Thought Amir had won game – Misbah

Cliched T20 speak tells you that one ball can turn a match on its head, but Mohammad Amir’s deadly yorker to remove Misbah-ul-Haq only gave the opening BPL fixture a better finish. That delivery in the 19th over was the exclamation point of a game that swung both ways, mainly due to these former Pakistan team-mates.Misbah ended up with the biggest impact through a 39-ball 61 that was both patient and attacking. The innings reconstructed Rangpur’s chase of 188 after they had fallen to 23 for 4 in the fifth over. Misbah added 64 for the fifth wicket with Al-Amin, then a fast-paced 80 with Thisara Perera but when Amir removed both off consecutive deliveries, even Misbah thought it was over.”I think he won in that moment,” Misbah said. “He bowled a really good yorker, I was set and I missed that. This is what people are here to watch. Amir bowled well with the new ball. He had good pace and variations. In the 19th over he would have won the game for his team. Good to see him bowling like [he did today].”Amir started off with a maiden before taking the first two wickets – Lendl Simmons caught at mid-off and Soumya Sarkar dubiously given out leg-before – off consecutive deliveries in his second over. He was hard to get away, especially when he kept zooming in the full ball.Chittagong Vikings captain Tamim Iqbal, who felt that his team were 10-20 runs short and suffered through Asif Ahmed’s two dropped catches, was delighted to see Amir bowl with such verve.”He bowled brilliantly,” Tamim said. “I was looking forward to seeing him bowl. I am sure he will get better and better each day. He was playing a game like this after a long time. I think he was a bit nervous but it will get better for him. He has been taking wickets back in Pakistan. He was playing T20s after a long time.”Misbah said that he always knew that, with Thisara and Sammy waiting in the wings, Rangpur had a chance despite falling behind halfway through their chase.”We just wanted to play 20 overs, and that’s what I was telling Al-Amin,” Misbah said. “He was playing well at that time. We had Thisara and Sammy in the end, so we knew what capabilities they have when it comes to hitting the ball.”Even if we needed 80 runs in five overs, we were confident. Here 15 runs an over is chaseable when you have set batsmen. Once you have that big over, you have to keep in mind which bowler has how many overs left. If we can plan that, we can win games.”

IPL franchise bids to be opened on Thursday

The BCCI will announce the owners of the eight IPL franchises on Thursday © AFP
 

The Indian Premier League, the BCCI-backed Twenty20 tournament, continues to gather steam – the eight cities in which the teams are to be based will be revealed when the bids for the franchises involved are opened on Thursday.A clutch of corporates are in the race to own a team in the tournament, which is slated to begin on April 18. Besides business houses such as Reliance Industries Limited (RIL), India’s largest private sector company, the Videocon group, a US$2.5 billion conglomerate, the UB group, the Hyderabad-based infrastructure major GMR, real estate giant DLF, media group Deccan Chronicle, and fast food chain Nirula’s, Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan and London-based betting firm William Hill are reported to be interested in owning a team.Videocon chairman Venugopal Dhoot, whose group is bidding for the Delhi and Mumbai teams, was enthusiastic about the prospect of becoming a franchisee. “It’s a great brand equity,” he told the business daily . “We see it as having great valuation.”The revenue streams for franchises include media rights (80% for the first two years, gradually tapering to 60%), IPL sponsorship money (60% for ten years), gate receipts, franchise sponsors and uniform merchandising. “Our clear focus in designing the league has been to maximise the value of the team owners,” Balu Nayar, the managing director of the International Management Group India, the sports management and marketing firm working with the BCCI on IPL, told .The base price for owning a team for ten years is US$50 million, but the intense competition and the fact that a large chunk of revenues from IPL’s lucrative media deal with Sony Entertainment and WSG will accrue to franchisees is likely to see much higher bids than the base price.Twelve cities satisfy the BCCI’s eligibility criteria – including having a stadium with floodlights and at least 25,000 seats – for hosting a franchise but the IPL is to initially have only eight teams. The twelve cities in the running are: Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Chennai, Cuttack, Gwalior, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kanpur, Kolkata, Mohali, Mumbai and New Delhi.”The choice of cities is based on market forces,” Nayar told . “Cities having the highest value will be selected.” Bidders are not allowed to own more than one team. The IPL hopes to grow the eight franchises to 16 by 2010.The player auctions are expected to be held around February 7, when the franchises can choose from a pool of at least 78 players with international experience the IPL has signed on. Shane Warne is the most expensive player, costing US$400,000 for one year while the next highest fee, of US$350,000, is for Glenn McGrath and Stephen Fleming.The IPL, sanctioned by the International Cricket Council, is a Twenty20 competition whose inaugural season will feature eight franchises participating in a 59-game season. Each franchise will play the others on a home-and-away basis, with the top four sides going through to the semi-finals.

