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Sunday 9 June 2013

Champions Trophy Group A Match 4 SL v NZ

New Zealand 139 for 9 (N McCullum 32*, Malinga 4-34) beat Sri Lanka 138 (Sangakkara 68, McClenaghan 4-43, Mills 2-14) by 1 wicket


Lasith Malinga took the 22 yards out of the equation in low-scoring thriller, but New Zealand survived him to register their first win over Sri Lanka in four years. The pitch has hardly ever mattered less. It was flat, the sun was out, the ball was not swinging, but Malinga's dipping slower full tosses had New Zealand batsmen hopping and hoping in what was expected to be an afternoon stroll. Nathan McCullum, first, and then Tim Southee batted with just the maturity New Zealand desperately needed to see them through with one wicket in hand.

The chase swung dramatically. From coasting at 48 for 1 New Zealand stumbled to 49 for 4. From 70 for 4 they fell to 80 for 6, but then, crucially, they were allowed to get away with a relatively quieter phase when Malinga was taken off and brought back only after the brothers McCullum had taken off 31 off the requirement. Malinga came back and seemed like he could strike with every ball, but Sri Lanka will be left asking themselves - especially because Malinga brought them so close - if they had kept Malinga's four overs back for too long.

DRS, or the way it was used by the sides, made its presence felt too. Kane Williamson wasted New Zealand's review by asking for a replay when he was caught dead plumb by a thigh-high dipping full toss. Daniel Vettori later copped a rough one when he had hit another similar full toss into his pad. Sri Lanka had exhausted their early in the innings, and had to do with two not-outs towards the end that they could have got overturned on replay.

Amid loud unending appeals almost every ball, it was supreme drama with the balls remaining taken out of the equation: New Zealand still won with 13.3 overs to spare and took a bigger net-run-rate boost than England did in their facile win over Australia.
 
Going by how they went either side of the lunch break - their chase began early because they had bowled Sri Lanka out in 2 hours and 55 minutes - New Zealand should have finished it much earlier. It was all going swimmingly for them until Malinga got Williamson in the eighth over. In the next couple of overs, Rangana Herath and Shaminda Eranga - preferred to Sachithra Senanayake and Nuwan Kulasekara - struck. Herath trapped Ross Taylor with one that went on with the arm, and Eranga got one to bounce from short of a length outside off, taking the edge from Martin Guptill, who had raced away to 25 from 24.
 
Still it should have been easy for New Zealand, but they fumbled further to spin. Tillakaratne Dilshan and Herath almost cut out all singles, and Dilshan got James Franklin with the right-arm spinner's version of the earlier Taylor dismissal. Sri Lanka were now sensing room for a miracle here, and brought Malinga back for his sixth over. On cue he struck, but Vettori could not get the obvious howler overturned because his team-mate had earlier challenged a call he was merely not sure about.
 
Strangely, though, Malinga was taken off immediately after he took Vettori's wicket. When he was brought back, New Zealand had reached 111 for 6, needing only a further 28.
 
Both Brendon McCullum and Nathan McCullum had been allowed to take the singles, and they did so. The period did involve a thin edge from N McCullum in the 28th over when the score read 100, but only the keeper heard it. Even the bowler Eranga hardly appealed. Did the excessive appealing leading up to that - Sri Lanka had been spoken to at the end of the 21st over - have any part to play in that decision? We will never know.
 
It is credit to Malinga's genius, though, that he came back and immediately took B McCullum out with another one of his loopy, alarmingly dipping full tosses. B McCullum played all across it, and the ball reached the off stump on a half-volley. New Zealand now needed 24 runs with three wickets in hand. Quite clearly, it was Malinga v New Zealand, and you wonder if it would have been different if it had been 44 runs to play with, and not 24.
 
Malinga, however, kept producing the magic. In his next over, he took out the other McCullum, who had wizened up to the slower ball, with a quick inswinging yorker. New Zealand still had 17 to get, and Malinga had 2.4 overs to go. The next four balls were a slower yorker, a quick yorker, a slower length ball, and another slower yorker, all on target. This was insanely good bowling, and Tim Southee and Kyle Mills somehow survived. As they did the next over, from Herath.
 
