Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka must win remainders and wait for others to 'self-destruct'

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Sri Lanka’s resurgent performanc­e against England, a brilliant upset that created a huge dogfight for the fourth qualificat­ion spot, was unfortunat­ely followed by very mediocre performanc­e against

South Africa.

Hosts England will have been scratching their heads as they watched South Africa stroll home with nine wickets and 11.4 overs to spare – was this the same team that derailed our campaign last Friday?

Asked to bat first by South Africa, Sri Lanka had an opportunit­y to put a decent total on the board on a new pitch and then defend with the ball, traditiona­lly our strongest strategy.

Losing Karunaratn­e in the first over was a dreadful start, but the brisk and entertaini­ng 67-run partnershi­p between Kusal Perera and Avishka Fernando created early promise of a competitiv­e total. Avishka once again showed some real class, confirming him to be a future player of immense potential for Sri Lanka. He bats with lots of time and is very balanced.

The challenge for him is to pace his innings with greater intelligen­ce and learn how to shift back and forth on the gears. He likes to keep going at the bowlers, which makes him a dangerous match- winner when things all go his way, but he would benefit from sometimes pulling back and managing his risk-taking more shrewdly.

South Africa were very short of confidence after a terrible World Cup performanc­e, but the experience­d Hasim Amla and Faf du Plessis settled those nerves with a clinical 175 run partnershi­p.

This leaves Sri Lanka facing likely eliminatio­n. Statistica­lly there is still hope, but we have to win against West Indies on Monday and India next weekend and then hope that England, Pakistan and Bangladesh all self-destruct.

They need to take it game by game and just focus on the West Indies match. If they can regroup and return for that game with the same intensity and passion that was on display against England then we can definitely beat a dangerous but dispirited West Indies team.

Beating India is another matter; they are looking very strong despite a real wobble against Afghanista­n. The loss of Shikar Dhawan at the top of the order has left a small weakness that teams are keen to exploit, hoping that KL Rahul makes an early mistake, but with Virat Kohli and MS Dhoni both in excellent form their batting order looks formidable.

India’s game against England on Sunday is a huge game in Birmingham and it is absolutely crucial for an England team that is now on the ropes after three failed run chases.

England started this tournament as the well-deserved favourites, but they have not been able to play with the same dominance during the past two weeks that has propelled their white ball cricket in recent times.

They look under pressure and they are clearly missing Jason Roy at the top of the order. They will be desperate for him to play against India and help reinvigora­te their batting with his positive energy and intent. - GamePlan

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