1st ODI: England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, 22 May 2014

After winning 1st T20, lets see how S Lanka ll perform in ODI’s.

England set off on World Cup path

The Preview by Alex Winter
May 21, 2014

Match facts
Thursday, May 22, 2014
Start time 1pm local (1200 GMT)
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[TD=“class: stryPicCptn”]Alastair Cook returns to lead England with a team to build for the World Cup © Getty Images

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Big Picture
The World Cup preparation begins here. Certainly for England who will want to quickly establish a winning formula and regain some confidence in the 50-over game as the ODIs tick down towards Australia and New Zealand next year. Hammered in Australia over the winter, they will want to return in eight months’ time having rebuilt a team to challenge.
Having found some ODIs success, certainly at home, England could look positively towards the first World Cup in familiar conditions since 2003 but the winter’s upheaval has left huge holes in England’s ODI side. This series begins the process of trying to find replacements for Kevin Pietersen, Jonathan Trott and Graeme Swann. Early-season England will of course present markedly different conditions to what will be encountered at the World Cup but England do not have time on their side: every ODI must be utilised for regeneration.
But England are perhaps in better shape than it may appear in ODIs with a solid experienced core of Alastair Cook, Ian Bell, Eoin Morgan and Ravi Bopara, and Jos Buttler now well established. Their bowling attack though poses more cause for concern. What about the pair of James’. Is Anderson the man for Australian wickets? And is Tredwell good enough? Samit Patel’s early-season form was not enough to persuade the selectors although Mick Newell gave a strong suggestion that the door is not closed.
Sri Lanka are in far better shape and have an impressive record at major tournaments behind them. Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara are playing on in ODIs until the World Cup, and Sangakkara will keep wickets here, which gives them two world-class players to build their side around. They have been flying in one-day cricket recently with World T20 success following an unbeaten campaign in the Asia Cup and they have seam bowlers who can thrive in English conditions.
Form guide
(completed matches, most recent first)England WWWLL
Sri Lanka WWWWW
In the spotlight
Australia went after him and James Tredwell became not nearly as tricky as he proved before he met the baggy greens. Now he faces a question mark over his ability to provide 10 solid overs and with two touring sides this summer well versed in playing spin bowling, this is a big summer for him to try and prevent England experimenting with other slow options.
Thisara Perera probably belongs the ‘agricultural’ bracket of batsmen but, as he showed in the T20, it can be mighty effective at giving an innings a late kick. He has the power to clear any boundary - and the ones at The Oval are long - and if he has a platform which allows him freedom he can explosive. His bowling also helps to balance Sri Lanka’s line-up
Team news
Ian Bell and Alastair Cook are set to open the batting for England which leaves Michael Carberry, Joe Root and Gary Ballance competing for the No. 3 and 4 spots. England have a choice between Tim Bresnan and Chris Woakes but neither could play if Harry Gurney suitably impressed in Tuesday’s T20 to earn an ODI debut.
England (possible): 1 Alastair Cook, 2 Ian Bell, 3 Michael Carberry, 4 Joe Root, 5 Eoin Morgan (capt), 6 Ravi Bopara 7 Jos Buttler (wk), 8 Chris Woakes, 9 Chris Jordan, 10 James Tredwell, 11 James Anderson
Sri Lanka have the handy little pair of Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara to return, with Sangakkara set to keep wickets. That denies Dinesh Chandimal the gloves and he could make way so Lahiru Thirimanne can keep his place. They could play two spinners and try to exploit England’s weakness with pace off the ball.
Sri Lanka (possible): 1 Kusal Perera, 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Lahiru Thirimanne, 6 Angelo Mathews (capt), 7 Thisara Perera, 8 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10 Sachithra Senanayake, 9 Ajantha Mendis, 11 Lasith Malinga
Pitch and conditions
The pitch is the same as for the T20 on Tuesday. It gripped a little and could encourage Sri Lanka to play two spinners. The forecast is for some showers but generally warm and sunny.
Stats and trivia

  • Sri Lanka have won 10 and lost 11 of their ODIs against England in the UK, including a 5-0 clean sweep on their 2006 tour.
  • The team’s last meeting came in last year’s Champions Trophy, also at The Oval, where Sri Lanka triumphed by seven wickets.

