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Live Cricket Score, Commonwealth Bank Series, 12th Match: Australia v Sri Lanka at Melbourne, Mar 2, 2012

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Sri Lanka entered this match with their fate in their own hands. It turns out those are pretty safe hands. Not even a hat-trick from Daniel Christian, a four-wicket comeback from James Pattinson, a captain’s half-century from Shane Watson or a remarkable, late, fighting fifty from David Hussey could prevent Sri Lanka from winning the last qualifying match at the MCG. Lasith Malinga led a strong bowling performance to complete Sri Lanka’s nine-run victory, which propelled them into the tri-series finals.

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No doubt Australia were disappointed, for they must now enter the best-of-three deciders knowing they have lost their previous three games to their Sri Lankan opponents. But India would have been even more gutted. An Australia win would have sent Sri Lanka packing and secured India a place in the finals. Instead, MS Dhoni’s men will now fly home at the weekend, ending a disheartening three-month tour.

Sri Lanka, on the other hand, have a chance to win a tri-series in Australia for the first time at their ninth attempt. Their total of 238 at the MCG, set up by half-centuries from Dinesh Chandimal, Kumar Sangakkara and Lahiru Thirimanne, seemed a fraction skinny on what looked like a reasonable batting surface. But despite losing Thisara Perera to injury during his first over, Sri Lanka’s total proved defendable with Malinga in their attack.

Not that it was straightforward. Hussey’s run-a-ball 74 nearly snatched victory for Australia. They needed 10 runs from the final over, bowled by Kulasekara, but Hussey holed out to long-off from the first ball of it and Sri Lanka celebrated. They had been on top early, when Australia were 3 for 26 after Malinga and Kulasekara troubled the top order, but then Australia fought back.

Batting at first drop, the stand-in captain Watson – Michael Clarke was not risked ahead of the finals – led Australia’s fightback with a solid, composed 65 and he had good support from Michael Hussey (29). But once their 87-run stand was broken, Australia struggled again.

Michael Hussey has proven a handy partnership breaker with his slow-medium bowling recently and this time he was on the receiving end of a similar ploy, as Thirimanne drew an edge behind that was well taken by Sangakkara. It was Thirimanne’s first international wicket and his second in all List A cricket, and importantly for Sri Lanka it was followed a few overs later by the departure of Watson.

Watson had brought up his half-century from his 61st delivery with a straight drive off Thirimanne and he had been strong when the bowlers had strayed too straight, but he was in no particular hurry. His innings, an encouraging one in his second match back from a long injury lay-off, ended when he played all around a fast, straight Malinga ball that knocked middle stump out of the ground.

David Hussey kept Australia afloat and did a fine job but his partners gradually dwindled. His fifth half-century of the series shot him to the top of the tournament runs tally but it wasn’t quite enough for Australia, whose innings started with the loss of both David Warner and Matthew Wade, who had been reunited as the opening pair. Warner (6) slapped Malinga to short cover, a strange shot to a ball that sat up on him, and Wade was lbw for 9 to Kulasekara, before Peter Forrest tickled a catch behind for 2 when he tried to cut Malinga.

It was just the start Sri Lanka needed in the field after posting 238. Their three half-centuries at the top of the order made for a lopsided scorecard as the lower order struggled, especially against Christian, who collected a career-best 5 for 31 and wrote himself into the record books as the first player from Australia since Brett Lee in 2003 to take an ODI hat-trick, and the fourth overall alongside Lee, Bruce Reid and Anthony Stuart.

Christian was mobbed by his team-mates after completing the feat, which began when Thisara Perera skied a ball and was taken at deep midwicket by Michael Hussey, who caught the ball inside play, tossed it up before he fell over the rope and completed the catch after stepping back in. The ball had gone so high that the batsmen had crossed twice, leaving the new man Sachithra Senanayake on strike instead of the established Thirimanne.

