Don't forget our batting - Ramdin

Denesh Ramdin thinks that underestimating West Indies' power hitters will be a severe mistake for the opposition come the World T20 in Bangladesh and they are hoping to reinforce this with strong batting performances in the remaining two T20s against England.

Ramdin said that while many were touting their spin attack as the focal point of the team, especially on the back of an impressive first outing in Barbados, the West Indies batsmen were more than capable of setting the tournament on fire, as they did when they were crowned champions on 2012.

"We are a very good T20 team, with explosive guys at the top and lower order. Chris Gayle back in our team is a boost for us," he said. "Our batting has been letting us down recently but in this format, once the guys get going you know how dangerous they are. We have batting that can chase down any score."

He believes West Indies have an all-round bowling unit that will also be able to stifle their challengers in Bangladesh and, following on from team-mate Marlon Samuels, singled out Samuel Badree as a player that many will be taking note of. He labelled him as "just as mesmerizing" as Sunil Narine, having played alongside Badree for many years in the Trinidad and Tobago team.

"The spin factor is going to be big. Marlon Samuels also did a great job for us in the middle after Sunil came off yesterday. We are in good bowling form. We just need to put runs on the board or restrict teams to as little as possible and chase it down with our powerful batting line-up. We have Ravi Rampaul, [Dwayne] Bravo and of course, Narine, who can defend any total."

On his personal form, he said that it was rewarding to see his glovework improve and be recognised, particularly with three stumpings against England on Sunday, but he added that it was a bigger plus to see his scores stepping up. He said that he was disappointed with his performances behind the stumps in the one-day series but gained some comfort from achieving the milestone of becoming the first West Indies wicketkeeper to score an ODI century.

He also added that it would be dangerous to discount England as they possessed "game-changers" such as Eoin Morgan and Jos Buttler. Ramdin said that despite the loss of Kevin Pietersen, which was comparable to "us losing Chris Gayle", England, as past winners of the World T20 in the West Indies in 2010, were well equipped to come back strong and mount a challenge in Bangladesh.


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Pakistan morale lifted by India win - Misbah

While losing the Asia Cup final was a disappointment, Pakistan could take 'a lot of positives' from the tournament, captain Misbah-ul-Haq has said. Among them, was the 'morale-boosting' win against India in the round-robin stage, a victory which meant the team got a warm welcome at the Lahore airport on arrival, being showered with rose petals despite not bringing back the trophy.

"Losing the final was a disappointment, but overall it was a very good tournament and we move on with a lot of positives," Misbah said. "I think the team put in a lot of hard work, the way we won matches. As a team the performance was terrific, but at the same time no doubt it is disappointing that we didn't win the tournament.

The match against India, Misbah said, put Pakistan in the right frame of mind for the World Twenty20. "Winning against India was important because people have a lot of expectations and have lots of interest in it. With such performances, the morale of the team is very good. In this condition, we definitely have a chance [at the World T20]."

Misbah did not take questions on his "slow" batting in the final against Sri Lanka lightly, cutting off one reporter mid-way through his question by saying: "When you are 18 for 3, even big teams also bat like we did in the final to recover."

Pakistan had lost their top three by the fourth over of the game, before Mishah and Fawad Alam were involved in a 122-run stand. Misbah made 65 off 98 balls before being dismissed, while Alam went on to remain 114 not out off 134. Pakistan reached 260 for 5, before Sri Lanka eased home with close to four overs to spare after taking a toll on Pakistan's pacers.

Misbah defended his fast bowlers, saying that the spin- and batting-friendly pitches of the subcontinent made life tough for the pacers. "It wasn't an easy tour, especially for fast bowlers. You know in Asian conditions, it's difficult for fast bowlers.

"Overall if you look, barring one or two bowlers, fast bowlers struggled. Conditions are conducive for spin bowlers and it doesn't help fast bowlers."


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An age-old problem for England

England will probably make at least two changes to their team for the second T20 against West Indies, but it may be a case of papering over cracks

It says something about the disarray in which England find themselves that, just days before they depart for the World T20, they are likely to go into Tuesday's game against West Indies with a new captain, two debutants in this format and a man who has not played a T20 match at any level for more than three years. What should have been the culmination of two years of planning is instead being thrown together at the last minute.

