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Jayawardene's century puts Sri Lanka ahead
By Ted Corbett
COLOMBO, MARCH 25. A sublime innings from Mahela Jayawardene,
full of delicate touches and late cuts made with the full blade
of the bat, gave Sri Lanka a total of 226 for six in the second
one-day international against England at the sweaty Premadesa
Stadium tonight. It was an innings fit to win a series and crown
a sequence against England that goes 61, 101, 78, 71, 11, 3, 101
not out; a regal procession of beautifully crafted scores.
What more is there to say about Jayawardene, save that he bears
the signs of greatness in every felicitious stroke. Like all the
great players he knows the value of the long slow shot down the
vee; but he is also capable of the rustic pull, the bludgeon that
smacks the ball hard through point and the cudgel that carries it
out to deep mid wicket or, in the derisory term used by the
English pro, into the no-man's land at cow corner, or slog alley.
This afternoon we saw another side to this stylish run-machine.
By the 40th over he was limping and we thought it might just be
the draining, soggy warmth and a touch of cramp.
By the 45th he was pulled up short, dragging himself for a single
and Russel Arnold came on as his runner. At this point
Jayawardene showed that he has either great courage or the greed
that is an added extra for the high-class batsman. He stayed at
the crease and, using little or no footwork, drilled the ball to
the boundary so that he not only took Sri Lanka from 180 to 226
in the last five overs but completed his own century off the
final ball of the innings.
You would not expect to see a finer innings in any one-day game;
it is a shame the pitch begrudged every run. What is the point in
bringing thousands of spectators thousands of miles to watch a
one-day game played on a pitch that is too slow to catch cold.
Stroke play was possible but only by the most patient batsman and
once Sanath Jaysuriya was out second ball - bowled off an inside
edge by Darren Gough - we knew that this would be an uphill
struggle rather than a joy ride.
Ramesh Kaluwitharana was caught off Alan Mullally's second ball
at 31 and then it was down to Marvan Atapattu and Jayawardene to
give the scoreline substance.
Atapattu has survived the assault by television commentator which
followed his double hundred at Galle and his subsequent failures
and his 57 was the major part of 88 for the third wicket.
He is a considerable part of the Sri Lankan line-up whatever
those opinionated English voices say and, since he must have
heard what they said about his footwork, his defence and his
limited ability, he has shown determination beyond the ordinary
to continue. The rest did nothing except lend their support to
Jayawardene but by the end of the innings it seemed that a 2-0
series success was in the Sri Lankan pocket
Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Flintoff both learned by the tenth
over - back in the hutch at 35 - that the lack of pace in the
pitch could trap anyone. Trescothick pulled a short ball straight
up in the air and Flintoff gave Murali, at mid-on, another chance
to show his acrobatic skills although, in contrast to his
Dambulla dive, he had to turn an easy catch into a difficult one
to prove that the Big Top is his natural home.
Graeme Hick went for 11 after another listless innings, the
captain Graham Thorpe dabbed a dozen and then tried one dab too
many and was caught at cover. Alec Stewart past fifty in the 31st
over but at the final drinks interval with 15 overs left 110 were
still needed.
Stewart was brilliantly caught, diving goalkeeper fashion, at
mid-wicket by Jayawardene whose limp had vanished as completely
as England's victory hopes. Two balls later Craig White was run
out for nought, proving no man can be in luck for a whole winter.
Michael Vaughan was caught in the deep off Muttiah Muralitharan
for 25 with 80 needed off the final eight overs, Robert Croft
fell two runs later, Andrew Caddick at 157 and with the fireworks
already popping Alan Mullally run out on 158 so that Sri Lanka
won by 68 runs and the series by 2-0, a consolation for their
Test defeat and a disappointment for England after its winter of
success.
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