Malinga now had 12 balls to bowl, and 11 runs to defend. He began the 34th over with a quick inswinging length ball, which was only clipping leg, and the umpire Bruce Oxenford ruled not out. He had ruled N McCullum out on a similar delivery, and under DRS both decisions stand. However, the next one would have been changed by DRS. It hit Southee on the toe plumb in front, went to the third-man boundary for four, but Tucker called it runs. It was a huge moment in the game. Not only did New Zealand not lose Southee, the target was now down to eight.



Much chatter went on. The players had to be separated at the end of the over. Southee was not losing his cool, though. The same couldn't be said of Mills. Southee dug one out towards mid-on in the next over, and took the fielder on.
 
Thisara Perera missed the stumps at the non-striker's end narrowly, but he was lucky the ball went to hit the other set of stumps. Mills, though, was not desperate to make it, and was caught short. New Zealand still needed five, and Malinga had one over to go.
For once, Malinga made a mistake. He began his final over with an attempted yorker that went down the leg side. Southee cautiously played out the rest of the over. Don't bother about whether the No. 11 will be on strike for the next over. Just see Malinga off.
 
Sri Lanka now made another interesting choice. Dilshan was given the ball. You could see why. Mitchell McClenaghan, a left-hand batsman, was on strike. He could get the lbw with the straighter one, or a bat-pad catch. But forget short leg for the inside edge, there was no man catching. And New Zealand needed only four. They were granted two easy singles, followed by a wide down the leg side, which also went for a bye. McLenaghan was nearly run out taking the second because they were not sure of the wide, but the end finally was a little insipid.
 
There was nothing insipid about New Zealand's effort in the field. Sri Lanka had gone with just three strike bowlers, but New Zealand replaced the injured allrounder, Gran Elliot, with a bowler, Vettori. You can imagine a few captains sitting back and allowing easy singles once the early wickets were taken, but there were no soft partnerships here. If you wanted to score runs, you either played exceptional shots or took risks. The risks brought New Zealand timely wickets.
 
It all began when B McCullum went parallel to the ground at second slip to send back Kusal Perera with the first ball of the match. All other New Zealand signs were there. Mills struck his usual early blows, Vettori - the first spinner to bowl inside the mandatory Powerplay in this tournament - took a wicket in his first ODI over since the 2011 World Cup, and McClenaghan kept cutting partnerships short. McCullum chipped in too, there was a run-out, and Sri Lanka were bowled out in the 38th over.
 
Kumar Sangakkara was one of three batsmen to reach double figures, but the only one to go past 20. He looked a cut above every other batsman on the day, but looking for quick runs he sliced an N McCullum offbreak to backward point. Sangakkara knew knocking around wouldn't help, and had been taking risks for a while now. This one didn't come off, though. As didn't the move to bowl Dilshan without wicket-taking intent in what proved to be the final over of the match.

25 overs New Zealand 94 for 6 (B McCullum 12*, N McCullum 12*, Malinga 2-22) need another 45 to beat Sri Lanka 138 (Sangakkara 68, McClenaghan 4-43, Mills 2-14)

Sri Lanka fought hard in the defence of the paltry 138 they mustered. Lasith Malinga took out two New Zealand batsmen with dipping full tosses, Shaminda Eranga got two with extra bounce, and the spinners put a leash on the New Zealand lower middle order. New Zealand were left ruing the wasted review by Kane Williamson, who was out to a thigh-high full toss from Malinga. Daniel Vettori later got a rough lbw call when he had hit the other Malinga full toss onto his toe. That wicket made it 80 for 6, after which the brothers McCullum added an unbeaten 14 until the 25th over.


New Zealand's chase began before the lunch break, and in those six overs they almost cruised to 26 for 1. It was all going swimmingly for them until Malinga made it 48 for 2 with Williamson's wicket. In the next couple of overs, Rangana Herath and Eranga struck. Herath reprised the Mahela Jayawardene dismissal, trapping Ross Taylor lbw. Eranga got one to bounce from short of a length outside off, taking the edge from Martin Guptill, who had raced away to 25 from 24.

 
Still it should have been a walk for New Zealand, but they fumbled further to spin.
 
Tillakaratne Dilshand and Herath almost cut out all singles, and Dilshan got James Franklin with one that went on with the arm. By now Sri Lanka were appealing almost every ball, and they had lost their review already. However, it was the other team that suffered from the loss of the review.
 
