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Mathews demolishes feeble India

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India's stay at No. 1 in the ICC rankings lasted all of 24 hours. Sri Lanka reasserted their superiority at home, scoring 307, and then strangled wickets at regular intervals to completely rout India in the dress rehearsal for Monday's final. Sanath Jayasuriya and Thilina Kandamby scored brilliant nineties after which the Premadasa reaffirmed its status as one of Sri Lanka's safe houses. Leading a canny display of seam bowling was Angelo Mathews, who picked out six wickets like plastic ducks in a shooting gallery. Blinded by the lights, India were steamrolled and suffered their biggest loss, in terms of runs, on Sri Lankan soil.

After Kumar Sangakkara had won the toss and chosen to bat, there was a welcome return to form for a key player. Jayasuriya, without a fifty-plus score since January, could have gone on 13 when he edged Ishant Sharma wide of slip, but was chanceless thereafter. He used the width on offer to judder boundaries and as Sri Lanka reached 34 in four overs, India had reason to fear the worst.

The loss of Tillakaratne Dilshan didn't cramp Jayasuriya's style and he continued to punish even the smallest indiscretion in line and length. With Jayasuriya pulling and driving RP Singh for three fours in an over, India's best option was to train their efforts at the other end. MS Dhoni gave them the breakthrough by stumping Mahela Jayawardene down the leg side. Sangakkara departed soon after, out lbw to a straight delivery from the impressive Harbhajan Singh, whose first six overs cost 13 as he struck a teasing line.

Jayasuriya had been slowed down due to a loss of strike. Incredibly, he spent 13 deliveries spread over 9. 1 overs in the forties. As the pop anthem of the year, the Black Eyed Peas' "I Gotta Feeling", blared across the thumping stadium Jayasuriya raised his half-century. The crowd cheered loudly. Those cheers turned to thunderous applause when Jayasuriya hammered Yuvraj Singh's short-pitched offerings over midwicket for consecutive fours. Jayasuriya's running between the wickets was superb and belied his age. Seven doubles - three of which came in one over - and three triples were just as punishing for India as the 13 boundaries Jayasuriya picked.

With the crowd rooting for his every run, Jayasuriya played to the gallery: Ashish Nehra was cleverly swatted wide of short fine leg, Yusuf Pathan was swept and paddled with power and precision. There was to be no century, however, as Nehra removed Jayasuriya for 98.

But there was something more deadly to come. Kandamby and Chamara Kapugedera put together an 83-run partnership that would all but seal the fate of the game. As is required when a pair must build on the excellent work of a player before them, they kept the scoring rate healthy. They weren't as belligerent as Jayasuriya but ran well, called loudly, and found the gaps.

Kandamby made sure to cut out any ambitious swings through the off side, opting to run hard for must of his initial runs and only backed himself to play aggressive shots when the run rate needed a boost. Anything that was too full or too loose disappeared and plenty in between was pushed away for ones and twos. The boundary patrollers were kept on attention as he swatted and deflected regularly.

A fabulous display of clean, crisp hitting - not slogging - helped Sri Lanka poach 53 off the batting Powerplay. A flurry of chips and biffs sailed over the square-leg region and extra cover, in between two awesome laps around the corner and one violent heave over midwicket. Aided by a drop at mid-on when he was 73, Kandamby added 18 more to his total and ensured Sri Lanka a winning score.

On tracks like this, against skilful bowlers who know more about choking than the average serial killer, successful pursuit of 308 needed something special. It wasn't to be. India again lost Dinesh Karthik early in the piece, gloving a short ball from Thilan Thushara down the leg side, and when Sachin Tendulkar turned a slower ball from Nuwan Kulasekara to mid-on, the warning sign was flashing.

With Tendulkar back in the hutch India shifted to the lowest gear. Yuvraj Singh survived a clear nick when on 9 but repeated the loose prod and nibbled one behind. Suresh Raina, one of the heroes of yesterday's run chase, nicked his first ball. Rahul Dravid was twice reprieved by Sri Lanka's fielders who missed the stumps, but his luck ran out on 47 when Mathews snuck one past the bat. The rest came and went without much impact against Mathews, who bowled nippy, stump-to-stump seam-up bowling. It literally was a procession: pitch it straight, get a bit of cut and nip, and thanks for coming.

