Friday, March 18, 2011

SL vs NZ: Sri Lanka thump New Zealand by 112 runs

MUMBAI: Sri Lanka showed why the World Cup favourites tag sits pretty next to them as they thrashed New Zealand by 112 runs in the day-night clash at the Wankhede Stadium on Friday.

The result enabled them to top Group A with nine points from six games. Sri Lanka now can't finish lower than second spot in the table and that too is possible only if Pakistan beat Australia in Colombo on Saturday.

More than the win, what will delight the co-hosts is the fact that their key players are back in top form ahead of the quarterfinals. After winning the toss and batting first, the 1996 champs were led by an inspired ton from skipper Kumar Sangakkara (111, 128 balls, 11x4, 2x6) and a stylish 66 (90 balls, 6x4) from vice-captain Mahela Jayawardene. Their 145-run third-wicket alliance enabled them to recover from a shaky 19 for 2 in 4.3 overs to a match-winning total of 265-9.

With the ball, Muttiah Muralitharan showed the spin and drift of old times and mystery spinner Ajantha Mendis too proved difficult to negotiate as New Zealand, going well at 82-2 at one stage, just collapsed in a heap as a result of the M&M magic.

The game belonged to the Sri Lankan skipper though. He has been in great touch right through the World Cup and Friday's 111 saw the southpaw top the run-getter's tally with 363 at a Bradmanesque average of 121. He was also brilliant behind the stumps, effecting a smart stumping off the bowling of Muralitharan to get rid of the young Kane Williamson.

Apart from scoring runs, it was the manner in which he took the responsibility of guiding the innings after openers Upul Tharanga (unfortunately run out at the bowler's end) and Tillakaratne Dilshan were packed off early. The way he controlled the powerplay overs was educative, especially for teams like India, who tend to try and do too much in them.

It was Sangakkara's first World Cup hundred and his first ton in 63 ODIs after his hundred against Bangladesh in June 2008 in the Asia Cup at Karachi.
Murali injures knee, hamstring

While Sri Lanka were thrilled after their 112-run shellacking of New Zealand in their last Group A encounter of the World Cup at the Wankhede Stadium on Friday, they were a touch worried over key bowler Muttiah Muralitharan's fitness. Murali injured his knee and hamstring while going for an impossible second run and got run out. Man of the match and Sri Lankan skipper Kumar Sangakkara, though, appeared confident about Murali's availability for the quarterfinal next Sunday. "He will be fine. We are heading back home now and it's important that we give him a rest. He has hurt his knee and hamstring, but he should be fine for the quarters." That Murali picked up 4-25 in eight overs despite his injury proves that he will be fine with some rest.

Ever since he took the charge of the Sri Lankan team from Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sangakkara has believed in leading from the front. The 33-year-old has been in golden touch in this tournament and he carried that form against New Zealand. He turned out to be a Man Friday for the Lankans. It was his first century since June 2008 and came after a long gap of 63 innings. Sangakkara's 11th hundred may not be a fluent one but he will cherish this as it came in a winning cause. It was a perfect One-day knock from the Sri Lankan captain, who fought adversities with utmost calmness and then showed his natural flair. His 128-ball 111 contained 12 fours and two big sixes.

How many times in their illustrious careers, Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene have stepped up and taken Sri Lanka to safety. Even they would have forgotten the counting! However, for spectators, it's always a treat to watch these two stalwarts batting together. On Friday, Sri Lanka had lost early wickets of in-form Tillakaratne Dilshan and Upul Tharanga with just 19 runs on the board. The Wankhede wicket was offering some assistance to the bowlers. The duo put their heads down; gave due respect to good balls and after getting their eye in, dispatched bad deliveries with class and authority. Their 145-run third-wicket stand set up the game for Sri Lanka, who posted enough runs for their bowlers to defend.