Senanayake was lbw first ball and replays indicated the ball would have gone on to hit leg stump. The same could not have been said for the next delivery. Rod Tucker raised his finger to give Kulasekara lbw but the ball appeared to be sliding down leg side and replays confirmed it was a poor decision. Christian didn’t care. It was a hat-trick, and they are rare.

Thirimanne (51) was good enough to help Sri Lanka survive their quota of overs, falling only in the penultimate over when he played on while trying to paddle sweep Pattinson. Rangana Herath remained 14 not out and Malinga was bowled off the last ball of the innings to give Christian his fifth wicket.

By batting out their time Sri Lanka ensured that the efforts of Sangakkara and Chandimal were not wasted. They had put on 123 for the third wicket and Chandimal was the more aggressive partner. He continued his good series and brought up his fifty off his 47th delivery with a glanced single off Clint McKay, before Sangakkara registered his in the same over from his 79th ball. Throughout his innings, Sangakkara had been in no hurry and didn’t score a boundary until his 55th delivery, when he punched Ben Hilfenhaus forward of point.

His runs came largely through ones and twos and it was an important stabilising performance after Sri Lanka were 2 for 17. Sangakkara fell for 64 when he top-edged a pull off Pattinson, and his departure slowed Chandimal down. Chandimal was out for 75 from 84 when he too was beaten by the pace of Pattinson, lobbing a ball to mid-off.

Chandimal had been willing to play his strokes and he brought the crowd to life with a muscular hit that sailed straight over the head of the bowler Christian and crashed into the sightscreen. Another followed off the spin of Xavier Doherty, over long-on this time, and Chandimal spent most of his time hovering around the run-a-ball mark.

As it turned out, the Chandimal-Sangakkara combination was just what Sri Lanka needed after Mahela Jayawardene was run out early thanks to a poor call by Tillakaratne Dilshan, who followed by edging Pattinson behind. At that point, Sri Lanka were wobbling. But they will enter the finals with stability, and form against Australia, on their side.

Sri Lanka 238 (50 ov)

Australia 229 (49.1 ov)

