Sri Lanka regained their two-match advantage in the one-day series
although were pushed closer that appeared likely for most of the chase
before getting home with two balls to spare. The pursuit was controlled,
for the most part, by Kumar Sangakkara's 86 but it needed another
steely contribution from Angelo Mathews to ensure against any late
slips.
Nothing seemed more certain than Sangakkara would seal victory with his
20th ODI hundred, but on 86 he found deep cover from a short delivery by
Chris Jordan and could barely come to terms with the need to walk off.
So instead it was Mathews and Lahiru Thirimanne who crossed the winning
line with a stand of 53, never flinching when the asking rate briefly
went above seven although Mathews was dropped at third man by Alex Hales
with 25 needed. Given that England managed to squeeze the chase into
the final over, they will rue the 12 wides which continued a theme from
the series.
England now need to win the three remaining games, two in Pallekele and
one more back at the Premadasa, if they are to take the series although
with an eye to the future there were a couple of performances that meant
it was not a completely forlorn day for them.
James Taylor, playing just his third ODI and first against anyone other
than Ireland, top-scored with well-crafted 90 before cramp got the
better of him and Eoin Morgan, the stand-in captain for the day, made
his first ODI fifty since January with 62 off 47 balls as the rest of
England's middle and lower order, losing 7 for 94, frittered away
earlier good work.
The early new-ball bowling from Steven Finn and Chris Woakes was
inconsistent and meant England did not build pressure, although they
were perked up when Tillakaratne Dilshan carved into the off side. With
two left handers now at the crease, Moeen Ali was brought straight into
the attack and kept a lid on the scoring while also enticing Kusal
Perera to edge to slip.
However, with each ball that gripped for Moeen it will have reinforced
the belief that the balance of England's attack was wrong without the
additional offspin of James Tredwell. Instead, they preferred to take
another look at Ben Stokes whose two overs went for 21, after being the
seventh bowler used, to take his series tally to none for 85 from eight
overs.
From 69 for 2, and a potential opening for England, Sangakkara and
Jayawardene added 96 with effortless accumulation, often toying with
Morgan's attempts to cut off their scoring areas. One minute they would
open the face to find space in the off side, and the next dinking into
the leg side.
|
|||
The signs of growing desperation were clear when England used their
review against Jayawardene when he was 27, but discovered that even Joe
Root was turning the ball too far. Given the ease with which Sri Lanka
were batting, it was a surprise when Jayawardene chopped against Jordan,
the pick of England's quicks. But Sangakkara just continued to cruise,
the most adventurous shot he played an uppercut over the keeper against
Woakes who, a short time earlier, had needed some treatment on a knee
problem. Then Sangakkara's aberration left the majority in the ground
stunned.
There was a sense of relief at the toss when it was confirmed that
Taylor would play. If he had not been given his chance in the enforced
absence of Alastair Cook because of a one-match suspension he would have
been well within his rights to want to get on the next flight home.
Still, it is one thing getting the chance and another to take it. He was
at the crease early, which could well have played to his advantage as
he did not have much time to let the nerves build, after Alex Hales
edged Dhammika Prasad's first legitimate delivery to slip.
There were some uncertain moments early in his innings and the initial
stages were hard work as he reached 11 off 29 deliveries before he
cashed in on Thisara Perera's first over. A bottom-handed flick from
outside off over deep midwicket for six was the sort of stroke that
peppered county boundaries during last season.
By the time Taylor found the boundary, he had lost Moeen, charging down
the pitch at Dilshan, meaning the innings went into a rebuilding pattern
as he was joined by Root. Boundaries were few and far between, and
Taylor saved himself by using a review when he was given lbw to Jeevan
Mendis on 35, only for there to be a clear bottom edge.
The scoring rate was given a jolt by consecutive sixes, Taylor driving
Ajantha Mendis over long-off and Root following by clearing deep
midwicket off Jeevan. The partnership ended on 93, England's best of the
series, when Root's penchant for late-cutting the spinners off his
stumps brought his downfall against Rangana Herath.
Taylor continued to punctuate his sprinting between the wickets with the
occasional boundary, but the conditions were starting to take their
toll and he twice needed lengthy treatment from the physio who was
focussing on his left forearm. Later the cramp appeared to be spreading
to his legs, and four balls after the second visit from the physio
Taylor tried to clear the off side against Ajantha Mendis but could not
beat the infield.
As so often, the batting Powerplay - taken one over before it had to be -
was not England's friend. Five deliveries after Taylor departed to the
relative cool of the dressing room, Ravi Bopara missed a quicker ball
from Dilshan.
Buttler could not help set a target in the same way he had chased one
down a few days ago as he picked out long-on with seven overs remaining.
Stokes' international batting woes continued when he found deep
square-leg, and with Morgan starting to find his stride the shot
selection of Woakes and Jordan left something to be desired.
Mathews entrusted his spinners with the final 21 overs of the innings:
for 20 of those overs there was barely any reason to question that
decision as Herath returned a miserly 3 for 36 and Ajantha Mendis
claimed 3 for 56. However, the first two balls of the last over - bowled
by Dilshan - were slotted for six by Morgan and the over ended up
costing 18. In the end it did not matter and the tricky decisions remain
England's, including the pressing question of who misses out for the
returning Cook in Pallekelle.
No comments:
Post a Comment