Wednesday, 2 September 2015

Sharmas take India to within seven wickets of win

India were seven wickets from their first series win in Sri Lanka since 1993 after Rohit Sharma, followed by lower-order contributions, all but batted Sri Lanka out of the game. The other Sharma, Ishant, having faced a barrage of bouncers from Dhammika Prasad and aggression from Dinesh Chandimal when he batted, came out pumped up and knocked out any thoughts of the target of 386 being chased down with two wickets in his first spell, including that of Chandimal, who had made slight physical contact with Ishant in India's innings.

It is conjecture if the altercations contributed to Ishant's hitting the good lengths, but it wasn't probably wise to expose him to the Sri Lankan bowling. Even at P Sara, India perhaps delayed the declaration and ran the risk of injuries to new-ball bowlers. Sri Lanka were obviously going to bounce them to serve the dual purpose of slowing the scoring down and delaying the declaration, and possibly eliminate the bowler. Prasad, the bowler here, was himself not done any favours: he was hit on the left glove the first ball he batted and had to retire hurt.

With a lead of 380 in the bag, against this Sri Lankan batting, and with rain always a factor, India would have been expected to declare early in the final session of the day. Still Ishant came out at No. 11, and was bounced and stared at. Except that one of those bouncers was a big no-ball. Ishant didn't like it, and when taking a single pointed to his helmet, as if to tell Prasad to aim at his head if he means to hurt him. Chandimal made himself a party to the altercation, and seemed to brush Ishant while doing so.

R Ashwin, who had batted as stylishly as Rohit but under considerably less pressure, tried to shield Ishant and opened the face to the last ball of the said over, but only managed an edge to end the innings. Ishant ran off to prepare to bowl in 10 minutes' time, but Prasad left his team behind and chased him and caught up with him at the end of the players' tunnel at SSC. The duo had to be separated.

All these bursts of energy from Sri Lanka were sudden on a day they were, more than anything, found wanting physically. It will please Virat Kohli, who has often seen - even when not captain - his bowlers come out second-best physically after competing for long periods of time. India had their lucky breaks - the rain on third evening when in the middle of a collapse the last of those - but they showed less wear of three back-to-back Tests than their hosts did.

On an oppressively hot day in Colombo - players were often seen fielding with ice-filled kerchiefs around the back of their necks - despite a seaming pitch on offer, Angelo Mathews bowled only six overs out of the 76 India faced, 19 out of 176.1 in the match, which meant little back-up for the two frontline quicks. Spinners bowling 34 overs on this pitch turned out to be easy pickings for India.

On the third evening, Sri Lanka rode the momentum to reduce India to 7 for 3, and were looking at just one big push in the final hour before putting their feet up. On the fourth morning, they were looking at a long hot day, and couldn't risk over-bowling anyone. India also had that 111-run first-innings lead, which meant almost every boundary resulted in a retreat from Sri Lanka.

Having said all that India would still have been pleasantly surprised to see Rangana Herath bowl the sixth over of the day, only the 14th of the innings. He also carried with him the baggage of the six Rohit had hit him for on the third evening. He began with long-on and long-off back, and just like that India could pick risk-free singles, four of them coming in his first over. Herath's first spell of 4-0-16-0 let India get into accumulation mode, but Kohli welcomed Nuwan Pradeep back with a trademark push wide outside off - high risk for a shot that doesn't produce runs if executed perfectly - saving the TV production truck the bother of cutting fresh replays of the dismissal. They could just go to the last innings' replays.

Rohit, though, kept driving beautifully and pulling emphatically whenever he got the opportunity. His two driven boundaries in the 25th over, shots played away from the body, were not free of risk, but at least he was going for runs. And he executed them perfectly. Binny at the other end enjoyed a charmed life in a quick 54-run partnership with Rohit. Sixteen of his first 29 runs came off edges, he was hit on the head once, and a stumping opportunity was missed by wicketkeeper Kusal Perera when on 25. Still, when he edged away for his second boundary, such was the scoreboard pressure on Sri Lanka they responded by taking a catching man out to deep point, where Binny took an easy single next ball.

Just when India were moving fast into an impregnable position, Rohit - as he has often done in his Test career - fell close to an interval. This, though, wasn't an out-and-out bad shot. He had scored runs earlier off the pull, but this time a little extra bounce from Prasad took the top edge for long leg to take it and keep Sri Lanka in the game. When they came back after lunch, Sri Lanka didn't seem to have enough left in them to keep staying in the game.

India got gentle spin off which they could pick easy ones and twos at one end, and tiring quicks at the other. Binny and Ojha added 42 largely trouble-free runs before Ashwin and Amit Mishra put together 55. Sri Lanka seemed resigned to batting only when India wanted them to, and Ashwin took the opportunity to play some graceful shots in his first successful innings with the bat. What followed between Prasad and Ishant, and Chandimal and Ishant wasn't as graceful, but might have been enough to warm Ishant up.

Yet again Ishant produced Upul Tharanga's edge in the first over, taken this time of course, to keep to 71 the total runs scored by the first wicket on either side in 12 opportunities. Ishant and Kohli were now in the face of the dismissed batsman, but Yadav was less angry when he got an edge out of Dimuth Karunaratne soon.