Sri Lanka won by 9 runs

  • Commonwealth Bank Series – 12th match
  • ODI no. 3253 | 2011/12 season
  • Played at Melbourne Cricket Ground
  • 2 March 2012 – day/night (50-over match)
Sri Lanka innings (50 overs maximum) R M B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal DPMD Jayawardene* run out (DJ Hussey) 5 7 6 1 0 83.33
View dismissal TM Dilshan c †Wade b Pattinson 9 20 16 2 0 56.25
View dismissal KC Sangakkara† c Forrest b Pattinson 64 113 93 3 0 68.81
View dismissal LD Chandimal c McKay b Pattinson 75 145 84 3 2 89.28
View dismissal HDRL Thirimanne b Pattinson 51 96 59 2 0 86.44
View dismissal AD Mathews c Doherty b Christian 5 10 8 0 0 62.50
View dismissal NLTC Perera c MEK Hussey b Christian 5 11 7 0 0 71.42
View dismissal SMSM Senanayake lbw b Christian 0 3 1 0 0 0.00
View dismissal KMDN Kulasekara lbw b Christian 0 1 1 0 0 0.00
HMRKB Herath not out 14 27 21 0 1 66.66
View dismissal SL Malinga b Christian 2 3 4 0 0 50.00
Extras (b 2, lb 4, w 2) 8
Total (all out; 50 overs) 238 (4.76 runs per over)
Fall of wickets 1-10 (Jayawardene, 1.4 ov), 2-17 (Dilshan, 4.6 ov), 3-140 (Sangakkara, 28.6 ov), 4-186 (Chandimal, 38.5 ov), 5-195 (Mathews, 41.1 ov), 6-206 (Perera, 43.3 ov), 7-206 (Senanayake, 43.4 ov), 8-206 (Kulasekara, 43.5 ov), 9-235 (Thirimanne, 48.6 ov), 10-238 (Malinga, 49.6 ov)
Bowling O M R W Econ
View wickets JL Pattinson 10 0 51 4 5.10 (1w)
BW Hilfenhaus 7 0 29 0 4.14
CJ McKay 8 0 39 0 4.87 (1w)
DJ Hussey 1 0 6 0 6.00
View wickets DT Christian 9 0 31 5 3.44
SR Watson 7 0 28 0 4.00
XJ Doherty 8 0 48 0 6.00
Australia innings (target: 239 runs from 50 overs) R M B 4s 6s SR
View dismissal MS Wade† lbw b Kulasekara 9 15 12 1 0 75.00
View dismissal DA Warner c Perera b Malinga 6 13 6 1 0 100.00
View dismissal SR Watson* b Malinga 65 119 83 5 0 78.31
View dismissal PJ Forrest c †Sangakkara b Malinga 2 8 9 0 0 22.22
View dismissal MEK Hussey c †Sangakkara b Thirimanne 29 78 56 3 0 51.78
View dismissal DJ Hussey c Dilshan b Kulasekara 74 121 74 4 1 100.00
View dismissal DT Christian c & b Senanayake 3 15 8 0 0 37.50
View dismissal JL Pattinson c Dilshan b Herath 12 26 23 1 0 52.17
View dismissal CJ McKay run out (Dilshan/†Sangakkara) 6 8 8 0 0 75.00
View dismissal XJ Doherty c Dilshan b Malinga 7 32 15 0 0 46.66
BW Hilfenhaus not out 0 7 2 0 0 0.00
Extras (w 15, nb 1) 16
Total (all out; 49.1 overs) 229 (4.65 runs per over)
Fall of wickets 1-16 (Warner, 2.5 ov), 2-18 (Wade, 3.1 ov), 3-26 (Forrest, 4.6 ov), 4-113 (MEK Hussey, 24.6 ov), 5-140 (Watson, 30.6 ov), 6-151 (Christian, 33.5 ov), 7-178 (Pattinson, 40.3 ov), 8-187 (McKay, 42.5 ov), 9-226 (Doherty, 48.2 ov), 10-229 (DJ Hussey, 49.1 ov)
Bowling O M R W Econ
View wickets SL Malinga 10 0 49 4 4.90 (3w)
View wickets KMDN Kulasekara 9.1 1 38 2 4.14 (1w)
AD Mathews 4 0 8 0 2.00
View wicket SMSM Senanayake 10 0 50 1 5.00 (2w)
NLTC Perera 0.5 0 8 0 9.60
View wicket HDRL Thirimanne 4.1 0 25 1 6.00
View wicket HMRKB Herath 10 0 43 1 4.30 (1nb, 2w)
TM Dilshan 1 0 8 0 8.00 (1w)
Match details
Toss Sri Lanka, who chose to bat
Points Sri Lanka 4, Australia 0
Player of the match LD Chandimal (Sri Lanka)
Umpires Asad Rauf (Pakistan) and RJ Tucker
TV umpire SD Fry
Match referee BC Broad (England)
Reserve umpire AJ Barrow
Match notes
  • Sri Lanka innings
  • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 – 10.0 (Mandatory – 36 runs, 2 wickets)
  • Sri Lanka: 50 runs in 14.1 overs (85 balls), Extras 1
  • Powerplay 2: Overs 15.1 – 20.0 (Bowling side – 27 runs, 0 wicket)
  • 3rd Wicket: 50 runs in 69 balls (KC Sangakkara 29, LD Chandimal 24, Ex 0)
  • Drinks: Sri Lanka – 71/2 in 17.0 overs (KC Sangakkara 32, LD Chandimal 24)
  • Sri Lanka: 100 runs in 21.5 overs (131 balls), Extras 3
  • LD Chandimal: 50 off 47 balls (2 x 4, 2 x 6)
  • KC Sangakkara: 50 off 79 balls (2 x 4)
  • 3rd Wicket: 100 runs in 118 balls (KC Sangakkara 48, LD Chandimal 50, Ex 2)
  • Sri Lanka: 150 runs in 32.2 overs (194 balls), Extras 3
  • Drinks: Sri Lanka – 152/3 in 33.0 overs (LD Chandimal 63, HDRL Thirimanne 8)
  • Powerplay 3: Overs 35.1 – 40.0 (Batting side – 26 runs, 1 wicket)
  • Sri Lanka: 200 runs in 42.2 overs (254 balls), Extras 5
  • HDRL Thirimanne: 50 off 57 balls (2 x 4)
  • Innings Break: Sri Lanka – 238/10 in 50.0 overs (HMRKB Herath 14)
  • Australia innings
  • Powerplay 1: Overs 0.1 – 10.0 (Mandatory – 41 runs, 3 wickets)
  • Australia: 50 runs in 13.4 overs (82 balls), Extras 10
  • Powerplay 2: Overs 15.1 – 20.0 (Bowling side – 36 runs, 0 wicket)
  • Drinks: Australia – 68/3 in 16.5 overs (SR Watson 33, MEK Hussey 8)
  • 4th Wicket: 50 runs in 80 balls (SR Watson 28, MEK Hussey 15, Ex 8)
  • Australia: 100 runs in 21.5 overs (131 balls), Extras 10
  • SR Watson: 50 off 61 balls (5 x 4)
  • Drinks: Australia – 144/5 in 33.0 overs (DJ Hussey 19, DT Christian 2)
  • Australia: 150 runs in 33.3 overs (202 balls), Extras 12
  • Powerplay 3: Overs 35.1 – 40.0 (Batting side – 19 runs, 0 wicket)
  • Australia: 200 runs in 44.1 overs (266 balls), Extras 15
  • DJ Hussey: 50 off 58 balls (4 x 4)
  • Attendance: 28,091