To some extent, they have been unfortunate. Certainly the injuries to Stuart Broad and Joe Root should be viewed that way.

But England are not the only side beset by injuries. West Indies, to take one example, are without Kieron Pollard and Kemar Roach. The whole point of picking a squad of players is to cover for such eventualities.

So it is intriguing that England have called Ian Bell into their T20 squad. As a decent player of spin with experience around the world and a wide range of strokes, it is a selection that makes sense. But it does beg the question: if England rate him so highly, why have they not picked him in T20 cricket for the last three years? Indeed, why did they not include him in their 30-man preliminary squad for the World T20?

Bell could yet end up as captain. Broad is expected to have recovered in time for Bangladesh but, when an injury requires a fourth injection, it becomes clear there is a long-standing problem. Meanwhile Eoin Morgan's knee is taking longer to improve than was anticipated and there is a growing concern that, despite the player's protestations, it may be more serious than originally thought.

More than that, though, England have been confronted with a perennial problem: their batsmen do not play spin well. It is not a new problem but, until there is a fundamental change in the way in which spin bowling is viewed at every level of recreational and domestic cricket in England, it is a problem which will go unsolved.

Until it is accepted that England are putting themselves at a disadvantage to other nations by taking an unnecessarily hard-line on unorthodox actions - see the example of Maurice Holmes - and penalising counties (such as Hampshire in July 2011) who prepare turning pitches, developing English players will not have the chance to develop their games against the turning ball and will go into international cricket unprepared.

Such solutions require long-term action. But Graham Thorpe, England's batting coach on this tour, has to work in the short-term. He has, in a couple of days, to transform a team that played spin like novices into one that can compete in Bangladesh. It is an almost impossible task.

It was telling that the players were given a day off on Monday. While Thorpe and the other coaches could have been forgiven for ranting at the team after a wretched display of batting on Sunday, they have instead attempted to restore their battered confidence and encouraged them to unwind on the beach or the golf course. In truth, it is too late to do anything else.

"It's about remaining upbeat and confident," Thorpe said. "We want the guys to be positive. We need to be positive in our play if we are going to do well in the World T20.

"We're certainly not going to panic, but we're not going to stand here and say we played spin well on Sunday. We didn't.

"That was a poor day with the bat. But let's give ourselves a bit more time and look to select better when we go for those big shots.

"We mustn't fret about it. We must just improve. We have to identify those players who are capable of going to Bangladesh and actually having a gameplan and the skill to be able to perform. We have to be bold; we have to hit boundaries and be able to manoeuvre the ball around against quality spinners; maybe bowlers we don't read as well.

"We don't face a lot of spin. We don't have heaps of it in county cricket. In terms of our development of playing it, it is harder when you don't face much of it in the domestic game. We have trips abroad with the programmes that have existed beneath, but the fact is the volume they play against is limited to playing with an international side travelling to the subcontinent. It is always going to be an issue.

"It took me a while, until I was 27 years old, until I had a real understanding of the method of playing spin. And that was in Test cricket when we had time to pad a few away."

One potential solution would be to allow England players to appear in the IPL. While Thorpe agreed that exposing players to different pitches and bowlers might be beneficial - "It would do them no harm. The more T20 cricket you play the better you are going to get at it" - there is the consideration of what it might do to England's overall cricket.

The English domestic game has already been weakened by the absence of quality overseas players, the best England players and even Kolpak and other experienced cricketers. Allowing more of them to play in a foreign domestic league during the home season would seem a perverse method of improvement, surely causing as much damage as good.

A change of team is inevitable ahead of the second match in the series. The spinners Moeen Ali and Steven Parry are both likely to return, with Broad out injured and Luke Wright clinging to his place by the skin of his teeth. He has failed to reach double-figures in his last eight international innings and has looked at sea against spin. Ben Stokes is not certain to survive, either, underlining that fact that, with only days to go before the tournament, England have yet to find a settled team.

"I think we misread the pitch in terms of the spin option," Thorpe admitted. "I think we received 10 overs of spin and lost 6 for 46, so we will have to look at that selection for the next game.

