Australia's pace bowlers sent Sri Lanka crashing out of the World Twenty20 championships at Newlands Thursday. "We're rising to the occasion," said stand-in Australian captain Adam Gilchrist. "We are more experienced in the big games."
Sri Lanka tumbled to 101 all out in 19.3 overs after being sent in. Australian opening batsmen Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden needed only 10.2 overs to take their side racing to a ten-wicket win in a Super Eights match that was effectively a knock-out encounter.
Australia made sure of joining Pakistan in the semi-finals while Sri Lanka were eliminated. Gilchrist admitted there may have been a feeling of injustice in the Australian camp going in to the 20-overs tournament.
"As a team who have dominated the other two forms of the game for a long while it could have been a feeling that it was not right that teams were brought closer to us," he said of the short format.
But Gilchrist said that if any such feelings existed they had been quickly removed. "We're not owed anything in cricket. It's a very real part of cricket now and I think we have made that adjustment as the tournament has gone on." "There was some juice in the wicket," said Sri Lankan captain Mahela Jayawardene. "The first six or seven overs were very vital but we didn't have the application to adapt."
Jayawardene said the tournament had been a valuable experience. "This is something new for us. Most of the national cricketers haven't played Twenty20 cricket. If this is going to be a part of international cricket we will have to look seriously at ways of improving."
The match was effectively decided in the first few overs after Australia's stand-in captain, Adam Gilchrist, won the toss. Stuart Clark took four for 20, the best figures by an Australian bowler in Twenty20 internationals.
Clark built on early breakthroughs by Brett Lee and Nathan Bracken, who took advantage of early life in the pitch. The first three wickets fell for 11 runs in the first three overs. Clark took over as Sri Lanka crashed to 43 for seven before Jehan Mubarak and Chaminda Vaas put on 40 for the eighth wicket.
Mubarak made top score of 28 before lofting a catch to extra cover off all-rounder Shane Watson, playing in his first match of the tournament. But Watson had to leave the field after bowling two balls of his fourth over, clutching the left hamstring that had kept him out of action.
Watson replaced Australian captain Ricky Ponting, who was ruled out of the rest of the tournament because of a hamstring injury suffered during his team's defeat against Pakistan in Johannesburg Tuesday. Gilchrist and Hayden snuffed out any chance of Sri Lanka fighting their way back into the match with aggressive batting.
Hayden hit his third half-century of the tournament, making 58 not out off 38 balls with seven fours and two sixes. Gilchrist was unbeaten on 31 off 25 balls.
SCOREBOARD
SRI LANKA
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U Tharanga c Lee b Bracken 4
S Jayasuriya lbw b Lee 0
K Sangakkara c Clarke b Clark 22
M Jayawardene c Clark b Lee 1
C Silva c Lee b Clark 6
T Dilshan c Gilchrist b Clark 3
J Mubarak c Symonds b Watson 28
F Maharoof c Clarke b Clark 0
C Vaas c Lee b Symonds 21
L Malinga not out 12
D Fernando c and b Bracken 0
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Extras: (lb1, nb2, w1) 4
Total: (19.3 overs) 101
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Falls: 1-1 (Jayasuriya), 2-9 (Tharanga), 3-11 (Jayawardene), 4-21 (Silva), 5-30 (Dilshan), 6-43 (Sangakkara), 7-43 (Maharoof), 8-83 (Mubarak), 9-99 (Vaas)
Bowling: Lee 4-0-27-2, Bracken 3.3-0-14-2, Johnson 4-0-18-0 (1w), Clark 4-0-20-4 (1nb), Watson 3.2-0-19-1 (1nb), Symonds 0.4-0-2-1.
AUSTRALIA
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A Gilchrist not out 31
M Hayden not out 58
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Extras: (b4, lb2, nb1, w6) 13
Total: (0 wkts, 10.2 overs) 102
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Bowling: Vaas 2-0-21-0 (1nb), Fernando 3-1-12-0, Maharoof 2-0-34-0 (1w), Dilshan 2-0-13-0 (1w), Malinga 1-0-8-0, Mubarak 0.2-0-8-0.
Did not bat: A Symonds, M Hussey, B Hodge, M Clarke, S Watson, B Lee, M Johnson, N Bracken, S Clark.
Result: Australia won by 10 wickets.
Umpires: I Howell (RSA), Asad Rauf (PAK).
TV umpire: A Hill (NZL).
Match referee: M Procter (RSA).
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