Senator accuses Ashraf of skipping meeting

Nasim Ashraf, the PCB chairman, has been accused of ‘deliberately avoiding’ a meeting in Islamabad © AFP
 

Senator Enver Baig, a member of the Standing Committee on Sports that is currently probing the bank accounts of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has accused its chairman Nasim Ashraf of ‘deliberately avoiding’ a meeting with the committee in Islamabad on Thursday.”He [Ashraf] was supposed to appear before the committee and answer important questions but he conveniently proceeded to Dubai to avoid us,” Baig told .”The worst part is that we were given a false excuse for his absence as a top PCB official told us that Ashraf had gone to Dubai to meet ICC president Ray Mali. But I’ve confirmed with the ICC headquarters in Dubai that no such meeting took place. In fact Mali had left Dubai two days ago for South Africa,” said Baig, who has been a major critic of the PCB top brass in recent years.Baig added that Shafqat Naghmi, the PCB’s chief operating officer, told the committee during an “on-camera” session that Ashraf had to rush to Dubai to meet with Mali and discuss some important issues related to the ICC Champions Trophy which Pakistan are to host this September. “He [Naghmi] told us that Ashraf had to leave in a hurry because Mali had told him that he was in Dubai just for a day on Thursday.”Baig said that it all turned out to be a “pack of lies”. “I believe that Ashraf flew off to Dubai to avoid the committee that was supposed to ask him some probing questions.” Baig also said that he and some Senators had requisitioned another meeting next month to discuss the PCB’s finances and have asked the Senate committee to make Ashraf’s presence mandatory.The committee, according to Baig, found out an “astonishing” fact from the details of the PCB bank accounts provided by the board that the it spent Rs 1.2 billion (US$17,788,340) during a short span of the last six months. “We were really surprised because that means that the PCB has been spending 12 crore a month. We’ve asked them to provide details and now they are supposed to submit balance sheets within the next three weeks.”

Parthiv, RP Singh help Gujarat clinch maiden Vijay Hazare title

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
RP Singh rattled Delhi with four wickets after Parthiv Patel’s hundred•PTI

