South Africa vs Sri Lanka, 32nd Match, Super 10 Group 1
It took one blow from England to knock Sri Lanka and
South Africa out of the World T20. Now the two teams face off in their
last league match here at the Ferozeshah Kotla on Monday with little to
salvage.
No doubt, no team likes to lose. But it is
difficult to keep the motivation high when there is not much to play
for. Therefore, both teams will play only for pride, and not necessarily
with an eye on the points.
These teams came with
contrasting expectations. Defending champion Sri Lanka was low on
confidence after a series of ordinary results post the retirements of
Kumara Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene. Add to it the injury to pace
spearhead Lasith Malinga, and the young Lankan team looked woefully
short of resources to match the best on the big stage.
Disappointing bowling
South
Africa, among the favourites to emerge as the first-time winner,
boasted of several prolific performers in the shortest format.
Much
was expected from A.B. de Villiers and an attack headed by Dale Steyn.
However, more than its batting, the bowling let the team down in the
competition.
Once England chased down 229 in the
opener, South Africa conceded another 172 runs to Afghanistan in a match
it was expected to win with ease. As was the case, the team conceding
around 400 runs in 40 overs had plenty to worry about. Thereafter, it
was too much to expect from this attack to restrict the mighty West
Indies to under 122.
With this being the background,
South Africa knows that no matter how much it scored, its bowling was
capable of leaking more runs. However, in this battle of two battered
sides, South Africa could emerge stronger only if its bowlers raise the
bar.
Disappointment personified
Hashim Amla,
who spoke to the media on Sunday, was disappointment personified. On the
question of the team not living up to the pre-event expectations, he
was rather candid in saying “every ICC event we have to answer this same
question. We did play on grounds that were quite different to each
other. We could not bat and bowl equally well in the key matches.”
In
varying degrees, the Lankans felt the pain of being out of contention.
On Saturday night, Angelo Mathews had reasons to feel gutted in spite of
lifting Lanka from an embarrassing 15 for four in three overs to within
two big hits of victory in the final over.
Leg-spinner
Jeffrey Vandersay chose to look at the brighter side on Sunday when he
said, “our batting is quite good. From 15 for four we came back fighting
(against England). It shows the character and potential of the team.”
However,
such a defeat hurts for a long time and 48 hours is too less for a team
to recover. As things stand, Lanka finds itself on the brink of ending
up as the most battered defending champion in the short history of the
competition.
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