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Tuesday 6 March 2012

Emphatic Sri Lanka level finals

Tillakaratne Dilshan his ten fours in his 106 
Sri Lanka 2 for 274 (Dilshan 106, Jayawardene 80) beat Australia 6 for 271 (Clarke 117, Warner 100) by eight wickets

Mahela Jayawardene and Tillakaratne Dilshan took full toll of a wayward Australia as Sri Lanka forced a third triangular series final in Adelaide. Chasing 272, the visitors galloped to the target with 5.4 overs to spare, benefiting greatly from a rollicking start when the first three overs reaped 30 runs.Dilshan alternated between the brazen and the cheeky, crashing 10 fours and also being struck on the helmet when he attempted his patented Dil-scoop. The captain Jayawardene was more cultured, but outpaced his partner in a princely innings that would have ended in the second over if not for a Clint McKay no-ball.Such indiscipline summed up Australia's predicament, having struck a horrid patch of form in the field midway through the first final in Brisbane and then being unable to rise above it in Adelaide. The captain Michael Clarke is also in the unenviable position of carrying a left hamstring problem perilously close to the start of the West Indies tour, due to begin almost immediately after the third final.Clarke had done his best to give his side a decent total. His 117 in Australia's 6 for 271 was the fastest of his limited-overs career and the second of his ODI captaincy. David Warner was more circumspect, but his chanceless 100 demonstrated a range of concentration and focus reserved for the best of batsmen. Famed as a boundary hitter, Warner reached the rope only four times in his innings and cleared it only once, but the value of his effort was reflected in a final total far greater than seemed possible at the innings' midpoint.Matthew Wade departed early to the spin of Dilshan, who opened the bowling and completed a tidy 10 overs, before Shane Watson played a chancy innings in which he was grassed twice. Each dropped catch fell off the bowling of Farveez Maharoof, who ultimately ran out Australia's vice-captain with a direct hit in his follow through. Lasith Malinga was the tightest of Sri Lanka's bowlers and deserved his three wickets.Two more catches would go down off Clarke's bat later in the innings, while Jayawardene raged against a delayed no-ball call at the height of his opposite number's innings. Debating the point angrily with both umpires after Maharoof had strayed above waist height with a full toss, Jayawardene lost his cool. His fury would be far more controlled when the reply began.A second-over edge behind by Jayawardene was cancelled out by McKay's overstep, typical of the abject way in which Australia's bowlers began their defence of a less than watertight total. Brett Lee gave up three wides on the way to conceding 12 from the opening over, and James Pattinson's first two overs were taken for 22 despite an abundance of away swing.No fewer than 11 of the first 30 runs were handed to Sri Lanka via the extras column, as Australia's bowlers maintained the poorly form they had demonstrated in the latter overs in Brisbane. Clarke had taken the field despite his injury, but his presence did not make much of a difference.Jayawardene and Dilshan did not get too frantic after the start they were given, and slipped into comfortable gears that involved regular singles and the odd boundary whenever the bowlers strayed in search of a first wicket. Australia's mid-innings options were milked for regular runs, Xavier Doherty's first five costing 37.Dilshan was first to pass 50, and Jayawardene soon followed. Australia's frustration grew when Asad Rauf refused a concerted appeal for caught behind from Dilshan on 77, as replays revealed a substantial edge that Wade gathered while keeping up to Watson.Jayawardene's sparkling stay was ended by a hint of Pattinson reverse swing and a clear lbw, but Dilshan went on to his second century of the tournament before Dinesh Chandimal and Kumar Sangakkara guided the visitors home.Clarke had little hesitation batting upon winning the toss, but the early overs were slow going. Jayawardene's imaginative use of Dilshan added to the openers' uncertainty, and Wade's impatience proved terminal when he swung at a ball not quite short enough for the stroke and was bowled.Watson's innings was halting, and he was dropped by Dilshan in the fielding circle then by Rangana Herath on the long-off boundary - the latter unable to complete an equivalent of his spectacular outfield take in the first final. However Maharoof was not discouraged by the missed chances, and when Watson was 15 he gathered and swivelled from Warner's offside bunt to throw down the stumps and find a diving Watson comfortably short. Clarke helped to build some greater momentum in the company of Warner, who was less conspicuous than he had been at the Gabba.The pair accumulated steadily, adding a little more impetus with the batting Powerplay, and continuing to benefit from profligate fielding from the tourists. Clarke was turfed on 71 and 77, the second chance falling to Malinga, who managed only to palm the chance over the rope for six.It set the scene for an explosive over, in which Clarke took Maharoof for six, four, six, four - the last a high full toss swung behind square leg. Initially the umpires did not call it a no-ball, but on reflection Bruce Oxenford raised his arm to hand Australia an extra run and another delivery. Jayawardene was incensed by the delayed call, arguing at length with both officials in a manner that suggested more of the incident would be heard later.Clarke had blazed past Warner despite the opener having a 23-run start, and he was first to reach his century with a flick through square leg. Though he had made plenty of useful contributions in the interim, it was Clarke's first ODI century since his first innings as the fully-fledged captain, against Bangladesh in Dhaka in April 2011.Warner's hundred arrived in the next over, an effort of composure and also courage after his groin complaint in Brisbane. He skied a catch without adding another run, leaving an increasingly restricted Clarke to guide the hosts to a total rather less substantial than was ultimately needed.

