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Chanderpaul clinches final-ball thriller
PORT OF SPAIN—Shivnarine Chanderpaul carried West Indies to a thrilling
final-ball one-wicket win in the first one-day international in Port of
Spain after being left needing 10 off two deliveries.
He responded with a straight drive before flicking a Chaminda Vaas full
toss over deep midwicket to send the Trinidad crowd into wild
celebrations. An enthralling match had swung one way then the other
before the final act. Sri Lanka recovered from 49 for 5 to post a
competitive total with Chamara Kapugedera hitting a career-best 95 in a
record sixth-wicket stand of 159 with Chamara Silva. West Indies were
well placed on 109 for 1 before Chris Gayle fell for 52, and when Dwayne
Bravo was run out the lower-order was exposed. Sri Lanka appeared to
have done enough, but Chanderpaul had other ideas.
He'd struggled to find the boundary, and the strike, in the final stages
but clipped a four off the final ball of the 49th over. Only three runs
came off the first four balls of the last over from Vaas before
Chanderpaul slammed a drive past mid-off, followed by the
match-clinching six which sailed over Mahela Jayawardene on the fence.
Jayawardene knew he wasn't going to haul in a last-ditch catch and
although he made his displeasure clear at the rare blemish from Vaas, on
reflection he'll find plenty to be pleased about from his team's
performance.
This series marks something of a watershed for Sri Lanka as they start
to build for the next World Cup. Muttiah Muralitharan has been rested,
something that will become the norm for non-major tournaments or series,
while Sanath Jayasuriya has been dropped to blood a young top order.
Throw in the absence of Lasith Malinga, Dilhara Fernando and Farveez
Maharoof through injury and this was Sri Lanka's weakest one-day bowling
attack for some time. After Vaas's 392 wickets, the next best was
Tillakaratne Dilshan with 45.
It didn't leave Jayawardene much to work with, especially when Ishara
Amerasinghe was taken to the cleaners and Kapugedera's bowling was less
successful than his batting. It was the debutant spinner, Ajantha Mendis,
who stood up with three wickets leaving West Indies dumbfounded by his
variations to suggest Sri Lanka may have unearthed someone to help ease
the burden on Muralitharan.
Mendis showed the calmness and control of a seasoned international
player, not a 23-year-old playing his first game. He broke through a
56-run stand between Gayle and Ramnaresh Sarwan, later adding Darren
Sammy and, one ball after being launched for six, claiming Jerome Taylor
in his further spells. Nuwan Kulasekera was another to answer his
captain's call with top-order wickets. Starting with Devon Smith he also
removed Sarwan and two balls later trapped Marlon Samuels lbw. Bravo
decided the best way to counter the flurry of wickets was with
aggression and joined the list of batsmen to take a liking to
Amerasinghe. He played his trademark pull off one leg through midwicket
before unfurling the shot of the match, a back-foot drive high over
extra-cover which struck one of the photographers a nasty blow on the
head.—Agencies |