4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

If there is no chance of rain then surely SL will rock :slflag:

Sun could shine on Sri Lanka at Lord’s

The Preview by Andrew Fidel Fernando
May 30, 2014
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England favourites but series unpredictable

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[TD=“class: stryPicCptn”]Sri Lanka have been vulnerable to the pace and bounce of Chris Jordan © PA Photos

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Match facts
Saturday, May 31, 2014
Start time 1030 local (0930 GMT)Big Picture
Eighty-one runs was the difference between the teams in the first match of the series. The margins have expanded alarmingly since, to 157 runs, then 10 wickets and 227 balls. They might not be numbers that suggest a compelling series, but Sri Lanka’s tilt at England has held interest, if only because of the unpredictability of the results.
Sri Lanka arrived favourites at the first match, on the back of a T20 international win and an unbeaten 2014 in ODIs, then faltered dramatically. England appeared to hold the aces at an overcast Chester-le-Street, but were shot out for 99. Then the hosts outskittled the skittlers at Old Trafford, to almost everyone’s surprise. Even the weather forecasts have been way off base, with heavy rains failing to materialise in the second and third matches. Conditions have been no indicator of results. Sri Lanka have at various times seemed well-adjusted and at sea in the cold and the damp.
Lord’s is expected to be rain-free and somewhat less chilly on Saturday, with temperatures expected to peak in the high teens. Sri Lanka appear to be the more vulnerable side at present, but they have traditionally done well at the venue, and when the sun shines. These are all just facts. They may not mean a thing.
One trend that will have been pored over by analyst and coaches in the Sri Lanka camp, is their batsmen’s frailty against Chris Jordan’s hit-the-deck pace. Jordan has not relied on great movement nor even a tight line and length. He has instead created trouble by generating good lift, and by having batsmen play too early or too late. His ambling approach to the crease explodes abruptly into an energetic delivery swing, and though many bowling coaches will see this as a flaw needing correction, it appears his pace has not been easy for Sri Lanka batsmen to judge.
If Sri Lanka fail at Lord’s, they will have comfortably lost a series. It will mark the end of their remarkable 2014 run. England, meanwhile, will hope it begins their resurgence.
Form guide
(last five matches, most recent first)
England: WLWWW
Sri Lanka: LWLWW
In the spotlight
Jordan may be taking most wickets, but there is no doubting the influence James Anderson’s pinpoint opening spell exerted on the last match, when he claimed both openers and conceded only 10 runs from his seven overs. Skilful, probing and relentless, he is exactly the kind of fast bowler Sri Lanka’s batsmen don’t like. They failed in their plan to play him out safely in Manchester, and even if they alter their outlook for Lord’s, Anderson is not an easy bowler to gain control of.
Mahela Jayawardene was among those who attempted to bat slow and long in Manchester, but he changed so much about his normally free-flowing game, he tangled himself up against an innocuous James Tredwell offbreak. Tough situations often coax him to his best, and as he has set the 2015 World Cup as a target, a regular flow of good scores will serve his confidence well.
Teams news
England will have learned little about their batsmen from the brief Manchester chase and will likely be unchanged.
England (probable): 1 Alastair Cook (capt.), 2 Ian Bell, 3 Gary Ballance, 4 Eoin Morgan, 5 Joe Root, 6 Ravi Bopara, 7 Jos Buttler (wk), 8 Chris Jordan, 9 James Tredwell, 10 James Anderson, 11 Harry Gurney
Angelo Mathews suggested Lahiru Thirimanne will be given a longer run at opener after the last match, but they may be tempted to bring in Kusal Perera into the side, displacing Thirimanne down the order. The visitors will hope to play two spinners, but have Thisara Perera in reserve if the conditions are more suited to quick bowling.
Sri Lanka (probable): 1 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 2 Lahiru Thirimanne, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 4 Mahela Jayawardene 5. Dinesh Chandimal, 6. Angelo Mathews (capt.), 7. Ashan Priyanjan, 8. Nuwan Kulasekara, 9 Sachithra Senanayake, 10 Rangana Herath/Thisara Perera, 11. Lasith Malinga
Pitch and conditions
The recent T20 double header saw the wicket go very slow for the second 40 overs and several Championship matches have seen some low first-innings totals but Lord’s wickets for internationals are generally excellent. The weather forecast is dry.Stats and trivia

  • Sri Lanka rode a Dinesh Chandimal century to victory in their most recent ODI at Lord’s in 2011, which was Chandimal’s last ODI hundred.