Ishant's anger boiled over when he got the counterattacking Chandimal to open the face to play a short ball to third slip, where KL Rahul dropped yet another catch only for Kohli to take the rebound. Ishant repeatedly banged his head without getting close to Chandimal. This was a better way to send the message across. More importantly he was in line for a 10-wicket haul and - if India finish the job here - a big role in two if India's last three Test wins.

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Ishant, Prasad, Chandimal and Thirimanne charged by ICC

India fast bowler Ishant Sharma and Sri Lankan players Dhammika Prasad, Dinesh Chandimal and Lahiru Thirimanne have been charged by the ICC for their roles in several angry exchanges during the fourth day of the SSC Test.

"Details to be announced after the conclusion of the Test," the ICC said on Twitter.

Ishant and Prasad faced off during the final session of the fourth day when Ishant, after being bounced several times by Prasad, smacked his helmet repeatedly while running down the pitch, as if asking the bowler to aim at his head. Chandimal walked over from slip, his shoulder brushing Ishant's, and exchanged words with the batsman.

Once India's innings ended and as Ishant ran back to the dressing room to get ready to bowl, Prasad followed him at a full sprint all the way back. These two incidents were the flash points of an ill-tempered passage of play that involved several stares and words being exchanged between Ishant and Sri Lanka's players.

There was further tension when Ishant gave Upul Tharanga an angry send-off and then went on to celebrate Chandimal's dismissal by striking the side of his own head repeatedly.

Ishant had been docked 65% of his match fee at the end of the second Test for send-offs to Thirimanne and Chandimal. Thirimanne, too, was fined 30% of his match fee for showing dissent at the umpire's decision during the second Test.

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Persistent India complete rare series win

You spend hours planning for outside edges and lbws, pegging away just outside off and breaking backs bowling bouncers, sweating, despairing, hoping for slip fielders to take the catches, praying the umpires agree with your lbw appeals, debating over DRS and no-balls, and then a Test turns on a reverse-sweep. Coming together at five down with 78 overs to survive, captain Angelo Mathews and debutant Kusal Perera kept India at bay for 38.1 overs and 135 runs, giving them an outside chance at an improbable win - still 144 away with 40 overs to go - but Perera fell to a reverse-sweep four overs before new ball and tea.

India's dying spirits - they were no doubt reminded of Johannesburg, Wellington and Galle over the last 20 months - found just the resuscitation they needed. With the first over with the new ball, Ishant Sharma, the much-maligned fast bowler, the hero of two of India's last three Test wins, and in the spotlight for his behaviour, removed Mathews for a valiant 110 to register his 200th Test wicket and pave the way for India's first away series win in four years and their first in Sri Lanka in 22 years. That he did so on cue and with a really full ball, two feats he has notoriously found difficult to muster over his career, will make the lbw sweeter.

There were important lessons in there. Ishant's eighth no-ball of the match, bowled in his first over of the day, had Mathews caught on 25 but India heard the heart-breaking call of no-ball even before they could go up in appeal. Later in the day, with nothing going for India and the sun beating down on their heads, Amit Mishra had Mathews plumb lbw on 93, except that umpire Nigel Llong thought the sound from the bat hitting the ground was an inside edge. Umpires are human, they make mistakes, which is why we have DRS in Test cricket. In Test cricket not involving India, that is. Had India opted even for an abridged DRS without relying on the predictive tracking technology, they would have won the series 3-0.

It was not all umpiring decisions that denied India the clean sweep. Dinesh Chandimal's counterattack in Galle played a big part in that grand comeback. One of the features of that comeback, which put India off their plans, was the reverse-sweep, a shot that Perera - who followed in Chandimal's footsteps to become only the second wicketkeeper to debut with twin fifties - played and will have people crucifying him for it. Perception of risk, though, has changed in modern cricket.

Perera is predominantly a right-hander, and used to bat right-handed until he decided to emulate Sanath Jayasuriya when he was around 10. He plays the reverse-sweep well, and Sri Lanka had got this far in the fourth innings by not letting India bowl the lines they wanted, by keeping the scoreboard moving. Just when, five overs before the new ball, India started to bowl at the pads of the batsmen with predominantly leg-side fields, Perera looked to keep the pressure on by exploiting the field. He made a sweet connection too, but found to perfection the man accustomed to getting out minutes before intervals, Rohit Sharma, at point.

It was until then a testing toil for India, who didn't do much wrong but found themselves helpless against a slowing-down pitch and resolute defence from Mathews and Perera. A mark of how well India bowled was in the first session when they got just two wickets, but always looked close to taking a wicket. For the first 90 minutes the quicks operated. Umesh Yadav got rid of Kaushal Silva, yet again with a bouncer, and even though he didn't take a wicket Ishant kept testing the batsmen and conceded just nine runs in six overs.