Missing their lead spinner and hardly relying on Ajantha Mendis, Sri Lanka's latest masters of asphyxiation did it comfortably in the end.
 
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Lee propels Australia to facile victory

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Brett Lee has wanted to prove a point in this series after missing the Ashes and did so in emphatic style as he claimed 5 for 49 to set up Australia's crushing seven-wicket victory, which gave them an unassailable 4-0 lead. After England folded to the pace of Lee for 220, Tim Paine made his first international half-century to set up the chase, then Michael Clarke helped himself to an unbeaten 62 as Australia cruised home with 38 balls to spare.

England were still handily placed on 146 for 3 when Lee, who removed Joe Denly in the fifth over, returned for a one-over spell before the mandatory ball change at 34 overs. His first delivery was a pinpoint yorker that was too much for Matt Prior, he finished with a wicket-maiden, and from there the innings nose-dived. However, it was Lee's last spell that was the most destructive as England's last five wickets fell for 20.

Lee was just too quick for four batsmen as he demolished the stumps with searing yorkers to complete the ninth five-wicket haul of his career. Nathan Hauritz also deserves huge credit for claiming two key wickets, including Strauss, and conceding just 23 runs from his 10 overs. In a pattern that has become eerily predictable, Andrew Strauss shone at the top with a neat 63, but once again his colleagues couldn't follow suit.

It was thrilling to watch Lee in full flow, an absent phenomenon during the Ashes series, as he uprooted the stumps of Luke Wright, Stuart Broad and Adil Rashid in the space of 15 balls. England's frustrations nearly boiled over when Owais Shah swung a full toss from Shane Watson to midwicket and stood his ground, believing the ball had been above waist height. Replays showed it was marginal, but England are far from a happy bunch.

There was barely a need for Australia to break sweat during their chase, although Watson's habit of falling lbw continued when he played across a delivery from Tim Bresnan. Paine cashed in on a couple of long hops from Rashid, who was introduced inside the Powerplays and struggled with his length to begin with, while Ricky Ponting eased back into his day job with two boundaries off Bresnan during a second-wicket stand of 57 in nine overs.

At times England's bowling was as ordinary as the batting, but to Rashid's credit he recovered somewhat from his loose start and removed Paine via a top-edged sweep. Ponting enjoyed what was little more than an extended net following his three-week lay-off - an ideal way to get himself back into the groove ahead of the Champions Trophy - until he drove Bresnan to cover, but Clarke eased to his half-century from 66 balls in the glorious late-summer sunshine.

Australia didn't bother to knock the runs off especially quickly on their last appearance at Lord's for the summer and the batting Powerplay was unused. The ground has brought mixed memories this year, but they will be back again in 2010 when they face Pakistan in a Test.

The pattern of England's efforts in this series has been uncanny - and not in a good way. Strauss dominated the scoring at The Rose Bowl, before he fell for 63 off 72 balls, and it was an almost identical situation here as he reached a 48-ball half century having won his fourth toss of the series. However, with Hauritz doing an impressive job in stifling the scoring rate - he had already removed Ravi Bopara - Strauss felt the need to try and increase the tempo, but only managed a thick outside-edge to short third man when England needed him to stay and score a hundred.

As he has done throughout the summer, Strauss looked in complete control. He took three fours in four balls off a wayward Nathan Bracken and had just the one awkward moment against Lee, when he got into a tangle against a short ball and gloved the delivery just wide of a diving Paine.

Bopara, demoted to No. 3 with Denly's recall, was also playing comfortably in a second-wicket stand of 67. However, Hauritz's introduction slowed England's progress and he made the breakthrough in his third over when Bopara was struck in line with off stump while sweeping to complete another unfulfilling innings.

England couldn't get Hauritz away - he conceded just a single boundary in his 10 overs - but again there was a lack of intent and the pressure told on Strauss as the run-rate dropped from over five to nearer four. In a smart piece of captaincy from Ponting, Hauritz was removed from the attack after nine overs to allow Lee a dart before the ball was changed at 34 overs with the result being Prior's demise.

