Overall it was a fine occasion for the visitors, who had left-arm
spinner Abdur Razzak becoming the first Bangladesh bowler to
aggregate
200 ODI wickets, as he picked up a five-wicket haul that helped drag
them back into the game after Sri Lanka's openers had built a fine
platform. The hosts didn't build appropriately on that excellent start,
ending up at 302 for 9 in their 50 overs when they looked on course for
much more.
Bangladesh began their innings in an equally good manner, with Mohammad
Ashraful and Anamul Haque adding 77 runs for the first wicket. But rain
delayed the chase for more than two hours, with the score at 78 for 1 in
13.4 overs. As play restarted at 10.20pm local time, as per
Duckworth-Lewis calculations, the visitors needed to score another 105
runs to win in the next 13.2 overs, and they did.
But things could have been different had Bangladesh wilted after Lasith
Malinga's final over. The two wickets he claimed in that over all but
sealed the series for the home side but Nasir charged at Thisara Perera
in the next, the penultimate over. He took 14 out of the 18 runs
required in that over, playing an easy square-cut and two proper slogs
over midwicket to snatch back the momentum. With two runs to win off
seven balls, Sohag Gazi top-edged one over wicketkeeper Kumar
Sangakkara, before turning and giving his batting partner a hug.
Promoted up to No. 5, Nasir witnessed madness at the other end as the
batsmen gave a chance to the calm Sri Lankan fielders and bowlers almost
every over. But he minded his own end, ensuring he was there when the
business end of the game came about.
The madness began when Jahurul tried to slog or take off for a suicidal
single every other ball, and it contributed to his dismissal. He was
batting well when not charging at the bowlers, but he thought it was a
situation that called for a change from first to fifth gear. The same
can be said about captain Mushfiqur Rahim, who was run out after Nasir
had pushed the ball towards the bowler Perera. His deputy Mahmudullah
was stringing together an important partnership with Nasir when he
decided to play a reverse-sweep off Sachithra Senanayake when the team
needed just 39 off 33 balls.
But the home side waited far too long to bring on the offspinner
Senanayake after the rain break, and that probably cost them.
Senanayake's angle from around the wicket gave the Bangladesh batsmen
too much to think about, and there were several moments when wickets
were just inches away. He took 2 for 26 from his six overs. Jeevan
Mendis hasn't bowled an over in the series and given the visitors'
weakness against legspinners, Mathews missed a trick there too.
It was a completely different game than the one played earlier in the
afternoon under brilliant sunshine. Sri Lanka posted a formidable target
with Tillakaratne Dilshan scoring his 16th ODI hundred, and second of
the series. Along with Kusal Perera, he added 116 for the first wicket
but the Bangladesh spinners gained some footing and it ultimately held
Sri Lanka back in the final ten overs too.
Perera scored his first ODI fifty in the typical manner that everyone
has been awed by so far in his short career. He went after the bowling
from the third over when he hit a straight six, and then continued to
pelt the pace bowlers who went for plenty in the first seven overs.
Dilshan went after the bowling in the two Powerplays but remained the
anchor through most of the innings. However, he found little support at
the other end.
The middle-order shuffle didn't help the hosts as none of Thisara
Perera, Mathews or Mendis could contribute as they were expected to. It
was left to Lahiru Thirimanne, who was pushed down the order, to bang
out two sixes in his quickfire 25, which took them past the 300-run
mark.
Razzak's five wickets apart, Mahmudullah and Sohag Gazi tightened things
up whenever they were asked to bowl. Mahmudullah made up for his poor
run of form with the bat, bowling his ten overs for 50 runs while Gazi
was once again accurate during most parts of his spell. And in the end,
it all added up to victory for Bangladesh.
---------www.cricinfo.com
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