The shock discovery of the day was that Parthiv Patel had gone 158 List A matches without a hundred, but in his 159th, the Vijay Hazare Trophy final, he produced that first in style to give Gujarat their maiden title. A collapse after Parthiv’s wicket had left the issue open in giving Delhi a manageable target of 274, but veteran RP Singh, playing his first match in the knockout stages, settled the matter with an opening burst of 4 for 23, which included a first-ball wicket of Rishabh Pant and later those of Shikhar Dhawan and Gautam Gambhir.Delhi continued to trust their bowlers, and perhaps were wary of the dew in the first day-night match of the tournament, when they asked Gujarat to bat. What they got was some indifferent bowling and fielding in the face of good batting for a majority of Gujarat’s innings. When they came out to bat, the ball did a bit under the lights, which RP took full advantage of.At the top of the order, Parthiv, with a game more rounded than just square hitting when he played international cricket, has been the threat throughout with his big hitting. But in the final, he looked intent on playing the longer innings. In the earlier exchanges Gujarat targeted the lesser-experienced Navdeep Saini* and Suboth Bhati while giving Ishant Sharma due respect.They lost Priyank Panchal and Bhargav Merai early, but even from 44 for 2 in the 10th over they kept attacking. Rujul Bhatt, who after Axar Patel has been Gujarat’s best player of the tournament, danced down and slogged Bhati over midwicket for a six while Parthiv repeatedly kept tucking away runs off his hips, which he used to struggle to do in international cricket.Parthiv and Bhatt added 149 for the third wicket, the highest for the third wicket in this tournament. Parthiv hit 10 fours, mainly through cuts and flicks off the hips. Bhatt hit four fours and a six in his 60 off 74 runs, which took his tournament tally to 338, which is the highest for Gujarat and the ninth-highest overall. They were helped along by two sets of four overthrows, various fumbles and a few clumsy dives.To add to this, Delhi will look back at two crucial moments. Bhati came on to bowl in the 11th over, bowled beautifully in the channel outside off first ball, drew the edge from Parthiv, who was on 21, but agonisingly saw it go waist high where the first slip should have been. Immediately he looked back complainingly at Ishant at mid-on, and immediately the slip came in, but the pocked-sized horse had now bolted. Bhatt just rubbed it in by hitting a six and two fours in Bhati’s first thiree overs. Manan Sharma later dropped a hard-hit return offering. Parthiv was on 67 then.Delhi’s two main slow bowlers have been Manan and Pawan negi, both left-arm spinners. Gambhir chose to hold them back as the two left-hand batsmen batted. Two offspinners introduced before these two – Nitish Rana and Milind Kumar – went for 71 in their 14 overs. In his second over Negi bowled Parthiv through the gate. This came close on the heels of Bhatt’s wicket, which gave Delhi some momentum. From 193 for 2 in the 37th over, it was Chirag Gandhi’s 44 off 39 and left-arm seamer Rush Kalaria’s lusty blows that took a fumbling innings to 273.Delhi came back into the chase with some hope, but RP squashed it immediately. With a generous sprinkling of grey in his beard, RP might look older than his 30, but the ball is still coming out all right from his hand. The first ball he bowled came out with the seam upright, moved in a little, and hit the top of off and middle of left-hand wicketkeeper batsman Pant. Kalaria maintained the pressure at the other end, and Dhawan eventually charged at RP to give a soft catch to cover.The only blip on Gujarat’s night arrived when Bhatt dropped Unmukt Chand off the bowling of Kalaria, but he made up for it soon enough when he accepted a low offering from Gambhir at first slip. The catch wasn’t 100% clean, but a soft signal of out from the on-field umpires sealed the decision in RP’s favour. Before signing off his first spell of 7-2-23-4, RP trapped Milind Kumar lbw with slight swing back in, and could have had a fifth next ball but for an inside edge from Rana.As wickets continued to fall, the only man capable of a miraculous comeback was Chand. He played attractive shots in his 33 off 48, but once he played Jasprit Bumrah on the contest was officially over. All Negi’s half-century managed to was push the score past 100. Bumrah went on to celebrate the win with an aggressive spell of 9.3-1-28-5, which included Ishant bowled by a perfect yorker after he had been peppered by bouncers and then made to wait for five minutes for the helmet to come in for the short leg.*05.00GMT, December 29: The report had erroneously mentioned Nitin Saini. This has been corrected.

Langeveldt joins Derbyshire in Kolpak deal

Charl Langeveldt has signed on as a Kolpak for Derbyshire © AFP
 

Derbyshire have signed Charl Langeveldt, the South African fast bowler, on a two-year Kolpak contract. Langeveldt could be in action for Derbyshire as early as Sunday’s Friends Provident Trophy match against Yorkshire at Headingley.”Charl is an excellent addition to our squad and brings real quality and experience to our side,” John Morris, the head of cricket at Derbyshire, said. “He has proven ability at the highest level of the game and just as importantly is exactly the sort of character we are looking for.”We have managed to bring him to Derbyshire ahead of several other options he had and we are delighted to have him on board.”Langeveldt, who has played 59 ODIs and six Tests, last turned out for South Africa in the one-day series against Bangladesh last month. He pulled out of the subsequent tour of India after being picked ahead of Andre Nel in a move many perceived to be driven by Cricket South Africa’s transformation policy.He was in sensational form for the Cape Cobras in the recently-concluded Standard Bank Pro20 series, taking 18 wickets in six matches, including a five-wicket haul and a hat-trick. His previous county experience includes short stints with Somerset in 2005 and Leicestershire in 2007.

