in the field and could not open the
batting. Amla slipped in the 43rd over while trying to field a ball at
fine leg. He fell on his knee and was immediately taken to hospital for a
scan.
Having dropped Colin Ingram to make way for Amla, South Africa needed
another makeshift opener and pushed Robin Peterson up the order. He
became the first spinner to open both the batting and the bowling for
the country, having been given the first new ball earlier, but it was
not an occasion for celebration.
Peterson watched as his partner, Alviro Petersen was dropped off the
fourth ball of the innings but he had no such reprieve. He kept out one
Lasith Malinga yorker but was comprehensively beaten by the next, which
crashed into the stumps to see South Africa's opening stand broken in
the first over.
Petersen and JP Duminy seemed to settle, with both hitting boundaries
that showed their class, but they only had a 32-run stand to show for
it. Thisara Perera managed some superb movement and got Duminy to
feather an edge to Kumar Sangakkara.
Rangana Herath struck in his first over again, getting Petersen lbw
playing for turn to one that went straight on. Tillakaratne Dilshan
removed AB de Villiers on review when the South Africa captain missed a
sweep. When Faf du Plessis was caught behind in the next over to become
Herath's 50th ODI wicket, South Africa were 69 for 5 and defeat was
imminent.
With rain looming, David Miller and Ryan McLaren tried to keep up with
the Duckworth-Lewis target but they had fallen too far behind. Form in
the top order has been exposed as severely lacking by Sri Lanka's wily
attack. With none of Duminy, de Villiers or du Plessis posting a
half-century in their last five innings, South Africa's batting will
have to improve even more than their bowling did in this match.
Although the South Africa attack sent down 14 wides, they found their
lines quicker than they had on Saturday. Morne Morkel struck the first
blow when he had Upul Tharanga caught by Peterson at mid-wicket but
South Africa would have shuddered to see the in-form Sangakkara stride
out.
He immediately added stability with the first boundary of the innings, a
well-timed flick through the leg side off a wayward Chris Morris
delivery. Sangakkara continued to place the ball well even as Dilshan
grew frustrated but he was dismissed against the run of play, to a
spinner. Sangakkara was tempted by Aaron Phangiso's persistent flight
and could not clear extra cover.
Dilshan had to take on the role of anchor and played an
uncharacteristically watchful knock. For 36 deliveries after Sangakkara
departed, Dilshan and Mahela Jayawardene could not find the boundary and
had to content themselves with nudging for singles.
In their 40-run stand, Jayawardene had one shot in anger, a back-foot
punch through point, before missing a reverse-sweep and being cleaned up
by Peterson.
Dilshan's vigil ended soon after. He got a thick edge off Morkel and de
Villiers took a sharp, one-handed catch to his right to send the last of
Sri Lanka's senior batsmen on his way. It was up to the young captain,
Dinesh Chandimal, to steady Sri Lanka.
He survived a rain interval and the loss of both Jehan Mubarak and
Perera but not du Plessis' instincts. Chandimal was out to a superb
catch but his 43 proved crucial to helping Sri Lanka post a competitive
score on a surface where batting became more difficult, and he can now
look forward to sealing the series on Friday.
0 comments:
Post a Comment