On a crumbling, turning, brute of a pitch by Twenty20 standards, Mahela
Jayawardene responded with a T20-size classic. His 42 off 36, as
delightful as it was delicate, proved to be the difference between the
two sides in a tight semi-final. It was a bitterly disappointing night
for his opposite number: Mohammad Hafeez outmanoeuvred a rampant Kumar
Sangakkara in a crucial moment in the first innings, he came back from a
horribly slow start to his own innings, but fell on 42 with some way to
go for Pakistan.
It was Sangakkara who returned the favour with a superb stumping off a
grubber to send Hafeez back with 48 to defend in 35 balls. Hafeez, who
had just opened up with an extra-cover drive, a reverse-swept four and a
punch through covers, was this close to making this his own night, but
it was to be Sri Lanka's, who won their first Twenty20 international at R
Premadasa Stadium, in the process successfully adjusting to a third
venue in this tournament, the most for any team.
The powdery surface began to explode upon impact by the third over of
the first innings. This was no place for average batsmen who stand there
and swing from the hip. This would need a quality batsman. On turning
tracks, they don't come better than Jayawardene. With the ball turning
square at times, he stayed low, swept and reverse-swept often to play
with the spinners' rhythm. Tillakaratne Dilshan, his opening partner,
seemed to be batting on a different pitch.
It was not just that Jayawardene was sweeping and reversing, it was the
range of that shot, able to beat the two square fielders on either side.
He connected with four reverse-sweeps, scoring 12. Then there was the
regulation sweep and the lap shot. Jayawardene's effort here was
reminiscent of his hundred in the semi-final of the 50-over World Cup of
2007. Just when he was running away with this thing, he failed to
connect well with a lap off Afridi, giving Pakistan their first wicket.
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That didn't bring them any relief, though. Sangakkara began with a four
to midwicket first ball, and later displayed a lovely chip over extra
cover. Hafeez was about to get into the game now. Watching Sangakkara
move too much around the crease, Hafeez pulled out before a delivery.
When he did bowl, he bowled it wide and out of reach of the moving
Sangakkara, and prised out a catch in the deep.
Now, with Dilshan looking to break free, Umar Gul and Saeed Ajmal bowled
three big overs. Gul got the better of Dilshan, who was looking to
break free after having been nine off 18 at one point. Ajmal, who
conceded 20 off his first two overs, came back with a six-run 19th over.
Gul missed his yorkers by the slightest of margins in the last over,
Thisara Perera and Angelo Mathews took toll of it, and Sri Lanka came
out confident of defending 139.
Pakistan never managed any flow to their reply. Imran Nazir swung from
the hip. He hit some and missed some before playing on a quick delivery
from Ajantha Mendis, making it 31 for 1 after six. Hafeez, having a
horror time with the bat, had just begun to recover in company with
Nasir Jamshed when an umpiring error turned the game around.
It was a slower offcutter from Mathews from over the stumps, hitting the
middle stump of the left-handed Jamshed, but he was given out by Rod
Tucker, despite the ball pitching outside the leg stump. In the same
over, another offcutter sent Kamran Akmal back. The game had turned.
Hafeez now began to swim against the tide. In what was now becoming a
contest of the captains, Jayawardene prevailed.
He had brought in Rangana Herath, who is slower in the field than most,
but Herath it was who bowled the decisive over. He needed help from
Sangakkara, who reacted exceptionally to a shooter, and stumped Hafeez
in a flash. Shahid Afridi fell for another golden duck, and those
waiting for the Umars, Akmal and Gul, to do something special were
willing the lightning to strike twice. It didn't.
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