The introduction of spin brought no relief, and Lahiru Thirimanne, who had batted for 16.5 overs with Mathews, fell in R Ashwin's first over to an extraordinary catch. His slip catching still far from perfect, KL Rahul was a different fielder under the helmet. Thirimanne saw a length ball on the pads, closed the face, and bobbed a leading edge up above silly point. Rahul rose with the ball, stuck his right hand up, and took the rebound. He was to nearly manufacture another wicket later in the day.

Before that, though, Mathews and Perera reduced India to hoping for extraordinary events. In testing heat and on the final day of a long and disappointing home season, Mathews and Perera concentrated superbly, but also made sure bad balls didn't go unpunished and in-and-out fields yielded singles. While Mathews is temperamentally suited for such innings, Perera went against his natural game, striking at 66 runs per 100 balls, well short of his 87 in all first-class cricket. The moment of the partnership perhaps was when Perera left alone a ball from Mishra that pitched on off stump just to show the bowler he had picked the wrong'un, a delivery Perera's team-mates have struggled to pick against both Mishra and Yasir Shah.

For Mathews, who had come in for criticism for not having bowled his fair share of overs as the third seamer on a seaming pitch and in oppressive humidity, this century was so nearly redemption. His reluctance to bowl might have allowed India to run away with it on the fourth day, but the highest run-getter of the series pitched his tent and hardly made mistakes. There was one when he poked at that Ishant no-ball, but he began to leave really well, and whenever he defended he did so off the middle of the bat. When, on 67, he flicked Mishra away, looking for an easy single, only to see Rahul field it at short leg; Mathews' full-length lunge back into the crease summed up his determination.

With a history of inclement weather and poor light in the final session, this was getting too close for comfort for India. They were left needing something similarly extraordinary towards the end of the second session, and found it through the Perera reverse-sweep. The jury will forever remain out on that shot.

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Devendro Singh enters Asian Boxing Championships semis, qualifies for World Championships

Bangkok: Commonwealth Games silver-medalist L Devendro Singh (49kg) assured himself of a medal and a place in the upcoming World Championships by storming into the Asian Championships semi-final here on Tuesday.

Devendro, a silver-medalist from the previous edition of the event, out-punched Cornelis Kwangu Langu of Indonesia 3-0 in his quarter-final bout.

He will square off against top-seeded Uzbek Hasanboy Dusmatov in the semifinals. Tuesday's win assured Devendro of a place in the October World Championships -- the first qualifying event for next year's Rio Olympics.

"He boxed extremely well today. It was a very dominant performance and even though he faces a very tough opponent in the next round, he might just surprise everybody given the form that he is in," national coach Gurbax Singh Sandhu told PTI.

The pint-sized dynamo was his usual aggressive self, using his right uppercuts and hooks with precision in all three rounds.

What stood out today was the Manipuri's control. Known to be a tempo boxer, Devendro's aggression wasn't completely no holds barred.

The nimble-footed pugilist used the uppercuts to break Langu's shell guard and did the scoring with hooks and jabs to advance in the Championship.

In the evening session, defending champion Shiva Thapa (56kg) will take on Kyrgyzstan's Omurbek Malabekov, while former Commonwealth Games gold-medallist Manoj Kumar (64kg) will fight Uzbek Fazliddin Gaibnazarov in their respective quarterfinal bouts.

They would be followed by second seed Vikas Krishan (75kg) -- against Vietnam's Dinh Hoang Truong -- and Manpreet Singh (91kg) -- against second seed Rustam Tulaganov of Uzbekistan.

They would need to be in the medal rounds to be assured of World Championship berths.

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Australia's George Bailey dismisses reports of T20 retirement

Australian middle-order batsman George Bailey has dismissed reports of his retirement from international T20 cricket, Cricket Australia confirmed on their official website. Bailey who has not played for Australia in the format for more than a year insists that he will continue his push for an inclusion in the squad for the 2016 ICC World Twenty20 tournament.

The clarification on Bailey’s future came in the wake of a report by Fox Sports on Monday that Bailey, who stepped down as skipper of Australia’s T20 team last year, was calling time on his career in the format after he was not considered for selection in the one-off T20 against England at Cardiff, which the hosts won by 5 runs.

In fact, Bailey’s last appearance in a T20 international came against Bangladesh at the 2014 World Twenty20 where Australia were knocked out in the group stage. His prolonged absence from the squad had led to the rumours of his retirement but it has now been confirmed that Bailey is staying put and still harbours hopes of a comeback.

“George has spoken to the selectors and team management and stressed his desire to feature in the Twenty20 international squad in the future and to be part of the team that travels to the ICC World Twenty20 in India next year,” the statement released by Cricket Australia said.

“The selectors and team management are fully supportive of that and now it’s up to George to put the performances on the board to give himself the best chance of selection,” it further added.

The 32-year-old has a unique feat of captaining Australia in every match that he has played in the shortest format of the game. Bailey led his country to the 2012 World T20 semi-final and was also skipper of Australia’s limited overs side when Michael Clarke was injured.

Australia are ot scheduled to play any T20 international until January 2016 where they will take on visitors India for a three-match T20 series and will follow it up with a similar face-off against South Africa, again on their home turf.

So Bailey will be hoping to make the most of his opportunities in the ODI format starting with the five-match series against England which starts on Thursday. 

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