A few days ago, the Indian T20 team and its followers had more reasons to celebrate. Their team trounced the Lankans 3-0 in a short series on Lankan soil itself. Sitting on the sidelines of each match, his face dismayed at the results was Sri Lankan interim coach Sanath Jayasuriya. For Indian cricket followers who are old enough to recall the phase between 1996 and 2001 when Jayasuriya butchered Indian bowlers across formats, the coach’s sad expression was perhaps as much of a joy as the results themselves. Especially as each of the three victories was accompanied by a surprise – the surprise of the Lankan batting folding up from positions of immense strength.
Take the first match. At one stage, chasing a stiff 214 to win, the islanders required 74 off 36 balls with 9 wickets in hand – undoubtedly a challenging task but the wickets in hand meant every batsman could give it a good try. At this point, the well-set Pathum Nissanka is bowled by Axar Patel, for a standout 79 off 48 balls. There wasn’t too much drama at this dismissal. After all, there were still 8 wickets in hand and there were plenty of players in the hut who could give the ball a good tonking. Except that no one did – SL collapsed from 140 for 1 to 170 all out. 6 batsmen failed to reach double figures. By the end, Riyan Parag had managed to make a mini-reputation for himself as a useful spinner. India will hope the reputation lasts!
In the second match, Sri Lanka, put into bat first, were 130 for 2 in 15 overs. It was the perfect setting for an assault that could have taken them to a total of 180 or thereabouts. Except that there was no assault. In the next five overs, the islanders manage to make a mere 31 runs more, losing 7 more wickets – with a rain interruption, India was set a target of a mere 78 to win, in 8 overs – they accomplished the chase with 9 balls to spare and closed the series. At this point it seemed obvious that the Lankans were not thinking too clearly. After reaching great positions, the rest of their players – number 5 and beyond – were batting in a daze. What transpired in the final match confirmed this.