Quotes
“It does help when you’ve beaten a side. Certainly in our camp, you’d feel a lot better. But with a few different players coming back in you won’t look too much into the Twenty20 game.”
Alastair Cook is confident the T20 loss on Tuesday won’t affect his side.
“We always had confidence coming from a World Cup victory. We needed that T20 win to tell ourselves that we are good enough to compete against these guys on their home soil.”
*Marvan Attapatu is pleased his side have got an early win under their belts.

*England set off on World Cup path | Cricket News | England v Sri Lanka | ESPN Cricinfo

Re: 1st ODI: England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, 22 May 2014

Mera England Mahan

Re: 1st ODI: England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, 22 May 2014

I hope Malinga ll continue his form :D

Re: 1st ODI: England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, 22 May 2014

12.30pm Sri Lanka have won the toss and will bowl. Angelo Mathews says he thinks there will be some help for the seamers.

Alastair Cook says he would have bowled as well with the dodgy forecast around. "If he was a sunny day you'd probably bat first," Cook said.Ravi Bopara dislocated a finger in practice a few moments ago but has been passed fit to play. No Michael Carberry or Chris Woakes for England. Just the one frontline spinner for Sri Lanka.

England Alastair Cook, Ian Bell, Gary Ballance, Joe Root, Eoin Morgan, Ravi Bopara, Jos Buttler, Chris Jordan, James Tredwell, James Anderson, Harry Gurney

Sri Lanka Tillakaratne Dilshan, Lahiru Thirimanne, Kumar Sangakkara, Mahela Jayawardene, Dinesh Chandimal, Angelo Mathews, Thisara Perera, Nuwan Kulasekara, Sachithra Senanayake, Suranga Lakmal, Lasith Malinga

Re: 1st ODI: England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, 22 May 2014

Eng 6/0 (2 overs)

1.4
Kulasekara to Cook, no run, **dropped, **but it would have been a terrific catch from Dilshan. Cook reaching out in front of his body and drives in the air off a thick outside edge. Dilshan dived high to his left but couldn't hold on

Re: 1st ODI: England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, 22 May 2014

39/1 off 10 overs. Slow going from England.

Re: 1st ODI: England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, 22 May 2014

Eng 61/1 (13 overs)

Need a break through here

Re: 1st ODI: England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, 22 May 2014

101/2 off 20.4 overs. Rain stopped play.

Re: 1st ODI: England v Sri Lanka at The Oval, 22 May 2014

A very efficient win for England by 81 runs on the D/L method. They constructed a good innings, despite having to restart after the rain, then defended it very well. Chris Jordan the star with bat and ball, but plenty of other good performances from the likes of Ian Bell, Gary Ballance and Harry Gurney. The early-season tonic England needed, but Sri Lanka can bounce back. It is only their second defeat in 20 matches, and both have been to England. I'll bring you news from the presentation shortly.
Angelo Mathews "It was a pretty poor performance, we were not up to the mark with the ball. It was an off day for them. A poor effort by the whole team. You can't control the weather, but we played some poor cricket. The wicket played pretty well. The confidence remains high, it's just one game."
Alastair Cook "It was very professional. Sometimes we though we had better of conditions and sometimes not. Everyone did well. Gary started really, we know what Jos can hit like and then Jordan as well. The lads played [Malinga] really well. Even the great bowlers can go the distance. That extra 30-runs made a big difference."
No surprises, the Man of the Match is Chris Jordan. "Just twisted by ankle a little but nothing serious. I enjoyed whacking the ball and bowling with some aggression. [The short ball] was something we spoke about after not finishing well the other night. It's nice to get one back on Malinga after the other night."
Well, that just about wraps things up from here. We'll be back on Sunday for the second match from Durham. Until then from Andrew McGlashan and Alex Winter it's goodbye and thanks for joining us.