The Asian Age

Kohli & Co. eye series triumph

Sri Lanka hope to arrest losing streak against India

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Pallekele, Aug. 26: India will fancy their chances of wrapping up the fivematch series when they lock horns with a beleaguere­d Sri lanka in the third one-day internatio­nal here on Sunday.

The visitors have a 2-0 lead in the series and can wrap up the contest with another win here before leaving for the last leg of the tour in Colombo.

India recovered from a precarious 131/7 to record only their second win at the Pallekele Internatio­nal Cricket ground.

The Men in Blue haven’t played much ODI cricket here, and Thursday’s match was only their second at this venue, having played previously in 2012. It does reflect on their hundred percent record here then, and the short two-day gap between the second and third ODIs will help them take the winning momentum forward.

The big question is if skipper Virat Kohli will continue with his bold approach when it comes to team strategy, if not team selection.

Ahead of the second ODI, he had outlined the need to give ample opportunit­y to the youngsters in the side, particular­ly the bowlers.

As such, it is only to be expected that Axar Patel and Yuzvendra Chahal will continue to be frontline spinners then.

However, the complicati­on in the 231-run chase in the second ODI occurred due to a shuffle in the batting order.

After a great start, Kohli sent in K.L. Rahul and Kedar Jadhav ahead at number three and four respective­ly. The mini-experiment failed spectacula­rly, mostly because they couldn’t read Akila Dananjay’s googlies properly.

Jadhav’s impulsive shot making during a threeball stay also didn’t go unnoticed.

Again then, it is a wonder if Kohli will experiment again on Sunday. The India skipper might just revert to the original batting order and close out the series before ringing any changes in the last two ODIs in Colombo. In doing so though, he will be departing from his claims of ‘making unpredicta­ble changes despite facing defeat’.

All said and done, India’s collapse on Thursday has brought this additional (but welcome) interestin­g twist to the equation here.

There is also the toss factor. Kohli won his fifth consecutiv­e toss on this tour, and predictabl­y chose to chase again. With Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan putting on a century stand, in a way, it was the catalyst for the shuffle in batting-order, as the Indian skipper probably didn’t want a second game without action in the middle for Rahul and others.

Could this force Kohli to rethink his bat-first theory, if he manages to win the toss yet again?

As concerns changes to the playing combinatio­n, Hardik Pandya is in focus. In the lead-up to the second ODI, the allrounder wore a light strap on his left knee, though the team management assured his full fitness. Later in the game, he pulled up with issues on the same left leg.

While it appeared to be a calf problem for him, due to which he left the field on three occasions.

 ??  ?? Ajinkya Rahane and Rohit Sharma.
Ajinkya Rahane and Rohit Sharma.
 ??  ?? Chamara Kapugedera, Sri Lanka’s stand-in captain (second from left), with bowling coach Chaminda Vaas (left), Dushmantha Chameera and Vishwa Fernando (right) at a practice session in Pallekele.
Chamara Kapugedera, Sri Lanka’s stand-in captain (second from left), with bowling coach Chaminda Vaas (left), Dushmantha Chameera and Vishwa Fernando (right) at a practice session in Pallekele.

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