SA to play one-off T20 against India


South Africa will play India in a Twenty20 international at the end of this month after establishing the match as a permanent fixture on the calendar, Cricket South Africa (CSA) announced on Monday. The Protease will host the one-off contest at the Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg on March 30, just three days after completing an away test series against New Zealand. "This match is a follow-up to last year s successful one at Moses Mabhida Stadium (in Durban) and after discussions with the Indian board, we have agreed to make this an annual fixture," CSA chief executive Gerald Majola said in a statement.

Milan, Barca within reach of quarter-finals


AC Milan and defending champions Barcelona are both well placed to progress to the quarter-finals of the Champions League as the first four of this season’s last-16 ties conclude this week. Milan take a 4-0 lead to Arsenal on Tuesday evening, while Barcelona – who got the better of the Italian champions in the group phase – have a 3-1 advantage to defend when Bayer Leverkusen visit Camp Nou on Wednesday. A slickly taken first-half hat-trick from the returning Zlatan Ibrahimovic set Milan on the way to a 4-0 win at Palermo on Saturday that enabled them to open up a three-point lead over Juventus at the Serie A summit. Massimiliano Allegri’s side were similarly ruthless in the first leg of their tie against Arsenal three weeks ago, when a Robinho brace helped the seven-time European champions condemn the Londoners to their heaviest defeat in continental competition. Arsene Wenger labelled his side’s performance “shocking” and the Gunners must now do what only three teams have managed to do in the history of UEFA tournaments and overhaul a four-goal deficit from the first leg of a knockout tie. Milan, however, have unwanted experience of throwing away handsome leads in the Champions League. In 2003-04, they went out to Deportivo La Coruna in the quarter-finals despite leading 4-1 from the first leg and the following season witnessed their famous loss on penalties to Liverpool in the final after they went in 3-0 up at half-time. Arsenal can also take heart from a run of four straight wins in the Premier League, the latest of which being a smash-and-grab 2-1 success at Liverpool on Saturday that took them to within four points of third-placed Tottenham Hotspur. Six of Arsenal’s last 19 home wins in Europe have been by four goals or more, and Wenger knows that in Robin van Persie – scorer of both goals at Anfield – he possesses one of Europe’s most in-form strikers. “We will give absolutely everything to win,” he told the Arsenal website. “We know the statistics are against us, but you can realise the impossible when you don’t know it is impossible. Let’s ignore that and just go for it.” Leverkusen face a similarly daunting task against a Barcelona side who appear to have rediscovered themselves in recent weeks, having registered three consecutive wins culminating in Saturday’s 3-1 success over Sporting Gijon in La Liga. Furthermore, Pep Guardiola’s side are unbeaten in 13 European home games and Leverkusen have not won away from home in Europe’s premier club competition for more than a decade. Barca will welcome back tournament top scorer Lionel Messi after he missed the victory over Gijon through suspension, but forward Alexis Sanchez (thigh) and left-back Eric Abidal (groin) are both likely to miss the game due to injury. Perhaps the most finely poised match of the week sees Zenit Saint-Petersburg travel to Benfica on Tuesday protecting a 3-2 lead from the first leg. Roman Shirokov’s 88th-minute winner gave Zenit victory at Stadion Petrovski on Valentine’s Day but Benfica have two away goals under their belts, as well as a record of 15 wins, three draws and one defeat in their last 19 European home games. Lyon will also take a narrow lead into Wednesday’s game at Cypriot side APOEL FC, whose hopes of reaching the last eight remain alive despite a 1-0 loss at Stade Gerland in the first leg. OL are bidding to reach the quarter-finals for the first time since their run to the last four in 2009-10 but domestically they are without a win in five Ligue 1 matches, which has seen them fall seven points below the Champions League places. “The match in Nicosia on Wednesday is important for the players, but also for the club,” said Lyon coach Remi Garde after Saturday’s 2-0 loss at Nancy.