Strangely, though, Malinga was taken off immediately after he took Vettori's wicket, and he still had four overs left with 44 runs to play with.

SL 138 (37.5 ovs)

Innings Sri Lanka 138 (Sangakkara 68, McClenaghan 4-43, Mills 2-14) v New Zealand

New Zealand last beat Sri Lanka four years ago, in the last Champions Trophy. You see them play the way they have done, and wonder why. This was a typical New Zealand show, restricting Sri Lanka to just 138.

All the New Zealand signs were there. Brendon McCullum took a screamer first ball, Kyle Mills struck his usual early blows, Daniel Vettori took a wicket in his first ODI over since the 2011 World Cup, and Mithcell McClenaghan kept cutting partnerships short, Nathan McCullum chipped in too, there was a run-out, and Sri Lanka were bowled out in the 38th over.
 
McClenaghan took four wickets, Mills and N McCullum two. Kumar Sangakkara was one of the three batsmen to reach double figures, but the only one to go past 20. The most striking part of this innings was that this was not an unplayable pitch by any stretch of imagination. The ball did a little bit, but it was mostly disciplined aggressive bowling that Sri Lanka folded against.
 
It all began with B McCullum going parallel to the ground at second slip. It was the first ball of the match, many could have been forgiven for rubbing their eyes. Mills bowled short of a length, got slight seam away from Kusal Perera, who poked at it in Sanath Jayasuriya fashion, but it was flying wide of the slips.
 
Not on B McCullum's watch, though. He went to this left, both feet off the ground, like a football goalkeeper, and took both his hands behind it. Sri Lanka had barely recovered from that when McClenaghan got one - the rare delivery - to swing back in, bursting through the bat-pad gap of Tillakaratne Dilshan and splitting the off bail into two.
 
B McCullum made an interesting change then. For the first time in this Champions Trophy, we had a spinner bowling inside the mandatory Powerplay. And it was a man who had last bowled in and ODI more than two years ago. Vettori's last ODI wicket was an lbw of Mahela Jayawardene. Here, too, he bowled to Jayawardene.
 
 The first ball was a typical slider, which took the inside edge. Two balls later, he turned one big. That left Jayawardene bemused. The knockout punch came next ball. Vettori bowled the expected arm ball. Jayawardene played for the turn, was beaten on the inside edge, and caught dead plumb.
 
In the next over, Mills got one to straighten outside off, and Dinesh Chandimal edged it through to Luke Ronchi.
 
Sangakkara and Angelo Mathews tried to recover with a 31-run stand, but Mathews moved too far across to a McClenaghan delivery, and had his leg stump go for a walk. In the following overs, B McCullum had as many as seven fielders inside the circle at times. One of them fielded and threw back to bowler Kane Williamson to find Sangakkara had sold Lahiru Thirimanne who was sold down the river to make it 82 for 6.
 
A streak 36-run partnership between Sangakkara and Thisara Perera ended just before Sri Lanka took the Powerplay. Perera had been dropped, had had an edge clear the man at point, but this time he lobbed McClenaghan to Vettori running back from mid-on. During the Powerplay, looking for quick runs, Sangakkara sliced an N McCullum offbreak to backward point. It was just the pressure of the falling wickets and the running out of the overs.
 
Sangakkara knew knocking around wouldn't help and had been taking risks for a while now. This one didn't come off.
 
McClenaghan finished off the innings by going round the stumps and drawing a leading edge from Lasith Malinga. That left New Zealand with 25 minutes to bat before lunch would be taken.

Toss: Sri Lanka won the toss & will bat teams below

Sri Lanka 1 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 2 Kusal Perera, 3 Mahela Jayawardene, 4 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 5 Dinesh Chandimal, 6 Angelo Mathews (capt.), 7 Lahiru Thirimanne, 8 Thisara Perera, 9 Rangana Herath, 10 Shaminda Eranga, 11 Lasith Malinga

New Zealand 1 Luke Ronchi (wk), 2 Martin Guptill, 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Ross Taylor, 5 James Franklin, 6 Brendon McCullum (capt.), 7 Nathan McCullum, 8 Daniel Vettori, 9 Tim Southee, 10 Kyle Mills, 11 Mitchell McClenaghan

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