"Luke hasn't scored as many runs as he would have liked. So we have to help him through that period. We have to keep him confident.

"We come back to the fact we have four games to go before the World T20 and I couldn't tell you what the batting line up is going to be. We must work out which personnel are going to fit into the slots. In the next four games, we hope it will become clearer and players will stand up and perform.

"At the T20 World Cup, we have a puncher's chance if we get things right. I think that's realistic. If we can get through that group we've done very well. We will only do that by being bold and upbeat about our performances and not getting too down when we do get beat."

England will travel, it seems, more in hope than expectation.


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Dhawan better off after South Africa 'setback'

'Lean patch made me stronger' - Dhawan

Shikhar Dhawan in South Africa: four Test innings, 76 runs, a highest of 29. Dhawan in New Zealand: four innings, 215 runs, a century that nearly won India a lost match and a 98 that put them in a winning position. Dhawan believes the two performances are related to each other. The "setback" in South Africa, he has told ESPNcricinfo, made him introspect and work further on his batting, which bore results in New Zealand.

"From South Africa, when I didn't score that much, I analysed my game that as a batsman, or as an opener, what shots I have to play at the start or what shots I shouldn't play," Dhawan said. "Every pitch is different. We were playing in India a lot that time [just before going to South Africa]. Then when I went there, it was a setback. I wouldn't say a failure, but the setback helped me a lot to become a more mature player.

"Then I realised, 'Okay on these kinds of tracks I need to play these kind of shots. And I have to leave bouncers [alone] at the start because the bounce is different, and it is hard to keep the ball down.' That's what I did and brought those things into my practice. When I went to New Zealand that practice became my instinct, and that's how I scored big runs there."

It has now been a year since Dhawan's comeback into the Indian team resulted in a sensational debut-Test century. A late bloomer, the 28-year-old Dhawan has scored seven international centuries in this period. Only his friend and now team-mate Virat Kohli has scored more hundreds over the last 12 months. Time has simply flown for Dhawan.

"One year is over already," Dhawan said. "It went so quickly. Good time always flies really fast. I celebrated on my own, the first anniversary with the Indian team. It's a great feeling. We won so many series, and of course we saw a bit of down time too. But that's how it is. You see ups and downs both. It is a beautiful journey. I am happy that I have been contributing to my side. I want to keep doing that, I want to keep improving as a batsman, and keep winning matches and series for my side.

"I had a bit of a lean patch too. That lean patch made me stronger, and made me realise the areas I had to improve on. Made me a more mature player. That's the best thing. It is a beautiful thing that I scored a lot of centuries and half-centuries. That's every batsman's dream: to score a lot of centuries and become the main man for the team."

Dhawan had to wait in the wings because two other Delhi batsmen formed one of India's most prolific opening partnerships of all time. He is philosophical about that phase, and also knows there can be no room for complacency. "I scored seven centuries in domestic cricket when I came to the Test side," Dhawan said. "I always believed it is a race that never ends. When Gautam bhai [Gambhir] and Viru bhai [Sehwag] were playing, I was playing in Ranji. I always used to believe this race never ends. I should just keep performing well, and then my time will come. Then god blessed me with [a place in the] Indian team. I just focus on my game, whatever is in my hand - my hard work, my dedication, my commitment to my team - that's all I do. And keep learning day by day."

Not just at the top of the order, there has been a change of the batting guard through the whole Indian batting line-up. Dhawan is pleased with how the transition has gone ahead. "Every individual takes that responsibility," Dhawan said. "To be the main man. To take the responsibility to win the match for the team. We are youngsters, we are still learning a lot of cricket.

"It doesn't happen overnight. You have to spend time out there and play a lot of matches to get experience. We have been doing well as a young unit. We won a lot of series, we lost a few too, but I personally feel we are doing really well. Out of these young players, there are going to be lots of future legends."


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Samuels backs Badree as World T20 'trump card'

Croft: A very efficient West Indies performance

Marlon Samuels was optimistic that the West Indies have found the right formula heading into their World T20 title defence in Bangladesh. Following a Man-of-the-Match performance in the opening T20 win against England in Barbados, where he struck an unbeaten 69 off 46 and picked up 2 for 21, he believed that their spin attack will be the key to retaining their trophy.