  • Alastair Cook needs 90 to move to 3000 career ODI runs. Ian Bell is the highest run-getter in the team with 4788 runs.

  • Lasith Malinga has the worst figures of any bowler who has delivered more than 10 overs in the series. He has taken one wicket at an average of 101. His economy rate is 6.73.

Quotes
“Sometimes you can get on one of those roles on a wicket where you lose two or three quickly and it’s difficult to turn the tide. That’s probably been the case in the last two games.”
James Tredwell identifies the cause of both team’s collapses in this series.

“We had a bad day, we are looking forward to Lord’s. The boys are practising hard. We just want to forget what happened in the last match.”
The Old Trafford collapse is quickly behind Sri Lanka according to Lahiru Thirimanne

Sun could shine on Sri Lanka at Lord’s | Cricket News | England v Sri Lanka | ESPN Cricinfo

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

England won the toss and elected to field. Lets see if SL can score 100. :D

Mera England Mahan.

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

108/1 off 20.5 overs. Loh jee SL any 100 bhi ker liye. :nahi:

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

:hbk:

Sri Lanka 261/5 (46.2 ov)

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

Come on guys, need some big hitting , Kulasekara should come to bat

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

Sri Lanka 267/5 (47 ov) :slflag:

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

England v Sri Lanka, 4th ODI, Lord’s

Dilshan, Sangakkara rebuild for SL

The Report by Andrew McGlashan at Lord’s
May 31, 2014
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[TD=“class: stryPicCptn”]Tillakaratne Dilshan brought up his fifty off a circumspect 72 balls © AFP

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Sri Lanka recovered their batting composure in impressive fashion after the embarrassment of Old Trafford as an unbroken second-wicket stand of 108 between Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara put them on track for a healthy total at Lord’s.
It was little surprise that Alastair Cook inserted Sri Lanka again. Although a repeat of what happened in Manchester was unlikely, he would have hoped to open a few scars, particularly as the sky clouded over as the start time arrived.
However, by the midway mark of the innings, they only had the wicket of the recalled Kusal Perera, sharply caught low to his left by a diving Chris Jordan at slip, and there was the prospect of chasing a target in excess of 300.
Perera, who was brought in to replace Dinesh Chandimal as Sri Lanka shuffled their order with Lahriu Thirimanne moving to No. 5, made a swashbuckling start which included a crunching six over deep midwicket before falling to a horrid hack across the line against Harry Gurney, the most consistent of England’s seamers early on.
Dilshan scratched around, reaching 13 off 29 deliveries, before scooping James Anderson and followed that with another boundary to fine leg. He almost fell at the end of the same over, however, when he gloved the ball attempted to leave alone.
Against the previous scripts, Joe Root was the first change bowler but the man-of-the moment, Jordan, was soon into the fray and not shy of slotting into bouncer mode although this time they were dealt with much more effectively by the experienced second-wicket pair. After the high of Old Trafford, Jordan was brought down to earth as his first four overs cost 26.
Sangakkara had taken 13 deliveries to get off the mark and, like Dilshan, was working hard to find his timing before he clicked into gear with three consecutive boundaries off Root; twice using his feet to loft down the ground and then a peachy cover drive.
The innings was transformed from stodgy to silky - beautiful footwork against James Tredwell helped him beat mid-on - and he reached his fifty from 53 deliveries. The next ball, Dilshan brought up his half-century from a more circumspect 72.

