Sri Lanka chased down 280 with four balls to spare to clinch a confidence-boosting three-wicket win over Australia in their one-day international (ODI) match in Hobart yesterday and take top spot in the tri-series tournament.
Fired by half-centuries from captain and man-of-the-match Mahela Jayawardene and Dinesh Chandimal, the tourists were ushered to victory by a brilliant cameo from allrounder Thisara Perera, who blasted an unbeaten 21 off 11 balls in the final few overs.
Perera smacked a six and a four in consecutive balls to leave his team needing only three runs from the final over and paceman Nuwan Kulasekara bashed a boundary through the covers to bring up the winning runs.
Photo: Reuters
The victory continued Sri Lanka’s stunning turnaround in the series, which also includes India, after they went winless from their first three matches.
Australia captain Michael Clarke won the toss and elected to bat in glorious sunshine on a flat pitch at Bellerive Oval. He enjoyed a 154-run stand with Peter Forrest after openers Matt Wade and Dave Warner both fell cheaply.
Forrest, promoted to three after former skipper Ricky Ponting was dropped from the side earlier this week, marked his fourth one-day match with a glittering 104.
The 26-year-old New South Welshman blasted two sixes and 10 boundaries in his 138-ball knock, before his post-century celebrations ended quickly at the hands of Angelo Mathews.
Deceived by a slower ball, Forrest attempted to slog over the covers, but succeeded only in skying a simple catch to Farveez Maharoof.
Mathews also removed Clarke for 72 two overs prior to Forrest’s dismissal, the Australia captain slogging over midwicket to Thisara Perera, who took a brilliant catch just above the grass after sprinting from the boundary.
Mike and Dave Hussey combined for a quickfire 42-run stand, but paceman Lasith Malinga took the wind from Australia’s sails when he bowled the former for 21 with a sizzling yorker.
Allrounder Dan Christian was stumped for six after charging down the wicket to meet spinner Rangana Herath, and Australia managed only 30 runs from their last five overs to give the tourists hope of reeling in the total.
Sparked by a belligerent Jayawardene, Sri Lanka marched to 51 in eight overs before Tillakaratne Dilshan was out for three, pulling a Ben Hilfenhaus delivery straight to Forrest at deep square-leg.
The Sri Lankan captain marched on with a 45-run stand with wicketkeeper Kumar Sangakkara, who fell for 22, poking an edge to Warner at backward point off an innocuous delivery from Christian.
Jayawardene added another 49 with Dinesh Chandimal before being stumped, deceived by a venomous, turning ball from spinner Xavier Doherty.
Chandimal’s 80 drove Sri Lanka to 243-5 before he was trapped LBW by paceman Ryan Harris, who caught Maharoof for five off the bowling of Ben Hilfenhaus in the following over.
Mathews was out for 24, slogging a rash shot straight to Dave Warner in the deep to give the hosts their seventh wicket and briefly raise their hope of stopping the Sri Lankan charge.
However, with 14 runs needed from the last nine balls, Perera plundered two short balls from Christian for 10 runs to propel the tourists to victory.
PAKISTAN V ENGLAND
REUTERS
Umar Gul and Saeed Ajmal bowled superbly at the death to inspire Pakistan to an eight-run victory over England in the first Twenty20 international in Dubai on Thursday.
World champions England looked to be cruising to a target of 145, following a quickfire 33 from the in-form Kevin Pietersen and Ravi Bopara’s 39, but man-of-the-match Gul dismissed Jos Buttler and Samit Patel with successive deliveries in the 18th over to give Pakistan hope.
Ajmal then bowled a brilliant 19th over of the innings, conceding just four runs, to put Pakistan on the brink of victory with England needing 18 off the last six balls.
Jonny Bairstow and Graeme Swann were unable find the boundary off Junaid Khan’s final over and managed just nine runs.
Pakistan, beaten 4-0 in the 50-over one-day international (ODI) series, would clinch the three-match Twenty20 series with victory in the second game in Dubai today.
England won the toss, but Pakistan raced to 36 runs in the first three overs before losing wickets at regular intervals as the scoring rate slowed.
Captain Misbah-ul-Haq struck a huge six in his unbeaten 26 off 26 balls and Shoaib Malik made 39, but Swann completed figures of three for 13 from four miserly overs to restrict Pakistan to 144 for six.
Pietersen, confident following consecutive centuries in the ODI series, struck 13 runs off the first four balls of the England innings and raced to 33 off 21 deliveries, before he was brilliantly caught on the leg-side boundary by Asad Shafiq trying to hit his second six.
Bopara made a fluent 39 to put England in control of their chase, but Gul returned to dismiss him, Buttler and Patel.
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