Paine pulled off a swift leg-side stumping to remove Eoin Morgan and though ideally two batsmen need to set when the batting Powerplay is taken, England had little option to call theirs soon after Wright arrived as his role in the side is to hit boundaries. It started brightly as the first two overs brought 21, but Lee soon found his range and England were blown away. In every sense.
 
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Gambhir confident of Champions Trophy return

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Gautam Gambhir is confident he will recover in time for the Champions Trophy from his injury that has kept him out of the ongoing tri-series in Sri Lanka. He had to pull out on the eve of India's first match because of a groin strain, which he had aggravated during a nets session.

"I am going to get fit before the Champions Trophy for sure," Gambhir told Cricinfo in Bangalore, where he is undergoing rest and rehabilitation. "It's a groin strain, so it would have taken me a week to 10 days - and our first game is on the 26th [in the Champions Trophy]. And I want to get fit before that."

His withdrawal from the tri-series was more of a precautionary measure: India already don't have Virender Sehwag's services for the Champions Trophy, and didn't want to risk Gambhir for the big event.

"If I had continued playing there, it would have aggravated, and there's a long season up ahead," Gambhir said. "I didn't want to take that risk. The Champions Trophy is much more important."

Gambhir is undergoing rehabilitation under the supervision of the physio-trainer team of Paul Chapman and Paul Close at the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore, and he could head home to New Delhi sometime next week because he will only require rest. It is believed to be a minor strain. Nonetheless, it will be a tricky decision for India, who risked taking a half-fit Sehwag to England for the World Twenty20 and ended up an opener short. This, though, is a smaller injury in comparison.
 
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We won't put pressure on Asif - Younis

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Pakistan captain Younis Khan and coach Intikhab Alam have said they will give Mohammad Asif time to settle into his groove after more than year out of international cricket, and have added they won't put any undue pressure on him on his return at the Champions Trophy. Asif last played in July last year; he was banned by the Pakistan board soon after in September, as he tested positive for the banned substance nandrolone at the inaugural IPL.

"We are not going to put pressure on Asif because he is coming after a one-year gap and I would also expect the fans not to expect much of him," Younis told reporters at a training camp in Karachi. "We will see how he copes and then decide whether to play him in the first match or not. I wish him the best, and hope that he gets five wickets against India [on September 26] and helps us win that game."

Asif's inclusion, Younis suggested, was a part of a long-term plan, for his experience would play a significant role in Pakistan's upcoming tours of Australia and New Zealand. "We had to bring him back as he is a quality bowler and even if he doesn't perform in this event, we would hope that he comes in better shape for our tours to New Zealand and Australia later this year," he said.

Alam was confident Asif will improve with each game and was positive about his fitness, coming in to this tournament. "Asif is one of the best new ball bowlers, but for this event we will have to give him time," he said. "He will perform with every match and I am confident that he is in a very good physical condition."

Asif is not allowed to be with the squad until the ban expires - on September 22 - and will therefore miss Pakistan's opening game of the tournament on the 23rd, the day he arrives in South Africa. "He is not available for the first game because of the ban," Alam said. "We will see if he plays the second game against India. He is very keen and is in a good mental state," he said.

Pakistan take on West Indies in their opening game of the competition but play two warm-up games before that, including one against Sri Lanka.
 
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Chastened India seek quick turnaround

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After seeing off New Zealand's timorous challenge, Sri Lanka and India will contest bragging rights in the Compaq Cup final. Sri Lanka hold the edge in the clash between two sides who generally don't do dull finals. The winners will go into the Champions Trophy in positive mood, leaving the loser to put salve on their injured pride.

While Kumar Sangakkara said a decision on Muttiah Muraliatharan's availability would be taken on Sunday evening, the bowler is fit and Sri Lanka should be fielding their strongest side - Thilan Samaraweera remains a doubt - and an Indian team missing the experience of three big-match players will have its work cut out to be competitive. Sri Lanka trounced India in the dress rehearsal on Saturday and again proved that once they have a score on the board at the Premadasa, they defend it resolutely.

Sri Lanka have all the weapons they need in two brisk new-ball operators, a vicious slinger, and two spinners with an assortment of tricks. Each of those bowlers is capable, more so under lights, of denying batsmen the space and time to score. The support cast is no less impressive, with the ever-improving Angelo Mathews and India would do well to be wary of Sanath Jayasuriya, who sorted out a couple of New Zealand batsmen with his variations last week. On Monday, India could face the world's most potent spin attack, with Murali and Ajantha Mendis possibly back in tandem. There will be a few flashes of the Asia Cup final last year.

