Cricket: Sri Lanka withstand Ali and Bopara

Reviewing existing International Cricket seems a bit meaningless in light of the tragic death of gifted Australian Phillip Hughes.   However, it is in their performances that the international cricket community can continue to show their respects, and in several performances in the first one day international between Sri Lanka and England, shades of Hughes’ quality strokeplay were evident.

Most notably, was Moeen Ali’s effort (we predicted his heroics earlier in the week). His 87-ball 119 was littered with boundaries, class and confidence. His innings further outlined his importance to England’s Cricket World Cup campaign, especially as Alastair Cook and Ian Bell continue to struggle to improve strike rates.

Ravi Bopara aptly assisted the England cause with a rapid 65 late in the piece. He was last out miscuing a leg side whack, giving Sri Lanka a 25 run win. Bopara has often been left carrying the baby of late, and is vastly improving as a finisher. Part of his development has been the ability to clear the rope rather than simply placing balls and hitting gaps. His power will be crucial on the grounds of New Zealand and Australia at the Cricket World Cup.

Sri Lanka’s first up effort setting a target was built around a balanced team effort. Three players (Dilshan, Jayawardene, and Kusal Perera) scored half centuries, while others (Matthews, Jeevan Mendis, and Thirimanne) made handy contributions at better than a run a ball. The 302 total was imposing; no team had chased more than 285 to win at Premadasa Stadium.

Making matters even tougher for the geezers was a quality spin attack that stifled the likes of Ben Stokes, Chris Woakes and James Tredwell as they sought quick runs at the end. Stokes in particular laboured to 16 off 27 before being stumped looking to find some much needed momentum. Woakes followed in the same suit leaving England’s cricket coaches needing to quickly find a plan to mask the middle order’s limitations against spin.

The win, Sri Lanka’s first since leaving for India to replace the West Indies in a one day international series, will provide them with a welcome boost, while England still search for a World Cup hero that single handedly win games on the big stage (notwithstanding Ali’s fantastic contribution in this game).

One rather interesting cricket anomaly occurred in the first over of England’s run chase. Captain Cook was adjudged LBW twice before successfully reviewing both decisions (both going over the top). Unfortunately for Cook, DRS form is not a selection team consideration.

Cricket: England’s path to World Cup begins in Colombo

England’s cricket stars are in desperate need of some game time. For one, they could use a tune up before next year’s World Cup, and secondly, they need the opportunity to prove they’re a strong collective unit and Kevin Pieterson’s nonsense was exactly that.

KP has dominated cricket discussion since the end of England’s summer of cricket, so the opportunity to showcase skills on the pitch will be welcomed with open arms by their World Cup hopefuls.

They head to Sri Lanka, in the middle of rain season, to compete in seven relatively meaningless ODI’s. The series, which is designed presumably to test combinations, comes just at the right time for both teams.

Sri Lanka need confidence after taking a hammering in India, while England just need more experience for the likes of Ali, Gurney, Jordan and Stokes.

The Last Time These Two Met

The teams actually met relatively recently. In May and June of this year Sri Lanka won a five match series 3-2, playing some quality cricket along the way. The series feature four completed innings scores under 150 and only one of over 300. Alastair Cook was under intense pressure after losing the previous series; it will be interesting if he is if they suffer a first up loss here.

The Teams

Sri Lanka (likely): 1 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 2 Kusal Perera, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (wkt), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Angelo Mathews (capt), 6 Lahiru Thirimanne, 7 Jeevan Mendis, 8 Thisara Perera, 9 Dhammika Prasad, 10 Rangana Herath, 11 Shaminda Eranga

England (likely): 1 Moeen Ali, 2 Alastair Cook (capt), 3 Ian Bell, 4 Joe Root, 5 Eoin Morgan, 6 Jos Buttler (wkt), 7 Ben Stokes, 8 Chris Woakes, 9 Chris Jordan, 10 James Tredwell, 11 Harry Gurney

The Key Players

Moeen Ali – Originally entered International cricket as a batsman who could bowl a bit. Now he rightfully commands respect as a front line spinner. Not only will he be a handful on the skidding pitches of Sri Lanka, but also expect him to score big runs. Comfortably one of the better players of spin in the English set-up.

Angelo Matthews – What a year Matthews has had. In both Test cricket and ODI cricket, the Sri Lankan captain has been epic. Often digging his side out of a whole, or if not, accelerating near the end of the innings, his contributions have been stunning to watch. Fresh off a 139 against India he should do well again.

The Odds*

Sri Lanka – $1.55

England – $2.45

*International Cricket odds courtesy of Unibet.

The Prediction

It’s always difficult to predict the winners when Duckworth-Lewis gets involved, and he definitely will at some stage in this series. England look appetizing at that price, so I’m picking them to sneak an early win while Sri Lanka’s Indian hangover continues.