ECB makes plans to keep its stars in the fold

The ECB is going all-out to keep their stars at home © Getty Images
 

The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) is planning measures, including staging additional Twenty20 internationals, to keep the country’s top players from being lured towards the Indian Premier League (IPL). England’s stars earn basic salaries of approximately ₤ 400,000, in addition to endorsement deals, but stand to gain enhanced win bonuses and appearance fees from additional Twenty20 internationals that the board plans to arrange, the reported.It is also believed that the 18 counties and leading venues, who have also been warned against hosting unofficial events, stand to gain financially. In an attempt to prevent players from flocking overseas to profitable Twenty20 tournaments the ECB has urged the counties to put their players on 12-month contracts rather than season-long ones. The ECB may also accept an offer from Allen Stanford, the American billionaire and brains behind the lucrative Stanford 20/20 in the Caribbean, who is reportedly willing to pay big bucks for a match between England players and his all-star XI.The ECB chairman, Giles Clarke, arrived in New Zealand after a meeting of the 12-man management board in London on Wednesday and is expected to brief the touring party on the details of the plans.The news came a day after Lalit Modi, the IPL chairman, indicated that dates for future events could be altered to accommodate England players. Nobody from the country has joined the IPL yet because it clashes with their domestic season. The ECB however, has decided to prevent that scenario from cropping up.Another idea under consideration is that the ECB changes the one-overseas-player-per-country rule to four for the next year, where Twenty20 matches are considered.Kevin Pietersen has reiterated his commitment to England and Matthew Hoggard, who said the IPL was a topic of discussion within the team, followed suit. “There’s a lot of stupid money flying about and I understand why a lot of people have gone to India to ply their trade,” he said. “If you are getting four or five times your salary for six weeks’ work, it can’t be a bad job.”But I want to play for England and play as many Tests as I can. Most of the guys want to play as much as they can for England, so I don’t think it’s going to be a massive draw on talent. But the IPL has got a lot of clout and maybe the International Cricket Council has realised that fact.”

Your catch or mine?

Never underestimate Ramesh Powar’s abilities in the field (file photo) © AFP
 

Indian Culture?: The Delhi Daredevils got rid of their cheerleadersa fortnight ago, after complaints that the scantily dressed girls weren’trepresentative of Indian culture. But in their place, you can see twotopless men with faces and torsos painted in red and black, the teamcolours. They dance around the outfield, with a bhangra troupe followingthem. More Indian? We wonder what the crowd thought of that.Helping hands: No bowler enjoys catches being dropped off hisbowling, and the excitable Sreesanth was near the end of his tether as twochances went down in the space of three balls. First Yuvraj Singh spilleda sitter at mid-off to reprieve Virender Sehwag, and then VRV Singhmisjudged a chance at third man after Gautam Gambhir had miscueda drive. Two costly mistakes, redeemed only by the batsmen on the strokeof midnight.Pace isn’t everything: VRV bowled the fastest ball of the match,clocked at 143.2 kmh, and Sehwag responded with a nonchalant swipe overbackward point. VRV’s two overs went for 33, proof that pace alone doesn’tcount for much.Fat men can move: You may remember Wesley Snipes and WoodyHarrelson in , and the rotund Ramesh Powarexploded another myth tonight with a smart running catch at midwicket tosend back the dangerous Farveez Maharoof. He had two wickets as well. Notbad for a debut outing.Yours? Mine? Oops: When Shaun Marsh lofted one high into the dustyDelhi night, Shikhar Dhawan and Shoaib Malik both ran towards the rope totry and snaffle it. With the crowd making such a noise, calls of “Mine”are unlikely to have been heard, and the two men ran into each other.Fortunately, there was no repeat of the sickening Steve Waugh-JasonGillespie collision , and a jubilant Dhawan rose off the turf with theball in his hands.Three strikes, you’re out: Glenn McGrath had been on the money forthe first nine balls of his spell, but then Yuvraj lofted sixes overlong-off and backward square leg to rouse the sleeping Punjab lion. Buthis attempt at three in a row was brilliantly taken on the run [and dive]by Maharoof at long-on.