England laboured against West Indies' spinners - their combined tally was 6 for 45 off 10 overs - Samuels labelled Samuel Badree in particular as their "trump card" to bolster the team's chances of becoming the first team to defend a World T20 title, a feat Samuels tagged as "a personal target".

"Sunil Narine and Badree will be crucial players for us in Bangladesh's conditions which suit West Indies cricket," he said. "Badree's a wonderful bowler and he showed it again today by picking up early wickets.

"We were surprised that the pitch favoured spin because Bajan pitches are usually known more for their pace but regardless of the pitch and its bounce, we have some pretty good spinners who use the new ball well. I think England will have to go back to the drawing board and reconsider using more spinners.

"We knew the record of this ground and we wanted to post a total of around 160 or 165. It was good for us to get more than we bargained for. We had a plan and put in an all-round performance and it all came together for us at the end so we have to keep working hard at it and come up with the goods more often than not."

However, Samuels acknowledged West Indies could improve on their performance, particularly towards the closing overs where they were restricted by England. Samuels added that they would not be underestimating Stuart Broad's team, who came from 1-0 down to claim the one-day series in Antigua.

Samuels said this series was particularly important for him as he works his way back to full fitness follow the chronic wrist injury which forced him home from the New Zealand tour and the groin problem which restricted him to one ODI last week. He is crucial to West Indies' middle order which will be lacking the power of Kieron Pollard for the World T20 but Samuels is not feeling any added pressure.

"It's tough coming off back-to-back injuries last year. I put in some serious work to regain fitness and I'm still getting there. There's no pressure regarding Pollard. We're usually a bunch of confident guys but not too overconfident. We'll take it ball-by-ball, game-by-game and whatever the team wants or requires of me, I'll go out there and try to do it to the best of my ability."

While Samuels kept his cool with the bat, in the field there was a heated exchanged with Ravi Bopara but he played down the argument as "in the heat of the moment" and said there was no lingering issue even though Broad suggested otherwise. "Ravi said something out there that he shouldn't have and I didn't like it. But he came and apologized after. He's a wonderful person and a great cricketer and I have a good relationship with him," Samuels said.

West Indies management also confirmed that Narine will be undergoing a CT scan on Monday on his knee after an attempted slide to save a boundary resulted in his foot getting stuck in the ground and hurting his need. He left the field after two overs and with West Indies winning comfortable was not risked again.

West Indies remained optimistic and deemed the scan as "a precautionary measure" as advised by the team's physiotherapist. They also allayed concerns over Badree who left the field for treatment on his hand after dropping a stiff return catch off Eoin Morgan as "nothing too serious."


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Broad fitness concern for World T20

Dobell: England selection was unsuitable for conditions

Stuart Broad will sit out England's next two T20s against West Indies in a bid to ensure his fitness for the World T20, with the captain revealing that he has been managing a knee problem with injections over the winter. Broad said after England's defeat in the first T20 that he was suffering from patellar tendonitis, which flared up during the third ODI in Antigua.

Broad downplayed the risk to his participation in the World T20, saying he "should be okay", but with less than two weeks until England's first game in Bangladesh, against New Zealand on March 22, it is cause for concern. Broad said he had already had "four or five" cortisone injections to his right knee, due to the workload on England's disastrous tour of Australia, and admitted that a long-term solution would have to be found.

"I've had injections for a while now, throughout the winter, it's been getting stiffer and stiffer," he said. "I caught my knee in the ground in Antigua and it swelled up. I struggled to move it a little bit, so I won't be playing the next couple. I should be okay assuming the injection works, which generally they do. It gradually got worse throughout the winter, with the amount of bowling I've been doing - no real break - so it's something I need to act on now to make sure I'm fit and firing for the World T20."

He conceded that an operation may be required at some point, though was hopeful of being able to take a full part in England's home season, after which there is only a limited-overs tour to Sri Lanka until the end of the year.

"I'll have to have a rehab period at some stage in the next 12 months, between six to ten weeks. But there's a decent period at the end of the English season which I can look at probably - or maybe four weeks in April," he said

"I can't keep waking up every day in agony, and surviving training. The injection should sort that out and if it means missing two Twenty20s in the West Indies when we've got a World Cup in Bangladesh, I'm not too frustrated about that."