India's concern is the batting, particularly at the top. Dinesh Karthik may have just played his way out of the XI, despite MS Dhoni having twice spoken of how wary he is to stick young Virat Kohli in as opener. Sachin Tendulkar has got starts on two occasions, but most worrying is the form of Yuvraj Singh, who has struggled to start against pace and spin. He scratched around dreadfully in both matches. India's fielding was also rather shabby in the previous game.

India's only real hope is to put up a big total and then pressure Sri Lanka's batsmen into committing errors. Chasing against the likes of Murali, Mendis and Lasith Malinga is a difficult task at the best of times, and as India found out yesterday, the anaconda grip gets you eventually.

Form guide (most recent first)
Sri Lanka WWLLW
India LWNRWL

Watch out for...
After his performance on Saturday, surely that's got to be Sanath Jayasuriya. Harrying between the wickets like a man possessed and then finding the boundary freely while under pressure, Jayasuriya's innings was an omen for India going into the final. In case they need reminding, in 12 finals against India, Jayasuriya has scored 692 runs at 57.66. The grand old man of international cricket rumbles on.

India will also rely heavily on one veteran at the top. In nine finals against Sri Lanka, Sachin Tendulkar has scored 361 runs at 51.57. The last time he played Sri Lanka in a final was in the 2004 Asia Cup at the Premadasa where his 74 couldn't produce a winning chase. Tendulkar will need to dip into the reservoir of 73 games against this opposition to correct a worrying trend for India.

Team news

Brendon Kuruppu, Sri Lanka's manager, said that Murali could have played on Saturday but that the management wanted to give him the extra day to rest for the final. His return means that Sri Lanka will have to take a tough call between resting one of the three quicks or Mendis. Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Thushara have led the attack all year and Mendis hasn't done much in two matches this week, so he may be the one to make way. Sri Lanka are also waiting on the fitness report of Samaraweera, who strained a hamstring after his century against New Zealand and missed the previous match.

Sri Lanka: (probable) 1 Sanath Jayasuriya, 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (capt & wk), 4 Mahela Jayawardene, 5 Chamara Kapugedera/Thilan Samaraweera, 6 Thilina Kandamby, 7 Angelo Mathews, 8 Thilan Thushara, 9 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10 Muttiah Muralitharan, 11 Lasith Malinga.

Karthik may continue to open the innings in Gambhir's absence, given Dhoni's reluctance to send Kohli in early. Kohli is not a specialist opener, though he filled the role in five ODIs in Sri Lanka last summer. He was impressive in handling Murali during this year's IPL, so should present a credible case. There are a couple of other possibilities for India; after Mathews nipped out six with his canny seamers under lights, there's an outside chance that the allrounder Abhishek Nayar gets a game. That would mean India have to drop Yusuf Pathan or one of the three fast bowlers (probably RP Singh, who had a poor last game). Praveen Kumar is another option.

India: (probable) 1 Dinesh Karthik/Virat Kohli, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 Rahul Dravid, 4 Yuvraj Singh, 5 MS Dhoni (capt & wk), 6 Suresh Raina, 7 Yusuf Pathan/Abhishek Nayar, 8 Harbhajan Singh, 9 RP Singh/Praveen Kumar, 10 Ishant Sharma, 11 Ashish Nehra.

Stats and Trivia

* Sri Lanka haven't lost to India in the last seven finals between the two teams - they've won five while two were rained out. The last time India won a final against them was 11 years ago, in the Singer-Akai Nidahas Trophy.
* Murali has an excellent economy rate of 3.94 in finals against India. In eight innings, he has taken ten wickets at 28.00.

Quotes

"If you win it, you have 60% chance of winning the match. Moreover, if you score 230-240, then you have a good chance as the bowlers will find it easier to bowl second."
MS Dhoni, matter-of-factly, explains the importance of the toss.

"He is fit and ready to go. We will see how he is, his body is. This evening we will make a decision as to whether he is available for tomorrow's game. Because we have a very important Champions Trophy coming up, we don't want to rush him into anything too soon. But to give him ample time to recover and get fully fit."
Kumar Sangakkara keeps everyone waiting of Muralitharan's availability for the final.
 
