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From the publishers of THE HINDU VOL. 25 :: NO. 28 :: Jul. 13 - 19, 2002 |
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CRICKET/NATWEST TROPHY
A second win for IndiaG.VISWANATH
N. SRIDHARAN INDIA has experienced the good and the bad of The Oval. In 1971 Bhagwat Chandrasekhar skittled out Ray Illingworth's England and won the Test match for Ajit Wadekar and India. Years later in 1979 Sunil Gavaskar made 221 in a Test that was described by Ted Dexter and Colin Cowdrey 'as the best they had seen'. And in 1986 India beat England in a one-day international. So far so good. The other side is that India has also been beaten twice by England. And also once each by Australia and West Indies at The Oval, both in World Cup matches. One match against England was abandoned because of rain. There was hope and apprehension for the Indians, one would think so, when they travelled to The Oval this time. But do teams really care about past records? Generally teams take The Oval for granted as a good track for batting. They were reminded of it recently, when Surrey and Glamorgan made 867 runs in Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy one-day tournament on June 19. Confirmation was available the moment Sri Lanka's skipper Sanath Jayasuriya began to fire shots as if he was manoeuvring a battle tank. The first seven overs from Zaheer Khan and Ashish Nehra saw Sri Lanka advancing at a run a ball, Nehra conceding very little though. The Indian seamers hit back through Ajit Agarkar whose opening spell of seven overs and three wickets resulted in Mahela Jayawardene (62, 105b, 4x4s) and Sri Lanka playing out the 50 overs so as to set a decent target. The game was dull and drab what with the cloud cover and moisture in the pitch helping the seamers to dictate terms to the batsmen.
N. SRIDHARAN For the second time Khan did not have a good start. But he came back to take three wickets, including the important one of Marvan Atapattu, bowled of the inside edge of his bat. Khan also dismissed Jayawardene, the perpendicular position of the bat at the point of contact with the ball resulting in a catch spooned to the bowler. Khan was happy to end with figures of three for 48 from ten overs. It was a day when even Sourav Ganguly bowled ten impressive overs. In conditions like the one that prevailed at The Oval Ganguly can prove to be a handy bowler as he once did at Toronto and grabbed five wickets to win the Man of the Match award. The seamers took all the eight wickets as Sri Lanka struggled to cross 200 runs. Having opted to bat first it was a poor score, but then Jayasuriya would not have imagined that the white appearance of the pitch would turn out to be a great ally of the seamers. There was mean bounce the seamers were able to extract and they also got sideways movement. This was enough to keep the batsmen cautious and circumspect. The Sri Lankan seamers - the experienced ones in Chaminda Vaas and Nuwan Zoysa - also had a good time. The contest was gripping all the way as Vaas removed the Indian openers, Ganguly and Virender Sehwag. The 71-run stand for the third wicket between Sachin Tendulkar (49, 70 balls, 1x6, 3x4) and Dinesh Mongia did not guarantee a victory for India. The Indians enjoyed the edge because they had a small target to chase which they could have achieved by placing their shots between gaps for singles and twos. Even so, Mohammad Kaif (38 not out, 44 balls, 4 x 4) challenged the Sri Lankan bowlers when some one like Yuveraj ( 31, 44 balls, 3 x 4) had opted for caution than an open show of flair. The dismissal of Tendulkar, a beautiful over the wicket delivered by Nuwan Zoysa that took the edge of his bat, must have raised hopes for the Sri Lankans. Tendulkar left the scene after umpire Dave Orchard shook his head to confirm that he was indeed caught at the wicket by Kaluwitharana. When Tendulkar departed India still needed a lot of runs, but Yuveraj and Kaif forged a nice partnership that surprised the Sri Lankans. "I have been hooking well in recent times. That's why I was playing that shot," said Kaif whose partnership for the sixth wicket with Yuveraj clinched the second match. It would not be out of place to say that the Indian cricketers are enjoying every bit of the English summer. The Indians proved to be a hit winning back to back matches.
N. SRIDHARAN The four-wicket win against Sri Lanka was extremely creditable because there was very little time to recoup after an energy sapping match against England at Lord's. Contests between India and Sri Lanka on English soil have been very few. In fact the two teams have clashed against each other only in World Cup matches, the first time in 1979 and the next, twenty years later. It is not often that a country gets a chance to play another in a neutral country. Sharjah is an exception. Three summers ago India had batted out Sri Lanka from the World Cup match at Taunton. Then Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid had collared a strong Sri Lankan bowling that had Muttiah Muralitharan in its line up. Ganguly made 183 and Dravid 145 that eventually helped India score 373 for six and beat Sri Lanka by 157 runs. In the latest tie, the bowlers made the most of the conditions with the seamers bowling five maiden overs in the match. The scores: Sri Lanka: S. Jayasuriya c Dravid b Agarkar 36; R. Kaluwitharana c Dravid b Agarkar 15; M. Atapattu b Khan 7; M. Jayawardene c & b Khan 62; R. Arnold c Dravid b Agarkar 6; N. Nawaz c Sehwag b Ganguly 11; U. Chandana c Kaif b Nehra 18; C. Vaas (not out) 26; N. Zoysa c Kaif b Khan 4; B. Fernando (not out) 4; Extras (lb-8, nb-1, w-4) 13. Total (for eight wkts. in 50 overs) 202.
N. SRIDHARAN Fall of wkts: 1-42, 2-65, 3-65, 4-78, 5-97, 6-140, 7-182, 8-186. India bowling: Nehra 10-0-29-1, Zaheer Khan 10-1-48-3, Agarkar 9-2-44-3, Ganguly 10-1-28-1, Kumble 10-0-43-0, Sehwag 1-0-2-0. India: S. Ganguly lbw b Vaas 7; V. Sehwag c Jayasuriya b Vaas 12; D. Mongia c Vaas b D. Fernando 33; S. Tendulkar c Kaluwitharana b Zoysa 49; R. Dravid b Chandana 8; Yuveraj Singh c (sub) Silva b D. Fernando 31; M. Kaif (not out) 38; A. Agarkar (not out) 7; Extras (lb-2, nb-7, w-9) 18. Total (for six wkts. in 45.2 overs) 203. Fall of wkts: 1-17, 2-26, 3-97, 4-113, 5-135, 6-195. Sri Lanka bowling: Vaas 10-0-38-2, Zoysa 10-0-46-1, D. Fernando 10-0-53-2, B. Fernando 3-0-11-0, Chandana 10-1-46-1, Jayasuriya 2-0-5-0, Arnold 0.2-0-2-0.
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