After bowling only two overs during the West Indies innings, the first of which cost 19, Broad was visibly limping whilst at the crease, with England already on their way to a comprehensive defeat. As well as two more T20s in Barbados, England have two warm-up matches before they begin their World T20 campaign. Eoin Morgan - who has also been carrying an injury - will captain the side in Broad's absence.

The wear and tear of life as a fast bowler has previously affected Broad's involvement with England. He wears special boots to manage a heel condition, which led to him leaving England's tour of India in 2012, and was forced out of the 2010-11 Ashes tour and the subsequent World Cup by stomach and rib injuries respectively.

In Australia this time around, having lost the Test series 5-0, Broad was given the first two ODIs off in order to rest. Since then he has played in six one-dayers and four T20s, as well as a warm-up match in the Caribbean. His importance to the side is not just as leader; he is also England's most-capped player and leading wicket-taker in T20 internationals.

England's 15-man World T20 squad currently contains Tim Bresnan, Jade Dernbach and Chris Jordan as the pace-bowling options, as well as the allrounder Ben Stokes. Harry Gurney, the Nottinghamshire left-arm seamer, was selected only for the West Indies tour and could now provide cover for Broad in the event of his condition worsening.

While Bresnan was a member of England's 2010 World T20 win and Dernbach has plenty of international experience, there are few other back-up options for the coach, Ashley Giles. Steven Finn and Boyd Rankin both suffered drastic losses of form in Australia and Chris Woakes has taken just two wickets with an economy of 10.27 in his four T20 internationals. James Anderson, the attack leader in Test cricket, has not played a T20 for England since 2009.

England are already likely to be without Joe Root for the World T20, due to a broken thumb sustained in Antigua, and Broad said that Morgan still was not 100% fit following a knee injury of his own. After a fourth T20 defeat in a row, England's preparations for Bangladesh could also do with some patching up.


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England miss the muscle

The opening T20 did not present new problems for England, just old ones rehashed at other venue. Misjudging selection can be fixed, but the batting needs to find a way of combating spin in the shortest format

Out-thought, out-played and out-gunned, England endured a chastening start to the T20 series against West Indies in Barbados.

It was not just that England were well beaten that will disturb them. It was that they were well beaten largely due to their enduring struggles against spin bowling. Bearing in mind that they will be playing the World T20 on Bangladesh pitches where spin is expected to dominate, then it is hard to be optimistic about their chances.

It would be an exaggeration to suggest that this match was decided before it even began. But not much of an exaggeration. While West Indies' three spinners bowled 10 overs and claimed 6 for 46, England selected four fast-medium bowlers who bowled their 12 overs for 128 without taking a wicket. They picked only one spinner and he was, by some distance, their best bowler. They simply misread the pitch.

But even if England had stacked their side with spinners, even if they had bowlers to compare to the quality of Sunil Narine, they would still have to have batted far better to have given themselves any chance of victory.

As it was, they batted like schoolboys. While Ben Stokes, head in the air and swinging like a punch-drunk boxer, might be forgiven on the grounds of inexperience, Luke Wright, playing his 100th international and becoming the second England player (after Stuart Broad) to reach 50 T20I caps, has no such excuse. He has now failed to reach double-figures in his last eight international innings and, on this tour, his scores have been 1, 0 and 0. That is not a sustainable record for a specialist No. 3 batsman. While Wright might have a future on quicker surfaces in Australia, it is hard to see how he will flourish in Bangladesh.

In the three ODIs in Antigua, England were largely able to see-off the spinners. They were able to accept that Narine would deliver his overs frugally and simply play him out and plunder the weaker bowlers. But here, in the shorter format, they were further burdened by the presence of the top-spin of Samuel Badree and knew they could not afford to simply accumulate for eight overs. Had Narine been able to complete his allocation of overs - he was obliged to leave the pitch after sustaining an injury in the field - then the margin might well have been even larger.

