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Astle blasts
New Zealand to five wicket win over Sri Lanka
AUCKLAND—New Zealand waltzed to a five-wicket win over Sri Lanka in
their second and final Twenty20 cricket international here to level the
series 1-1. Veteran Nathan Astle was in blistering form with an unbeaten
40 off 37 balls, hitting the winning run with nine balls remaining.
Sri Lanka never fired after being sent into bat first on Tuesday,
falling 10 balls short of their allotted 20 overs as their innings came
to a halt at 115. It then became a formality for New Zealand to reach
the 116 required for victory, a target they achieved for the loss of
five wickets.
Brendon McCullum and Stephen Fleming started the run chase at a
rollicking pace, reaching 51 by the sixth over when Fleming drove at
Dilharo Fernando and was caught by Chamara Kapugedera at point for 17.
Kapugedera ran out McCullum for 28 to put the brakes on the New Zealand
scoring until Astle opened up, taking 15 off the penultimate over by
Ruchiro Perero to level the scores.
In the next over, Astle sneaked a single of the third ball by
Tillakaratne Dilshan to wrap up proceedings.
The tone of the game was set with the very first ball of the game when
television technology detected Upul Tharanga edge James Franklin to
wicketkeepr Peter McGlashan.
It was such a faint edge that the players did not even appeal, not that
it mattered much as Franklin bowled Tharanga two balls later.
By the 10th over, Sri Lanka were in deep trouble at 58 for six and if it
was not for a tail-end bash by Lasith Malinga and Fernando their innings
may well have ended much earlier.
Malinga’s 27 came from 19 balls and Fernando hit 21 from 14, whacking 44
in four overs for the ninth wicket before Fernando mishit an Astle full
toss and was caught by Andre Adams on the deep mid-wicket boundary.
Franklin was the most successful of the New Zealand bowlers with three
for 23, while for Sri Lanka Fernando backed up his fine knock with the
bat by taking three for 19.
Sri Lanka won the rain-affected first match in Wellington on Friday by
18 runs on the Duckworth-Lewis calculation method. The two teams play
the first of five one-day matches in Napier on Thursday.—Agencies
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