Runako Morton killed in car crash


The former Test and one-day batsman was killed in a car accident. "Our deepest condolences to Runako Morton s family. Such devastating and tragic news," the board said on its official Twitter account, after the 33-year-old s death was announced. Morton, who played 15 Tests for the West Indies, scoring 573 runs at an average of 22.03, died when he lost control of his car and careered off the road in Trinidad on Sunday, according to the Trinidad Express newspaper s web site. His last appearance for his country came against Australia in a Twenty20 international in 2010. Morton s career was blotted by disciplinary breaches. He was expelled from the West Indian Academy in July 2001, and a year later was called up to the injury-plagued West Indies squad as a replacement for Marlon Samuels. He pulled out of the ICC Champions Trophy in September 2002, after lying about the death of his grandmother. His career slipped further when he was arrested (though released without charge) in January 2004, following a stabbing incident.

Chelsea sack Villas-Boas after less than season


Andre Villas-Boas’s tortured spell as Chelsea manager came to an end on Sunday when the Premier League club sacked the Portuguese after less than nine months in charge. The London club handed over first-team duties to assistant manager Roberto di Matteo for the remainder of a season that is in danger of becoming the worst since Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea in 2003. Speculation over the future of Villas Boas, at 34 the youngest manager in the league this season, had been swirling in the British media for weeks after a series of poor results and reports of rifts with senior players. The dismissal of the man often referred to simply by his initials “AVB” came after Saturday’s 1-0 league loss to West Bromwich Albion, their seventh league defeat of the season and a dreadful performance all round. “Unfortunately the results and performances of the team have not been good enough and were showing no signs of improving at a key time in the season,” the London club said in a statement on their website. The Stamford Bridge outfit have won three of their last 12 Premier League games and are in danger of missing out on qualifying for the Champions League for the first time since Russian billionaire Abramovich bought the club. They are trailing 3-1 in their round-of-16 Champions League tie against Napoli ahead of the March 14 second leg, while they sit fifth in the Premier League table with 46 points from 27 games. “The club is still competing in the latter stages of the UEFA Champions League and the FA Cup, as well as challenging for a top-four spot in the Premier League, and we aim to remain as competitive as possible on all fronts,” the statement said. “With that in mind we felt our only option was to make a change at this time.”

Federer beats Murray to win Dubai Championships


The second-seeded Federer didn t drop a set all week and was rarely threatened by the third-seeded Murray, who was coming off his semifinal win against top-ranked Novak Djokovic. The win was Federer s fifth title in seven tournaments and his 72nd overall. He also won two weeks ago in Rotterdam. "This is perfect. This is great. Any title is a good one, I ll tell you that," Federer said. "I have a losing record against Murray, I do believe, and not against Novak ... I don t want to say (beating Murray) means more to me but it s a beautiful victory." The 16-time Grand Slam champion kept Murray off balance much of the match, outplaying the 24-year-old from Scotland with a mix of powerful groundstrokes, drop shots and the occasional serve-and-volley. Federer saved two break points when down 3-2 in the first set at the Aviation Club. He saved the first when Murray hit a forehand long and won the second with a backhand volley. Federer broke Murray to go up 6-5 and took the first set when Murray hit a forehand wide. The two players traded breaks early in the second set before Federer broke decisively to make it 5-4. Murray saved one match point before the Swiss star hit a forehand winner into the corner. "The match was close I think in both sets, I just gave myself more opportunities than Andy did overall," said Federer, who used the fast surface to his advantage. Murray struggled much of the night with his backhand and his serve also let him down. He won 85 percent of his first service points against Djokovic, but only 48 percent against Federer. "For sure I made a few too many mistakes in the second, and he was playing a lot more aggressive than in the first set," Murray said. "Sets can come down to just a couple (of) points. You get a lucky shot here or one great shot and you can break the set wide open." Murray insisted his win over Djokovic was not on his mind as he took the court against Federer. "It was a good win yesterday, good win the day before, tough match today," Murray said. "So I m just happy with the week, because at this stage last year I was in a very different position, different frame of mind." Despite losing, Murray said his performance this week will help him at upcoming tournaments in the United States. "I was happy I managed to adjust to the court," Murray said. "The conditions over in Indian Wells (and) Miami are going to be very, very different to here. Much slower court, which hopefully will suit my game a little bit better." The 30-year-old Federer now heads to New York, where he will play an exhibition match Monday at Madison Square Garden against Andy Roddick. "There is no substitute to confidence," Federer said. "I ve played great."-