 
 
While the likes of Dwayne Smith and Chris Gayle were able to thrash fairly decent deliveries over the boundary, England are more reliant on bowler error to match such strokes. They have come to a gunfight armed with a catapult
 

It is far from the first time that England teams have looked clueless against spin bowling. Perhaps due to the largely one-dimensional character of the pitches that dominate in county cricket, or perhaps due to the inflexible attitude that endures towards 'mystery' spin in the UK, young England players react to exposure to bowlers such as Narine with something approaching horror. It has been a long-standing weakness in the English system.

There have been improvements in recent years. But there are few members of the Test squad that triumphed in India in this limited-overs squad, so it appears that, each generation, England have to return to square-one in their struggle against spin. In the longer term, they would be well served allowing more turning pitches in the County Championship and encouraging more unorthodox bowlers to develop their art. At present, the cleft foot of the puritanical action-police continues to hold England back in this regard.

England did not bowl badly. While West Indies recorded their highest T20I score at the venue - only Sri Lanka and Australia have scored more here - it was more of a result of a true pitch almost perfect for this form of the game and a batting line-up blessed with power then it was poor bowling. England simply lacked the slow-bowling options that might have made life more difficult.

Indeed, had James Tredwell accepted a chance - a chance somewhat harshly described by Broad as "a dolly" - offered by Marlon Samuels when he had 43, West Indies might have restricted to something around 150. As it was, Samuels thrashed the final five deliveries in the same Jade Dernbach over to the boundary and West Indies were all but out of reach.

England have little such fire-power in their own batting. While the middle-order of Eoin Morgan, Jos Buttler and Ravi Bopara, must be considered dangerous, their line-up does not compare to the power present in the West Indies' top seven. While the likes of Dwayne Smith and Chris Gayle were able to thrash fairly decent deliveries over the boundary, England are more reliant on bowler error to match such strokes. They have come to a gunfight armed with a catapult and may well have missed a trick by overlooking powerful T20 batsmen such as Darren Stevens and Steven Crook, whose skiddy pace might also have proved especially effective in Bangladesh.

There was even worse news for England at the end of the game. Broad announced that he will not play the final two T20s in order to rest a knee problem that might be described as chronic, while it emerged that Morgan's knee injury is continuing to bother him. The England camp deny it, but both must be considered doubts for the World T20 and Broad, who is having a "fourth or fifth" injection on his troublesome knee, is clearly in need of some time off. Whichever way you look at it, England are facing an uphill struggle in Bangladesh.


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Manuka Oval could host Sheffield Shield final

The Sheffield Shield final may be held at Manuka Oval in Canberra or Gliderol Stadium in Glenelg after both New South Wales and South Australia were forced to find alternatives to their main venues. The last round of matches begins on Tuesday and will determine the finalists, with South Australia, New South Wales and Western Australia all equal on 26 points at the top of the table and Queensland also in contention on 22 points.

South Australia had already advised that if they were to host the final it would be held in Glenelg instead of at Adelaide Oval due to a Rolling Stones concert, and New South Wales have also had to come up with another plan. The SCG will be in use for Major League Baseball matches between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Arizona Diamondbacks, and Cricket New South Wales has nominated Manuka Oval as its final venue.

The Blues will play Western Australia at Manuka Oval in the final round in a match that will go a long way to determining the make-up of the final, although South Australia's match in Hobart against Tasmania will also be important. Last year's runners-up, Queensland, could also catapult themselves into the decider if they beat Victoria at the MCG.

All three of the top sides will benefit from the return of Test players from the tour of South Africa, with Steven Smith to captain New South Wales, who also gain Nathan Lyon. Shaun Marsh is likely to rejoin the Western Australia outfit, perhaps as a replacement for his brother Mitchell, who suffered a side strain in last week's match.

Phillip Hughes will make his return for South Australia but the Redbacks will be without their captain Johan Botha, who was suspended for one match for a bizarre incident in last week's match against New South Wales. Botha was believed to have called for the new ball during the New South Wales innings and then rubbed the old ball on his boot spikes before throwing it off the ground.


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Thirimanne century could prove career-defining

Sri Lanka's selectors have persisted with Lahiru Thirimanne, and in his 62nd ODI, he underlined his top-order potential again, under the pressure of a chase in a final

When he looks back on his match-winning 101 in the Asia Cup final, the highlights reel in Lahiru Thirimanne's head is unlikely to include the single that took him to 39. The shot Thirimanne played, moreover, was that banal middle-overs staple: the push, with the spin, for a single. That particular single, though, was significant. It nudged Thirimanne's batting average from 29.9761904761905 to 30.

