Sri Lanka overcame a serious bout of the jitters to book their place in
Saturday's World Cup final in Mumbai, as New Zealand bowed out in the
last four for the sixth time in ten campaigns, though with their pride
fully intact after another fabulous never-say-die performance in
Colombo.
In a strange amalgam of the one-sided thrashing that Sri Lanka handed
out to England in their quarter-final on Saturday, and New Zealand's
last-eight fightback against South Africa in Dhaka, the favourites duly
progressed, and by a seemingly comfortable five-wicket margin. However,
the closing stages were fraught in the extreme as a raucous home crowd
was forced to postpone a party that had been in full swing for more than
three-quarters of the contest.
Defending a mediocre total of 217 after a spirited batting effort had
unravelled in a clatter of late wickets, New Zealand's lust for a scrap
kicked in with a vengeance just when it seemed the match was finally out
of their reach. At 160 for 1 in the 33rd over, with Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara
entrenched in a game-breaking partnership of 120, what little attention
had been on this, the less glamorous of the two semi-finals, had
already begun to drift towards Wednesday's epic match-up in Mohali.
But then Dilshan, cruising on 73 from 93 deliveries and seemingly
destined for his second hundred in consecutive matches, slapped loosely
at Tim Southee and picked out Jesse Ryder at point, whose second catch
of the innings was a far less breathtaking affair than his earlier
one-handed pluck off Sri Lanka's pace-setter, Upul Tharanga.
Three balls later, the new man Mahela Jayawardene was beaten in flight
by a beautiful dipping delivery from Daniel Vettori and nailed plumb lbw
for 1, whereupon Sangakkara's habitually cool head deserted him, as he
attempted to steer the lively Andy McKay over the keeper for four, but
ended up dollying a simple chance to Scott Styris at third man.
Sri Lanka had lost three wickets for eight runs in 22 deliveries, and
just as had been the case in the throttling of South Africa, New
Zealand's bowlers ramped up the aggro while maintaining supremely
disciplined lines and lengths. On the same worn wicket that had been
used for the England quarter-final, runs suddenly became excruciatingly
hard to come by as Sri Lanka's untested middle order was fully exposed
to the limelight.
Chamara Silva and Thilan Samaraweera scraped together nine runs in six
overs as the asking-rate climbed to close to five, and it took a message
from the dressing room, delivered with a drink from Dilhara Fernando,
to persuade them out of their defensive mindset. Silva responded with
two fours in consecutive deliveries as Ryder's seam-up was brought into
the attack, but three balls later he tried to get aggressive against the
extra pace of Southee and chopped onto his own stumps for 13.
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Samaraweera, however, had the experience to see his team home. A short
ball from Ryder was fetched over midwicket for four, before a wild throw
from Oram gifted him another four as the ball sailed over the keeper's
head. Another error lopped five more precious runs off the total as a
McKay wide slipped through the keeper's grasp, and though McKay
responded with a beauty to Angelo Mathews that was sent to be reviewed
for caught-behind, the lack of Hot Spot meant there was no evidence
available to reverse the on-field decision.
And with a smoking six off Southee in the next over, the game was
finally relieved of its tension - even though it took two winning shots
to seal it, after Mathew's initial carve through the covers was called a
dead-ball due to a firework exploding right at the moment of delivery.
Instead, Samaraweera nudged through third man to wrap up the game with
13 balls to spare.
Such a nerve-jangling finale could not have seemed further from the
agenda while Sri Lanka's innings was in full flow. From the moment
Tharanga launched his third ball, from Nathan McCullum, straight down
the ground for six, Sri Lanka were always ahead of the asking-rate. His
departure for 30 from 31 balls did change the tempo of the Sri Lankan
innings, but neither Dilshan nor Sangakkara had any reason to rush
towards a modest victory target.
Sangakkara had an early let-off when he edged Oram at a catchable height
through the vacant slip cordon, while Dilshan - who had been so
combative against England - took 28 deliveries to score the second
boundary of his innings, and his 50th of the World Cup to date. But he
went on to pass 400 runs for the tournament, en route to overtaking
Jonathan Trott as the leading run-scorer, and as Sangakkara finally
began to nail his trademark cover-drives, New Zealand looked to have run
out of ideas.
In hindsight, the Kiwis will look back on the closing stages of their
own innings with regret, for a late collapse of 5 for 13, including 4
for 4 in 12 balls, undermined much of the good work they had put into
the early part of their innings. The bed-rock was provided by Scott
Styris, a centurion against Sri Lanka
in the 2007 World Cup, who ground out a responsible 57 from 76 balls.
But when he was extracted lbw by the final delivery that Muttiah
Muralitharan will ever bowl on home soil, Sri Lanka responded
euphorically to scythe through the tail and leave seven precious
deliveries unused.
Whether a 240 target would have made any difference will remain a matter
for conjecture. Though they fared better than any other team in the
tournament so far in taking 41 runs off Sri Lanka's bowlers in the
batting Powerplay, they were ultimately undone by the depth and variety
of their attack, with Lasith Malinga's yorkers scalping three key
wickets at critical moments.
Too many of New Zealand's batsmen made starts without going on. Martin
Guptill flicked Malinga's fifth delivery through midwicket in a 65-ball
39, only for Malinga to york him superbly when he returned for his
second spell, while Brendon McCullum slog-swept Rangana Herath for six,
only to be bowled for 13 playing the exact same stroke. Taylor, whose
ferocious hitting could have been so valuable at the death, launched a
Mendis long-hop straight to deep midwicket just when he looked ready to
build on his 36 from 55 balls.
But as Vettori takes his leave of the New Zealand captaincy, he can
reflect on yet another campaign in which his team rose to the challenge
of the big event in precisely the manner that too many of their supposed
betters - namely England and South Africa - consistently fail to do.
Sangakkara and his men, meanwhile, march on to their second final in
consecutive World Cups, where Muralitharan - his broken body
notwithstanding - will attempt to complete his career on the highest
high imaginable.
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