England see Sri Lanka through by eight wickets at the Oval to win series 2-0

By Leonard Ratnayake in Kennington Oval, London

Aided with a fine display of batting to appraise the blameless bowling attack against the visiting Sri Lankan, the Englishmen sailed to victory unabated by eight wickets in their second One-day international encounter at the Kennington Oval, England on Thursday.

To somewhat a decent score by the Sri Lankan batsmen given their careworn form in the past matches, the bowling department, which have been admired for their recent progress, failed today to create any pressure on the English batters to show any competition.  On many occasions, not even the fielders showed much enthusiasm in grabbing or chasing after to the ball, except for the brilliant catch by Dananjaya de Silva to remove Jason Roy, who looked threatening after having scored 60 in 52 balls with 10 boundaries. Chamika Karunarathna was the wicket taker in the 18th over while the scorecard read 102 for two. Rarely in few moments, Sri Lankan fielders showed some agility and reflexion and hinting of what they could be if wanted.

Wanindu Hasaranga took the other wicket to fall in the 13th over getting an inside edge to claim the danger man Johnny Bairstow for 29. Hasaranga missed a second scalp when captain Kusal Janith Perera failed to convert a clean outside edge from Eoin Morgan to a dismissal. Morgan was reviewed for an Leg Before Wicket appeal in the 33rd over as Sri Lanka wasted all of them for unsuccessful reviews.

With many other options in hand, Perera kept on insisting on four fast bowlers trying them at both ends, before it was too late to bring in lucky boy of the day Dananjaya, but it was late introduction as the English batters had already settled and were about to poise victory. Notably Dasun Shanaka was hardly to be seen in the field. Joe Root and Eoin Morgan were unbeaten on 68 and 75 respectively.

Earlier in the day, much to the surprise yet again English captain insisted on bowling first after winning the toss against a struggling Sri Lankan batting line up, as the first match ended up as a low scoring affair with many overs to spare.

Incidentally, Sri Lanka were three down for 12 in the fourth over as many spectators were still waiting in long queues in numbers with doubts of getting in before the match was over as England had relaxed rules on crowd capacity.

At 21 for four in the seventh over, there were inquiries for stats on the lowest innings score. Yet again it was expected to be another short-lived game. All four specialist batsmen including captain Kusal Janith Perera were back in the pavilion with Sam Curran charging early on with the new ball backed by David Willy.

Playing under pressure, Dananjaya de Silva showed his class with some clinical strokeplay in a timely innings while Wanindu Hasaranga backed him up by playing some sensible cricket to build up a partnership by rotating the strike to the most experienced.

Hasaranga’s growth in the world ranking could be complimented for his commitment for improvement and evolution as a matured player, who reads the pulse of the game in that moment. He was spotted taking some extra time for fitness training in the ground during the tour to suggest that the kid in the block is focused on a target while few others were roaming in streets.

All of Hasaranga’s hard work to resist an English control was wasted as he tried to pull Sam Curran to finish his patient innings of 26 in 49 balls which saw only two boundaries rather unusual for the pinch hitter. He added 65 for the fifth wicket with Dananjaya de Silva, who anchored Sri Lanka’s recovery.

De Silva’s magnificent innings ended in disappointment as he half hooked a short ball from David Willy into deep square fielder Joe Root to deny a much-needed century for Sri Lanka in this tour of England. He was out for 91 but made sure that Sri Lanka was heading for a decent score as he partnered Dasun Shanaka for 98 runs for the sixth wicket.

Shanaka too was unlucky to miss his half-century as he tried to accelerate Sri Lanka’s innings to a formidable score in the 45th over being caught at the boundary off Willy who took four wickets. Sam Curran finished his 10 overs claiming a five for 48.

The two teams will meet at Bristol Cricket Grounds on Sunday for their final clash of the tour, as Sri  Lanka will be heading home to play India while England will host Pakistan.

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*


This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.