Aggressive Butt scripts seven-wicket win

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Salman Butt’s 76 set up a seven-wicket victory for Pakistan, who now lead the series 2-0 © AFP
 

A blazing 76 by Salman Butt led Pakistan to a comprehensive seven-wicket win in a rain-curtailed match at the Iqbal Stadium. Heavy rain after 48.2 overs in Bangladesh’s innings kept the players off the field for more than two hours and the target of 226 was reduced to 158 in 25 overs by the D/L method. Pakistan made easy work of the target, despite an asking-rate of more than six an over, and extended their lead to 2-0 in the five-match series.Despite the heavy defeat, Bangladesh had something to write home about, especially their lower-order revival. Mahmudullah’s unbeaten half-century pushed Bangladesh to a respectable score of 225 for 8 after a characteristic top-order wobble. Tamim Iqbal piloted the early charge with an attacking 60 but the excitement was rather shortlived, with half the side back in the pavilion by the 25th over. Mahmudullah then proceeded to add 37 with Farhad Reza, doubled that effort with Dhiman Ghosh, and those stands were significant in ensuring Bangladesh didn’t fold up before the allotted overs.Tamim set the pace with some gorgeous drives through extra cover and controlled flicks off the pads, making it fairly obvious from the start that the margin for error on this surface was minimal. The high elbows were a feature of his technique as he punched crisply through the off side and back past the bowler.Shahriar Nafees wasn’t as technically correct and like a repeat offender, perished in identical fashion to the Lahore game, swatting at a wide delivery away from the body. Aftab Ahmed’s dismissal was unfortunate as replays indicated the ball struck him above the knee roll off Gul, who picked up his 50th ODI wicket in the process.Ashraful walked in and went on the offensive with an exquisite cover drive off Tanvir to go past Habibul Bashar as the highest run-getter in ODIs for Bangladesh, before taking Gul to task with three fours in a single over. However, Bangladesh lost two quick wickets against the run of play – including Ashraful – and Tamim fell shortly after bringing up his fifty.Mahmudullah and Reza got together for damage control after Tamim’s wicket, and the pair brought some stability to the innings. With spinners bowling from either end, the pair grafted – staying back and waiting for the turn, pushing the ball into the gaps and fetching the odd boundary. The partnership was worth 37 before Reza lunged forward to Shahid Afridi and was trapped lbw just after a drinks break, in the 34th over.Luckily for Mahmudullah, he found an able partner in Ghosh and the pair strung together the most fruitful stand of the evening. In the five overs after Reza’s dismissal, Bangladesh added 34. Pakistan lost the plot, and the introduction of Younis Khan to break the stand only leaked more runs. Mahmudullah never got tied down at any stage, and shortly after the pair added 50 runs, he brought up his own half-century, giving Sohail Tanvir the charge and punching him through extra cover and then glancing one down to fine leg the following ball. Rain intervened with ten balls left, leaving Mahmudullah unbeaten on 58.The overcast conditions mattered little for Pakistan as the openers blazed away in a stand of 46 in just over seven overs. Butt took to Mashrafe Mortaza early, punching him through extra cover and followed it up with a pull over midwicket in the same over. His innings was a suitably classy affair, full of proper cricket shots, drives, cuts and the odd pull.The early pounding forced Ashraful to bring his slow bowlers on in the fifth over and the move worked as the left-armers, Abdur Razzak and Shakib Al Hasan, plugged the scoring for three consecutive overs. Nasir Jamshed fell after attempting one ugly heave too many, bowled by Shakib.Younis Khan walked in and carted Mahmudullah for a huge six over midwicket before a swing and a miss off Reza sent him back for 13. Yousuf joined Butt, and during his cameo knock of 32 became the second Pakistani to go past 9000 ODI runs behind Inzamam-ul-Haq. Butt brought up his fifty in the 18th over, launched Mahmudullah for a six over long-off before he was run-out off a direct hit for 76. His 72-ball knock had all but sealed the victory, with Pakistan needing just seven to win.