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Federer reaches semis at Indian Wells

INDIAN WELLS: World No. 2 Roger Federer defeated Swiss compatriot and doubles partner Stanislas Wawrinka 6-3, 6-4 in the quarterfinals of the Indian Wells ATP tennis tournament on Friday.

Three-time former winner Federer advanced to the semifinals where he will face Serbian Novak Djokovic who defeated Frenchman Richard Gasquet 6-2, 6-4.

"I have had a wonderful hard court swing," Federer said. "I had a good start to the year, a good six months. I am excited, pretty healthy and really motivated."

Federer set up match point with a thundering forehand down the line then clinched the win when Wawrinka punched a backhand wide ending the 64-minute match on centre court.

The Swiss pair are also teaming up in the doubles draw. No sooner had they finished their singles match then they had to get ready to return to the main stadium court to play doubles against Spaniard's Rafael Nadal and Marc Lopez as the first match on the night session.

In their only previous meeting this year, Federer crushed Wawrinka in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open 6-1, 6-3, 6-3. He eventually lost to Djokovic in three sets in the semifinals and Djokovic went on to win the title.

"Wimbledon wasn't that bad," Federer said on Friday.

Federer's win not only sets his first semifinal match against third seeded Djokovic since the Australian Open but the outcome will determine the number two ranking in the world. Federer has a 13-8 career record against Djokovic.

World No. 3 Djokovic has been blitzing his opponents the last few months and is currently on an 18-match win streak dating back to last year's Davis Cup final.

Saina avenges loss to Eriko, reaches quarters in Swiss Open

NEW DELHI: Saina Nehwal avenged her All England quarterfinal loss to Eriko Hirose with a thrilling three-game victory over the Japanese in the second round of the Wilson Swiss Open Super Series in Switzerland.

Second seed Saina beat All England finalist Eriko 21-15 17-21 21-11 in a match which lasted close to an hour to set up a clash with sixth seed Bulgarian Petya Nedelcheva in the quarterfinals.

Nedelcheva defeated qualifier Karin Schnaase of Germany 21-12 21-11 last night.

Eriko had beaten Saina in the quarterfinals of the All England Championships last week and the Japanese got off to a good start in the first game in Switzerland.

She opened up a four-point lead at 9-4 in the second round but Saina caught up with her and moved ahead to pocket the opener.

Her back against the wall, Eriko came back strongly in the second game and moved neck-and-neck with Saina before surging ahead from 17-16 to equalise.

In the decider, world number four Saina didn't give any chance to her rival and shut the match with ruthless precision moving to 13-5 first and then holding on to it as Eriko crumbled.

In men's singles, Ajay Jayaram also reached the quarterfinals with a hard-fought 15-21 23-21 21-19 victory over 16th seed Hans-Kristian Vittinghus of Denmark in the third round last night. He will take on fourth seed Sung Hwan Park of Korean in the next round.

Rupesh Kumar and Sanave Thomas beat sixth seeds Mads Conrad-Petersen and Jonas Rasmussen of Denmark 17-21 21-15 21-15 in the men's doubles category.

The Indian duo will next take on fourth seeds Chieh Min Fang and Sheng Mu Lee of Chinese Taipei in the quarterfinals.

In women's doubles, there was disappointment in store for Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa.

The Commonwealth Games gold medallist lost 16-21 12-21 to seventh seeds Shizuka Matsuo and Mami Naito in the pre-quarterfinals last night.

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Tendulkar eyes ton of tons in World Cup group finale

CHENNAI: Sachin Tendulkar can complete another landmark on Sunday by hitting his 100th international hundred as India tackle West Indies in the World Cup's final group match.

Both sides have yet to make sure of their quarterfinal places, although the qualifying picture from Group B will become a lot clearer after South Africa, who are already through, face hopefuls Bangladesh in Dhaka on Saturday.

As well as the qualification picture, most of the 38,000 fans at the Chidambaram Stadium will be anticipating Tendulkar's 100th international hundred.