An ODI average of 30 isn't a massive deal, you might think, but it's probably the equivalent of a Test average of 40. In most cases, the difference between averaging 29 and 30 in ODIs - and between 39 and 40 in Tests - is usually the difference between feeling like you still need to prove yourself and feeling secure about your place in the side.

It's slightly different for Sri Lankans, though. Throughout their history as a cricket team, their batsmen have been slow starters in ODIs. It took Sanath Jayasuriya till his 235th match for his average to stabilise itself above 30 - that is, for it to never dip below that mark again.

It took 102 matches for Kumar Sangakkara, 149 for Mahela Jayawardene, 111 for Aravinda de Silva, 155 for Tillakaratne Dilshan and 86 for Arjuna Ranatunga. The quickest of Sri Lanka's top seven ODI run-getters to achieve a stable 30-plus average was Marvan Atapattu, who got there in his 23rd match. He, of course, began his Test career with five ducks in his first six innings.

Sri Lanka's selectors have always given their talented batsmen a long run in the side, believing they have the game and the temperament to eventually come good. Time and again, they've been proved right. Sri Lanka's current set of selectors, chaired by Jayasuriya, have given Thirimanne that sort of run in the side. The Asia Cup final was his 62nd ODI. It was the perfect stage to play what could prove a career-defining innings.

Two things worked in Thirimanne's favour during the first half of his innings. Early on, Pakistan's attentions were mostly fixed on Kusal Perera, who was worrying them no end with his Jayasuriya-esque flicks and jabs, powered by an iron bottom-hand grip. This took some pressure off Thirimanne, and allowed him to remain inconspicuous and play at his own pace.

Saeed Ajmal then came on, bowled a maiden to Kusal, and struck twice in his second over to dismiss Kusal and Sangakkara. His next over, to Mahela Jayawardene, was another maiden. When Misbah-ul-Haq took Ajmal out of the attack, he had bowled four overs, out of which Thirimanne had only faced two balls. The first of those had squirted off his inside-edge for four. Even during the opening game of the tournament, in which Thirimanne had scored a century, Ajmal had been the only Pakistan bowler to trouble him.

None of this, of course, is to knock Thirimanne's achievement. Sri Lanka were under tremendous pressure when they lost their second wicket. They still needed more than 200 to win, and their momentum had stalled to a considerable extent.

Thirimanne began the process of regaining Sri Lanka's momentum in Mohammad Talha's first over. Talha started with a deep backward square leg and a square-ish fine leg. Third ball of the over, Thirimanne bisected them with his pull. Two balls later, when Talha drifted too straight, he sent fine leg running the other way, once again in vain, with a deft flick off his hips.

Those two shots showcased Thirimanne's timing and placement as well as his ability to keep his head about him under pressure and look for scoring opportunities. He has shown those qualities right through the Asia Cup, and given credence to the comparisons that are often drawn between him and Sangakkara. It helps that they share a tall stance and a cover drive on one knee with a full flourish.

 
 
All three of Thirimanne's ODI hundreds have come when he's batted in the top three; in those positions, he averages 49.08 in 14 innings. At No. 4 or lower, he averages 22.80 in 33 innings. Like Sangakkara, whose blossoming coincided with a move up the order - he had spent a lot of the early part of his career at No. 6 or 7 - Thirimanne will probably bat up the order in the long term
 

In this innings, on a slow pitch and against a group of fast bowlers who didn't pitch it up all that often, Thirimanne didn't get to play the cover drive that much. Instead, he exploited the V behind the wicket, and picked up a couple of boundaries with open-faced steers past the wicketkeeper that brought Ranatunga to mind.

After he had moved into the 70s, Thirimanne picked up a cheeky boundary off Umar Gul with one of these late dabs. Next ball, he blocked solidly, back to the bowler. Gul raised his arm, as bowlers often do, as if to throw the ball at the stumps. Thirimanne said something. Gul, moving closer to the batsman, responded with an observation of his own. Thirimanne, like Ranatunga and Sangakkara, didn't seem to mind a bit of chat.