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We're not out for revenge - Sangakkara

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Kumar Sangakkara, Sri Lanka's captain, is not out for revenge against India after the recent history the two teams have shared. Sri Lanka surrendered their last two home series to India but scored an emphatic victory on Saturday, one that left Sangakkara pleased at the way the team had shaped up.

"I think you learn from your past games and you move on and you face newer teams, different combinations every single time you go out. So the past is the past really," said Sangakkara after the team's practice session. "You cannot dwell on it too much and get lost in it. You've got to be prepared for the present and for the future."

Sangakkara denied Sri Lanka gained a psychological advantage over India in the dress rehearsal for Monday and was keen to keep the focus on the final. Sri Lanka are unbeaten in finals at home this decade and Sangakkara hoped to kept that outstanding record. "Every victory is done and over. You've just got to get ready and face the next challenge. We have won one or two games here, so we've just got to get prepared for the finals. We have just spoken about clearer plans for everyone. We are just on the right track to build from here. And each victory in that journey is very important."

Sri Lanka's middle order has been boosted by the late call-ups to Thilan Samaraweera and Thilina Kandamby. Samaraweera's exceptional maiden century lifted Sri Lanka from 69 for 5 against New Zealand and on Saturday Kandamby's unbeaten 91 seized the momentum back from India. Sangakkara identified those contributions, as well as Sanath Jayasuriya's return to form, as "very important factors in subcontinent conditions". "With Sanath in form with his batting and his bowling I think it balances the side very well," he said. "The middle order is just started clicking. You just have to keep that going ... work hard and at the end of the day every single batsman must be responsible for his performance."

Calling it right at the toss has been a crucial factor at the R Premadasa stadium, where Sri Lanka have preferred to bat first and then call upon their magnificent bowlers to strangle the opposition. Sangakkara has, in every press conference at this venue after the Tests, stressed on the need to change history and he spoke of the same today. "Are you going to think about the toss and not about winning the game, or are you going to try and win the game no matter what happens with the toss? I think we've got to get the attitudes and our minds right. We know what the reality is so we got to fight harder and harder every single time and try change them.

"My theory of luck is simple. If you are prepared and you train very hard then the need for luck is minimise. The toss unfortunately cannot control that and what you can control is how you react to it and what do you do after it. Whether you bat first or second you got no choice you have to try and win the game."

Sri Lanka will take a final call on Muttiah Muralitharan on match day, but one bowler who has lessened the impact of his absence has been Lasith Malinga. After rocking New Zealand with an explosive three-wicket over on Tuesday, Malinga had the Indians hopping. "If Malinga is firing well and the ball is swinging he is equally deadly with the newer or older ball. In these conditions when the ball is slightly older he seems to get a bit of reverse-swing very early with his action," said Sangakkara. "I think that is his gain, his strength. We just want to make sure that we exploit every bowler's and each player's strength every time we use them."
 
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Players can't trust each other - Akram

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Wasim Akram has expressed doubt over the viability of players' associations in India and Pakistan. Younis Khan, the Pakistan captain, had announced his intention to form a players' association and met Federation of International Cricketers' Association (FICA) chief Tim May in this regard. Akram, however, had his doubts over whether such a concept would work. "Our culture will be the biggest barrier, if a players' association has to see light of the day and then deliver," Akram was quoted as saying in the Dawn.

"A geographical divide hasn't partitioned our way of thinking," Akram said. "We have a strange culture in India and Pakistan. Players just can't trust each other. I think it is the only reason why players' associations have not worked."

There have been attempts by players in Pakistan to form a representative body, but have largely failed. Majid Khan made an attempt to form Pakistan's first players' body in the 1980s but it didn't work, while the Indians formed their own around the same time and it eventually met a similar fate.

Younis' move is a significant development for Pakistan cricket, given the almost constant cycle of players developing differences with one another, or with board officials. Player management is also a fledgling concept here and until recently, most players were not formally represented by any party.

Akram himself was part of Pakistan teams which were riddled with factionalism and cliques in the 90s. His removal from captaincy in 1994, due to a players' revolt, is a case in point.