The India star moved to 99 centuries (51 in Tests and 48 in one-day internationals) with a majestic innings of 111 in his side's previous group match against South Africa.

However, even a 'Sachin special' was not enough to prevent a three-wicket defeat by South Africa where India, on a belting batting pitch in Nagpur, contrived to lose their last nine wickets for just 29 runs as they slumped from 267 for one to 296 all out.

"When you hit those big shots, you tend to forget that you are playing for the country and not for the crowd," India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni said.

Runs are set to be harder to come by in Chennai, where no batsman managed a fifty on a typically bowler-friendly pitch during England's nailbiting 18-run win over the West Indies on Thursday.

The good news for India is that West Indies have no equivalent of Proteas' fast bowler Dale Steyn.

But their batsmen, who will be expected to bat far more sensibly in the powerplay after collectively losing their heads against South Africa, will do well not to under-estimate a youthful Windies attack that troubled England.

Leg-spinner Devendra Bishoo took three wickets on his one-day international debut while lively seamer Andre Russell almost produced a match-winning all-round performance with four wickets and a dashing 49.

Had the West Indies, who lost their last four wickets for just three runs on Thursday, won both they and India would now be in the quarterfinals.

However, West Indies coach Ottis Gibson was encouraged by much of the England match, saying: "We are starting to show the resilience we are going to need to beat teams like England and India on Sunday and the big boys."

For India, the debate over whether to play off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin is reaching a key phase.

Dhoni has been steadfast - his critics would say stubborn - in support of struggling leg-spinner Piyush Chawla.

Ashwin, praised by Dhoni for his mental toughness and stability, has yet to bowl a single over at the World Cup.

But Sunday's match is taking place on Ashwin's home ground and there will be those in the Indian camp arguing that it is better to bowl the 24-year-old this weekend than risk playing him 'cold' in a quarterfinal.

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SL vs NZ: Kiwis need 266 runs to win against Sri Lanka

MUMBAI: Kumar Sangakkara led from the front to hit a fine 111 as Sri Lanka posted 265-9 in Friday's World Cup clash against New Zealand which was marred by an unsavoury catch controversy.

The Sri Lankan skipper also put on 145 runs for the third wicket with his deputy Mahela Jayawardene (66) to pull his team out of early trouble in the day-night match at the Wankhede Stadium.

The two teams have already made it to the quarterfinals and the result of this game will determine their final Group A positions.

Sri Lanka lost opener Upul Tharanga early when he was run out in the third over after Sangakkara won the toss and elected to bat in hot and humid conditions.

Tharanga backed up too far and Tim Southee (3-63) managed to get his hand to a straight drive from Tillakaratne Dilshan before the ball rolled on to hit the stumps.

Dilshan followed his partner to the pavilion soon, lobbing a simple catch to Jacob Oram off Southee while trying to go for an ambitious shot on the leg side, plunging Sri Lanka to 19-2.

Jayawardene got embroiled in a controversy early in his innings.

The former captain tried to play a defensive shot in the 24th over against off-spinner Nathan McCullum but ended up chipping the ball back to the bowler.

McCullum dived and managed to get his right hand under the ball to cap what looked like a stunning effort.

But even as McCullum broke into a celebration, TV umpire Amish Saheba was called in and he ruled it not out.

A furious McCullum and Kiwi skipper Ross Taylor angrily protested the decision with on-field umpire Asad Rauf.

Jayawardene, then on 26, hit six fours in a dour 90-ball innings before being adjudged trapped leg before off Southee, a decision he asked to be reviewed but in vain.

Sangakkara played a captain's innings, racing to his 11th century and completing 9,000 one-day international runs in the process, the fourth Sri Lankan player to the mark.

This was Sangakkara's first three-figure score in 63 innings, having gone without a ton since June 2008.

He was bowled by McCullum in the 42nd over after facing 128 balls and hitting 12 fours and two sixes.

Angelo Mathews provided the late impetus to the innings with an unbeaten 41 off 35 balls.