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

End of over 48 (12 runs) **Sri Lanka 279/5 **(RR: 5.81)

Mathews :hbk:

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

Congrats Sanga

38.1
Jordan to Sangakkara, 2 runs, back of a length, pulled wide of deep midwicket and this will be the century, they trot back for the second and Sangakkara's brings up his first century at Lord's in any format, a great-paced innings

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

It seems they are losing plot, they should cross 300 after an awesome start ......

48.1
Jordan to Mathews, OUT, step to leg, Jordan follows him, Mathews is cramped and tries to swing over the leg side, totally miscues it straight up in the air and Anderson pouches the catch taking a couple of steps back at mid-on
*AD Mathews c Anderson b Jordan 30 (30b 4x4 0x6) SR: 100.00*

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

:naraz:

48.4
Jordan to Kulasekara, OUT
KMDN Kulasekara b Jordan 0 (2b 0x4 0x6) SR: 0.00

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

296/9 (49.5 overs) :slflag:

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

Sri Lanka **300/9 (50.0 ov) :slflag:

**Not Bad in last overs :smiley:
Sri Lanka RR 6.00
Last 5 ovs 51/5 RR 10.20

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

There is only one true death-overs specialist bowler left..Separamadu Lasith Malinga Swarnajith!!!

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

I take it Separamadu Swarnajith did well in the death overs to lead Sri Lanka to victory. Did Indrajith play a good supporting role?

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

Lucky to win. :D

Well played SL

Next final match in Birmingham. dekh lein gey SL koh.

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

that lad taylor was scary....such a clean hitter of the ball.....and if you take his batting form in this match in context, malinga's last over was a super human effort sir jee....

and yes you are rite....dekh lein gay kissie kay mahan england ko!!! ;)

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

Just check my 1st Post ::smiley:

MOM reminding me Dhoni :hehe:

Big 3 :barbie:

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

No doubt Malinga is playing a very important role almost in their every win. It reminds me a phrase "Nah chair mast malangaN no " :D

Re: 4th ODI: England v Sri Lanka at Manchester, May 31, 2014

Sooper performance by Sanga, Dilshan and Malinga :slflag:

England v Sri Lanka, 4th ODI, Lord’s

Buttler ton in vain as Malinga holds nerve

The Report by Andrew McGlashan at Lord’s
May 31, 2014
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Sri Lanka 300 for 9 (Sangakkara 112, Dilshan 71, Gurney 4-55) beat England 293 for 8 (Buttler 121, Bopara 51, Malinga 3-52) by seven runs
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Buttler magic in vain as Sri Lanka take it to decider

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[TD=“class: stryPicCptn”]Jos Buttler scored the fastest ODI century for England but fell short at Lord’s © PA Photos

