Jayawardene steers strong Sri Lanka chase
25 overs Sri Lanka 2 for 144 (Jayawardene 79*, Chandimal 28*) need another 137 to beat Australia 6 for 278 (Forrest 104, Clarke 72)
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Mahela Jayawardene gave Sri Lanka the perfect start as they set out to chase a near-record 281 at Bellerive Oval. At the halfway mark of their innings they had reached 2 for 144, needing a further 137 for a victory that would push them to the top of the Commonwealth Bank Series table, and importantly they had Jayawardene at the creased and well set on 79, alongside Dinesh Chandimal, who had 28.
Jayawardene was in fine touch after beginning with a couple of edgy boundaries early in his innings. In the fifth over he put those edges behind him and took on the pace of Brett Lee, swinging a magnificent six over midwicket from a fast, straight ball that most batsmen would have been content to defend or drive straight.
The runs kept flowing for Jayawardene and he found a knack of taking a run from the last ball of the over to maintain the strike during his opening partnership with Tillakaratne Dilshan. By the time Dilshan pulled a catch to Peter Forrest at deep midwicket off the bowling of Ben Hilfenhaus for 3 from nine balls, Jaywardene had already galloped along to 44 from 39 deliveries during their 55-run stand.
The strike evened up during Jayawardene's partnership with Kumar Sangakkara, who sent a couple of searing strokes to the boundary before he was caught at point off a leading edge from Daniel Christian's bowling for 22 from 22 balls. Jayawardene had already brought up his fifty with a punchy drive down the ground off Christian from his 45th ball.
Jayawardene and Chandimal kept the runs coming and at the 25-over mark their partnership had reached 54 runs and the Australians needed a wicket badly. Ryan Harris had been expensive in his first match back from a rest and Jayawardene had enjoyed using Lee's pace against him, and he was costing more than a run a ball.
Should Sri Lanka win the match it would be the second-highest total in a successful chase in an ODI in Hobart, behind the 282 that Australia ended up with against Zimbabwe in 2001. It would also mean that both Australia and Sri Lanka would be one game clear of India with two matches each remaining before the finals.
50 overs Australia 6 for 280 (Forrest 104, Clarke 72) v Sri Lanka
It cannot be easy to take over from a champion, but Peter Forrest made an outstanding start as Australia's No.3 in the post-Ricky Ponting ODI era with a century that helped his side to 6 for 280 against Sri Lanka. Australia's strong performance means Sri Lanka will need to chase a target one run short of the highest ODI chase at Bellerive Oval, and they will need the biggest second-innings score by a visiting team at the venue.
Forrest's hundred was his not only his first for Australia but also in any List A match, and no Australian has scored more in his first four ODIs than Forrest's tally of 238. He brought up his century by dropping the ball into the off side and haring off for a quick single from his 136th delivery, and it brought fist-pumps from Forrest and a hug from his partner Michael Hussey.
He was caught at deep cover off Angelo Mathews in the next over for 104 as he tried to keep the tempo rising and it ended a fine innings. After he departed, the lower-order squeezed out some valuable late runs: Michael Hussey was bowled trying to dab Lasith Malinga fine for 21 from 14 balls, David Hussey finished unbeaten on 40 from 28 balls and Brett Lee chipped in with a useful 20 not out from 15 deliveries.
But this innings was all about Forrest. Almost every time Forrest has walked out to bat in this series he has increased his chances of staying in the side, and his poise at the crease must also have him in the minds of the selectors for Australia's Test tour of the West Indies.
He struck 10 fours and two sixes but avoided risks wherever he could, generally preferring to force the ball through gaps instead of over fielders. When he did go for the aerial route it nearly brought about his downfall, particularly when he pulled a ball that only just landed over the boundary and was lucky not to have been snaffled by the deep midwicket Mathews, who was just a couple of paces too wide.
A cover-driven boundary off Nuwan Kulasekara was especially impressive, zipping off the bat with speed and perfect placement. For much of his innings, Forrest had the support of the captain Michael Clarke, who scored 72 from 79 deliveries during their 154-run stand. But Clarke appeared to battle a sore back late in his innings, stretching on the ground shortly before he lifted Mathews to deep midwicket and was well taken by a tumbling Thisara Perera.
But he had played an important rebuilding role for Australia after they lost both openers early. He muscled two sixes over midwicket, one a flat pull early in his innings off Farveez Maharoof, who had been impressive early, and took to all the bowlers during the batting Powerplay. Australia scored 43 for no loss during that five-over period and the lift in tempo was important after Forrest and Clarke had consolidated.
The innings had started poorly for Australia after Clarke chose to bat, with the departure of Matthew Wade in the second over. He punched a boundary through cover off Kulasekara but next delivery fell for 5 to a soft dismissal, a limp drive that lobbed straight into the hands of Mahela Jayawardene at mid-off.
His partner David Warner didn't regain his lost fluency and failed to strike a boundary in his 13-ball stay. On 7, he edged a good ball behind off Maharoof and Australia were in trouble at 2 for 27 in the seventh over. Maharoof was especially miserly early and none of the Sri Lankan bowlers leaked serious runs. But by the end, Australia had built a total that was likely to provide a serious challenge for Sri Lanka.
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