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Sri Lanka A v Indians, Tour Match, Colombo
Yuvraj seals win after wobble
Dileep Premachandran in Colombo
August 12, 2006
Indians 203 for 7 (Yuvraj 61*, Dravid 47) beat Sri Lankans 202 for 9 (Tharanga 88, Sehwag 3-16) by three wickets
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Chasing 203 for victory, they slipped from the relative comfort of 128 for 3 to the crisis scoreline of 153 for 7, before Ajit Agarkar's resolute 32, and a doughty knock from Ramesh Powar saw them home with 33 balls to spare. After Nuwan Zoysa had triggered an early slump with the wickets of Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag, both caught clipping the ball to midwicket, the slow bowlers came to the fore, with Malinga Bandara's legspin and Mohamed Suraj's offbreaks causing hesitancy in the middle of the innings.
Yuvraj, though, carried on as he had for much of last season, stroking the ball sweetly off his pads and crunching some lovely drives through the covers in his 57-ball 61. His 65-run partnership with Rahul Dravid, who made 47 after opening with Tendulkar, set the game up for the Indians after Sehwag's penetrating spell of 3 for 16 restricted the Lankan A side to 202 for 9.
Upul Tharanga continued to mine a rich vein of form with a classy 88, but with the exception of a sedate 31 from Jeevan Mendis, there was little support from the top order. The Indian bowlers - apart from Ajit Agarkar who went for 45 in his seven overs - gave little away and only a late charge from Akalanka Ganegama, who thumped 29 off 27 balls, took the run-rate past four an over.
After all the scrutiny of his recent form, Irfan Pathan could feel satisfied over a 10-over spell that cost just 31, though he would have been less than thrilled with his 13-ball stay in the middle after being sent in at the fall of the first wicket. Several outside the gates had also congregated to watch Mahendra Singh Dhoni - a familiar face on Reebok advertising hoardings here - but despite a trademark loft for six, he could make only 10 as the Indian chase went from cruise to crisis. Rahul Dravid said afterwards that he was reasonably happy with the outing, and with another game pencilled in for tomorrow, the Indians had every reason to be optimistic that it would be all right on the [Wednesday] night.
Associate editor Dileep Premachandran gave up the joys of studying thermodynamics with a
view to following in the footsteps of his literary heroes. Instead, he
wound up at the Free Press Journal in Mumbai, before Gentleman gave him a column called Replay. He arrived at Wisden Cricinfo after also having
worked for total-cricket.com. Sunil Gavaskar and Greg Chappell were his
early cricket heroes, though attempts to emulate them had hideous
results. He considers himself obscenely fortunate to have watched India's
incredible comeback against invincible Australia at the Eden Gardens in
2001, and Liverpool's inc-RED-ible resurrection in the 2005 Champions'
League final. His girlfriend remains astonishingly tolerant of his
sporting obsessions.
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