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Jos Buttler produced arguably England’s greatest one-day innings - his first ODI hundred, the fastest for the country and the fastest at Lord’s - but Sri Lanka clung on to level the series in a contest that became gripping during the latter stages of the chase.
Buttler’s 61-ball century, eclipsing the 69-ball record of Kevin Pietersen at East London, brought England’s requirement down to 12 off the final over but Lasith Malinga held his nerve as Chris Jordan holed out and Buttler was run out for 121 off 74 with two balls of the innings remaining.
He had come to the crease to join Ravi Bopara with England listing on 111 for 5 in the 29th over with the innings having included just four boundaries. They proceeded to add 133 in 16.2 overs to bring the equation down to 62 required off the last six when Bopara top edged a sweep off Ajantha Mendis.
But Buttler responded by taking 20 off the next over - bowled by Nuwan Kulasekara - including two skimming sixes over extra cover. Jordan dug out singles and twos where he could, scampering manically between the wickets, although it was basically down to Buttler who reached his hundred with a brace off Mendis. The force was with England but a single to Buttler off the first ball of the final over ate up a priceless delivery, especially when no runs were scored as Jordan was dismissed next ball at long-on.
It was a breathless finish to a match that was seemingly dribbing to a rather soporific conclusion. England needed to achieve their highest chase on home soil to seal the series after Sri Lanka posted 300 for 9 but for more than half the chase there was barely a whimper. They lurched to 10 for 2 against a supreme new-ball spell by Malinga and could never find the impetus to mount a challenge. At one point they went 130 deliveries without hitting a boundary before Buttler began his mission with a reverse sweep in the 31st over.
It was a performance that added fuel to well-worn arguments that England do not possess the required top-order power when a large score - and 300 is no longer the gargantuan total it was - is either there to be chased down or needed to be set. At one point Alastair Cook could be seen with head in hands on the balcony. He perked up during Buttler’s onslaught, but his overriding emotion is likely to be one of frustration.
Sri Lanka would have struggled to accept this match slipping away although some of their bowling and fielding slipped under pressure. But they ultimately claimed victory and for much of the game it was another display of their resilience. Conditions were markedly different from Old Trafford yet it was still another striking turnaround having been bowled out for 67 three days ago led by Kumar Sangakkara’s first hundred at Lord’s.
Sangakkara and Tillakaratne Dilshan added 172 for the second wicket - Sri Lanka’s third best stand for that wicket in ODIs - to form the backbone of the total. Although England fought back in the final 10 overs, a final-ball boundary by Mendis enabled Sri Lanka to cross the psychological 300 marker: England had only ever chased down more than 300 twice in their ODI history.
Sangakkara’s innings will not get him a spot on the honours board - that is reserved for Test hundreds - but it did tick off one of the missing milestones in an illustrious career.
His previous best at Lord’s in any format was 65 and he needed 13 balls to get off the mark but then progressed silkily to his hundred off 95 deliveries. The first of his 14 boundaries, a hook against Chris Jordan, did not come until his 27th ball but it was the three in a row he took off Joe Root that really launched his innings. When he was stumped off James Tredwell in the 43rd over he left to a standing ovation.
Sangakkara worked hard to find his timing before he clicked into gear with three consecutive boundaries off Root; twice using his feet to loft down the ground and then a peachy cover drive. Beautiful footwork also helped him beat mid-on off Tredwell and he latched on to loose deliveries from Ravi Bopara, who strayed on both sides of the wicket. The 10 overs combined of Bopara and Root cost 76 runs.
Sangakkara and Dilshan joined forces after Kusal Perera, brought in as Sri Lanka shuffled their order, edged a wild mow to slip. Dilshan scratched around, reaching 13 off 29 deliveries, before scooping James Anderson and following that with another boundary to fine leg.
Dilshan brought up his half-century the ball after Sangakkara but it always more of a battle for him. His last 21 runs soaked up 37 deliveries and he was also discomforted after a collision with Root in the bowler’s follow through.
He fell in the first over of the batting Powerplay, attempting to scoop a full delivery from Anderson which took leg stump, and England regained a semblance of control. Mahela Jayawardene has been short of runs in this series and it was a scratchy innings from him. The final 10 overs brought 83 runs, fewer than Sri Lanka would have wanted.
Malinga produced a wicked four-over spell, trapping Cook lbw with one that swung back in and was overturned by the DRS and then finding Ian Bell’s edge to slip. He did not concede a run until his 18th delivery and even then it was a squirted edge to third man.
Root and Gary Ballance tried to rebuild but it was painful progress. After the first 10 overs England were 34 for 2 and there was precious little lifting of the run rate. Ballance struggled against the spin of the recalled Ajantha Mendis and Sachithra Senanayake before edging a reverse sweep which summed up the innings which used 69 deliveries. Root had only faced one ball fewer when he top edged to fine leg.
England put great stock in the ability of their middle order but the asking rate was approaching eight when Eoin Morgan walked in and did not dip. Morgan could not find the boundary in 16 balls and was then stumped. The game appeared up. It wasn’t. What followed was epic and will give England much food for thought. For Sri Lanka there was just relief.

England v Sri Lanka, 4th ODI, Lord’s Report : Kumar Sangakkara ton helps SL post 300 | Cricket News | ESPN Cricinfo