Fleming's microcosmic fifty

Matthew Bell’s awful misjudgement gave Ryan Sidebottom his first wicket © Getty Images
 

Trendsetter of the day
Tim Southee’s first delivery of the day, to England’s overnight stalwart, Stuart Broad. Broad’s 42 had helped rescue England from their mid-innings nadir of 147 for 6, but in a portent of collapses to come, he was unable to push on when play resumed. Southee found the perfect line and length, and a hint of away movement, and Brendon McCullum did the rest. Twenty-four balls later, England’s innings was all over, and the teenaged Southee led his side from the field with figures of 5 for 55, the best by a New Zealand debutant for more than 50 years. As he did so, he was thrown the match ball for safekeeping, which he rammed deep into his pockets. As well he might after that sort of effort.Misjudgement of the day
There is a bet doing the rounds among the Kiwi journalists that Matthew Bell will not pass 30 at any stage in the series. Today he batted as if he was in for a cut of the winnings, with the most ludicrously awful misjudgement since the England media manager losthis middle stump to Matthew Hoggard on the eve of the Test. The ball did swing appreciably, but quite why Bell thought it wise to shoulder arms to a straight one is anyone’s guess. In the event, he was cracked on the kneeroll plumb in front of middle, and sent on his way for a second-ball duck.Flighty fifty of the day
Stephen Fleming’s fifty-to-hundred conversion rate has been a source of wonder, frustration and bemusement all throughout his 14-year Test career. He’s somehow managed to pass 7000 Test runs (and rack up three big double-centuries) without taking his centuries tally into double figures. Today’s innings, however, showed just how this could be possible. For the best part of a session, Fleming was invincible. He cut and drove the new ball with disdain, and threatened single-handedly to carry New Zealand to an impregnable total. But then, just as thoughts began to drift to a fairytale finish, Fleming wrenched the situation back to reality. A half-cocked waft outside off stump, and off he ambled for a microcosmic 59.Bowling spell of the day
Amid the mayhem, one man stood tall like a beacon of rectitude. Ryan Sidebottom has been the stand-out seamer on either side in this series. Defiant in defeat in Hamilton, quietly competent while the young guns starred in Wellington, and now the indisputable leader of the line in Napier. He bowled without a break all the way from lunch to the close of the innings, taking 6 for 37 in 14.4 overs, and 7 for 47 all told. They were the best figures by an England bowler since a certain Steve Harmison took 7 for 12 in Jamaica four years ago, and they carried his series tally to a remarkable 23 wickets at 14.21, more than double the next most prolific bowler, Chris Martin (10).Catch of the day
It was an unremarkable lob to mid-off from an unremarkable tailender, Jeetan Patel, but the man beneath the catch was relieved nonetheless. Monty Panesar has had nothing less than a shocker in the field this series, and the roar that greeted his achievement was not merely English excitement at another wicket falling. Even in his moment of triumph, however, Monty managed to mess it up a touch. As his long fingers closed around the ball, he somehow managed to cut the tip of his left index finger – which could prove troublesome when his turn comes to bowl. Off he sprinted to the dressing-room to see the medics, almost before the batsman had managed to leave the crease.Swipe of the day
England’s positive intent was their downfall in the first innings, but Michael Vaughan wasn’t about to let any such bad vibes cloud his judgment. This pitch was a belter when he assessed it on the first morning, and despite a five-session scoreline of 421 for 20, a belter it remained. So when Chris Martin banged in a good-length delivery just outside off stump, Vaughan had a monstrous mow at it, and almost swung himself off his feet as he aimed towards the midwicket floodlights. Unfortunately for him, the ball zipped a little quicker off the track than he’d expected, and brushed the shoulder of the bat to complete an underwhelming Test for England’s captain.