None of this affected Thirimanne's batting. He flowed on, smoothly, content to stay within the confines imposed by the pitch and the lengths Pakistan bowled. It took until he had moved to 81 for someone to give him a wide half-volley, and he pounced on it gleefully.

The next 15 runs took a while coming, as Jayawardene took centre-stage for a while before he and Ashan Priyanjan fell in quick succession. Thirimanne didn't have too much of the strike in all that while. He had been on 85 off 85 balls at the end of the 33rd over. At the start of the 44th, he was on 99 off 105. When he finally flicked Junaid Khan to reach 100, he leaped and punched the air twice, once with helmet on, once with helmet off.

Thirimanne's century was his third in ODIs. All three of them have come when he's batted in the top three; in those positions, he averages 49.08 in 14 innings. At No. 4 or lower, he averages 22.80 in 33 innings.

Like Sangakkara, whose blossoming coincided with a move up the order - he had spent a lot of the early part of his career at No. 6 or 7 - Thirimanne will probably bat up the order in the long term. In the short term, though, with Dilshan set to return from injury, he gives Sri Lanka a bit of a headache. It isn't one they'll mind too much.


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Misbah bemoans ineffective bowling

Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq has attributed his team's Asia Cup final defeat to his bowlers' inability to put pressure on Sri Lanka's batsmen. Chasing 261, Sri Lanka, led by a century from Lahiru Thirimanne, cruised to a five-wicket win to take their fifth Asia Cup title.

Only Saeed Ajmal posed a threat to Sri Lanka, as Pakistan looked to defend a hard-earned total. Ajmal took 3 for 26 in 10 overs, but apart from him and to an extent, Mohammad Hafeez, the rest of the attack - Umar Gul, Junaid Khan, Mohammad Talha and Shahid Afridi - were all ineffective.

Misbah had to take Ajmal off after the offspinner had taken two quick wickets in his first spell of four overs. He had given away just ten runs, having delivered two maiden overs as well. The Sri Lankan batsmen opted against attacking Ajmal, prompting Misbah to switch bowlers to try and wrestle a wicket.

"They were just consuming his [Ajmal's] overs, just blocking him," Misbah said. "I thought I would take a chance with someone else, to get the wicket. But I think it was a bad day for all the bowlers. They couldn't really put pressure, and you can't win matches with just one bowler. You need to bowl well as a unit."

Gul and Talha have now had two poor games back-to-back after bowling ordinarily against Bangladesh. Junaid went for 56 in nine overs, only picking up Ashan Priyanjan's wicket very late in the game.

"We sought early breakthroughs which Saeed Ajmal finally provided us. Bowling too requires partnerships but none of the bowlers could build that sort of pressure on the batsmen. I think it became easy for them, and they won the game.

"We didn't bowl wicket to wicket, and build pressure. Sri Lankan bowlers did that. It was a slow wicket so you had to bowl straighter. Our lengths were quite short too. And we gave a lot of width too, which made it easy for them."

But Pakistan's real problem, as the captain recognised, was their start with the bat. Sharjeel Khan, Ahmed Shehzad and Hafeez all got out in 4.3 overs, leaving the middle- and lower-order far too much to do in a final.

Lasith Malinga was the man responsible for Pakistan having a poor start, picking up a five-wicket haul just as he did in the tournament opener against the same team in Fatullah. Incidentally, Thrimianne too had scored a century in that game.

"Thirimanne played really well and Malinga's first spell was a good one as he swung the ball. He put us under pressure, but we did play some bad shots.

"It was our plan not to give Malinga wickets, but we failed to execute that. He again took five wickets and put us under pressure."

Despite losing the first and last game of the tournament, Pakistan will leave with a happy batting line-up after the wins against India and Bangladesh. They successfully chased 245 and 327 respectively, the latter having broken the record for their biggest chase.

"The team really played well, especially the batting department. Ahmed Shehzad played well. Fawad Alam played two very good innings. Shahid Afridi finished two games. Hafeez and Umar Akmal are in good touch. These are positives. We chased well in two games. Before the World T20s, we are in good shape and are confident."


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