So much has changed in the course of an innings. Had India failed in their most unlikely pursuit of 321 inside 40 overs to earn a win and a bonus point in Hobart, Australia’s final round robin match against Sri Lanka would have served primarily as a preparatory spar between the two sides ahead of Sunday’s first final in Brisbane. However the extraordinary effort of Virat Kohli has added plenty of edge to the encounter at the MCG. Sri Lanka must now win or tie to make the finals, while Australia have a direct say in which team they face in the competition deciders.

The task of seeing off Sri Lanka may yet fall to Shane Watson as stand-in captain, as the selectors weigh up whether or not to play Michael Clarke in the final qualifying fixture. Clarke began the week by winning the Allan Border Medal as Australia’s most outstanding cricketer of the past year, while Watson also scooped awards in the ODI and Twenty20 categories. Their squad for this match and the deciders features James Pattinson, recalled after injury, while the likes of Daniel Christian and Clint McKay will want to perform strongly to shore up their places for the finals.

Much of the certainty and stability built up by Sri Lanka was shaken in Hobart, leaving question marks...

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3rd Match: Australia v Sri Lanka at Perth, Feb 10, 2012

Angelo Mathews is critical to Sri Lanka's chances of a first ODI win over Australia in Perth

Angelo Mathews is critical to Sri Lanka’s chances of a first ODI win over Australia in Perth

Australia v Sri Lanka, CB Series, Perth Settled hosts meet hesitant visitors

Big Picture, Match Facts and Predictions
An Australian side in the pinkest of form meet Sri Lankan opponents with plenty of improve upon following a first-up loss to India in a mediocre match that was also at the WACA ground. While the tourists will benefit from having played a match at the ground, a series of starts with the bat, some middling bowling and hesitance in the field – from the newly-appointed captain Mahela Jayawardene’s field placements as much as his men’s occasionally indifferent attacks on the ball – must be rectified if they are to get close to the hosts.

Michael Clarke’s major concern as captain appears to be who to rotate out of the side to hand a debut to the adopted Queenslander Peter Forrest...

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