Sri Lanka seamers topple India on green track

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details1:08

India’s win-loss ratio of 0.625 at home

Kasun Rajitha, Dushmantha Chameera and Dasun Shanaka – Sri Lanka’s lanky seam-bowling labour force – came upon a thoroughly surprising green Pune deck, and wound up delivering their team a surprisingly thorough victory. The three quicks took eight wickets for 59 between them, to blow India away for 101. Sri Lanka’s inexperienced batsmen were rarely at ease in pursuit, but did well enough to get to the target with five wickets in hand and two overs to spare.Chameera had provided glimpses at his penetrative potential during the recent tour of New Zealand, but Rajitha and Shanaka had gone unheralded until today. If Binura Fernando – the left-arm quick – had not injured a hamstring ahead of this match, Rajitha might not even have debuted. Instead, he claimed two wickets in a tone-setting first over and finished with 3 for 29. Shanaka is in the team largely for his batting, but bowled magic deliveries through the middle overs, uprooting Suresh Raina’s leg stump with an in-dipper, and bouncing MS Dhoni second ball. He took 3 for 16.Fresh from Australian run-gluts, India’s route to defeat was paved with over-ambition. Even after the pitch had proved itself spicy, big shots continued to be attempted. Edges kept being collected. Wickets continued to tumble. The biggest stand of their innings was between R Ashwin and Ashish Nehra, who put on 28 for the eighth wicket. Without Ashwin’s 31 not out, their total might have been closer to 80.Sri Lanka’s innings appeared to be heading in the same direction at 23 for 2 in the fifth over, but Dinesh Chandimal and Chamara Kapugedera combined for 39 tension-relieving runs. Three late wickets fell, but the target was so small, even this scratchy batting performance was more than good enough. The victory puts Sri Lanka back on top of the ICC T20 rankings.It was Rajitha who first put the fire in a young Sri Lanka team. Barely heard of before he took five wickets in a tour match against the Indians in August last year, he delivered an immaculate first international over, seaming the ball sharply away from right-handers, and generating fine pace and carry. His first wicket came second ball. The length delivery stopped a little on Rohit Sharma, who hit aerially down the ground. Chameera moved across from mid-off to help a stick-thin fast-bowling brother out, diving feet off the ground to pouch that catch. Clearly excited by that scalp, Rajitha ended the over with a seaming short ball at Ajinkya Rahane, whose leading edge carried to an advancing cover.He had a catch dropped off Raina’s inside edge in between, but Rajitha soon had a third wicket, in the fifth over. Then Shanaka took over, bowling slower, but just as accurately. The Raina-Dhoni double blow in his first over put India at 51 for 5. It also doubled Shanaka’s wicket-tally in all T20s. He had played in 26 matches before this, and was called upon to bowl in less than a quarter of those games.Chameera troubled the middle order with raw pace until Ashwin picked India off the floor with a sensible approach and excellent timing. He smoked Chameera through the leg side for four first ball, but largely awaited the bad deliveries to play his big shots. In the end, Ashwin just ran out of partners – Nehra succumbing to Chameera’s pace and Jasprit Bumrah running himself out, in the 19th over.Nehra dismissed Sri Lanka’s openers, who were also guilty of attempting too many boundaries while the ball was still zipping around. Chandimal and Kapugedera were streaky but smart, looking for singles and twos, with the required rate always under a run-a-ball. Chandimal top-scored with 35, Kapugedera hit 25.MS Dhoni banked on spin through the middle overs, and the slow bowlers did remove Kapugedara, Chandimal and, later, Shanaka. But Sri Lanka had stacked their side with allrounders again, and batted deep. Milinda Siriwardana was on hand to apply the finish, hitting 21 not out from 14. Ashwin was the best of India’s bowlers as well, picking up 2 for 13 from his three overs.

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