The Herald (South Africa)

ZIMBABWE RECORD HISTORIC VICTORY

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SIKANDAR Raza starred with bat and ball to help Zimbabwe edge out Sri Lanka by three wickets and clinch a historic series victory in their fifth oneday internatio­nal on Monday.

Taking the series 3-2 in Hambantota, 11th-ranked Zimbabwe bagged a maiden series win in Sri Lanka and the first overseas triumph in eight years.

Off-spinner Raza claimed three wickets to restrict the hosts to 203/8, after Zimbabwe elected to field first.

Raza later anchored a tense chase, with an unbeaten 27, as the visitors won with 71 balls to spare.

Zimbabwe opener Hamilton Masakadza top-scored with a fluent 73, before rookie offspinner Akila Dananjaya struck back with four wickets to rattle the Zimbabwe middle-order.

The visitors slipped from 137/1 to 175/7 – losing six wickets for 38 runs – but Raza and skipper Graeme Cremer (11 not out) hung on for an unbeaten 29-run stand and the underdogs erupted in celebratio­n.

“I’m happy Sikandar came to the party. It turned around quickly, but I’m glad we pulled it off in the end,” an elated Cremer said following the win.

“This win is very special. Fans must be jumping around back home. We knew we were playing good enough cricket to put them under pressure.”

Earlier, Pakistan-born Raza, who opened the bowling for the visiting side, returned with impressive figures of 3/21 at the Mahinda Rajapaksa Internatio­nal Stadium.

Raza, the man of the match, was complement­ed by Cremer, who took two wickets with his wily leg-spin, most notably the prized scalp of his opposite number, Angelo Mathews (24).

“Raza is a definite weapon with the new ball. I was hoping for a breakthrou­gh or two – and he gave us that in the powerplay,” Cremer said.

Sri Lanka suffered from a lack of partnershi­ps, but opener Danushka Gunathilak­a (52) and Asela Gunaratne (59 not out) hit gritty half-centuries to steady the home side.

The hosts slipped to 153/8 in the 42nd over, before Gunaratne and Dushmantha Chameera (18 not out) put on an unbeaten 50-run stand for the ninth wicket.

Paceman Tendai Chatara drew first blood, with opener Niroshan Dickwella – who came into the match with two successive centuries – caught behind for three.

That wicket also put the brakes on Sri Lanka’s rampaging opening starts in the previous one-day internatio­nals against the African side.

Dickwella and Gunathilak­a made ODI history with back-toback double century partnershi­ps in the previous two contests against Zimbabwe.

Mathews said even though the conditions had been tough for batting, the Sri Lanka team’s final run tally was far below what was expected.

“Credit to Zimbabwe. They gave us a really tough time and we didn’t have any answers,” a disappoint­ed Mathews said.

The defeat was Sri Lanka’s worst bilateral ODI series in recent times.

The eighth-ranked side face India for a full series on home soil from July 26 to September 6.

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 ?? Picture: AFP ?? MAN OF MATCH: Zimbabwe’s Sikandar Raza celebrates after dismissing Sri Lanka’s Kusal Mendis in their fifth one-day internatio­nal in Sri Lanka yesterday
Picture: AFP MAN OF MATCH: Zimbabwe’s Sikandar Raza celebrates after dismissing Sri Lanka’s Kusal Mendis in their fifth one-day internatio­nal in Sri Lanka yesterday
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