Sri Lanka [338/6] defeat West Indies [315/9] by 23 runs in the 39th match of World Cup 2019

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The defeat to South Africa put an improbable qualification beyond their control, and England's win sealed their fate, but Sri Lanka are aiming to give it their best shot against a vibrant West Indies outfit which has nothing to lose in the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup 2019.

Overview

Sri Lanka v West Indies
The Riverside Durham, Chester-le-Street
2019 ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup, Match 39
Monday, 1 July; 10.30am GMT, 09.30am local

Sri Lanka’s 20-run win over England, on 21 June, had well and truly opened up the competition for the semi-final spots at the World Cup. However, a painful loss to South Africa, in the very next game, made their own qualifying chances extremely bleak.


In their nine-wicket loss at this very venue on 28 June, their inconsistent batting came to the fore yet again. Skipper Dimuth Karunaratne would be aiming to improve that aspect against a challenging West Indian bowling attack.

The Jason Holder-led side, on the other hand, has reached the fag-end of a sorrowful campaign that has seen them win just one out of seven games. Though they have been impressive in parts, the side has failed to close out key moments in tight games. Things went downhill after a breezy seven-wicket win over Pakistan in their opening game, and they now sit just above Afghanistan in the points table, having lost out on the semi-final race.


Key players

Lasith Malinga (Sri Lanka): Their batting unit has misfired more often than not, putting the onus on Malinga to deliver with the ball in clutch situations. With nine wickets in five games, seven of which came in Sri Lanka’s two wins, the veteran pacer has done his bit. With Nuwan Pradeep’s premature exit, Sri Lanka will be relying heavily on their bowling spearhead once again.

Chris Gayle (West Indies): In the dying embers of his international career, Gayle will look to sign off from his fifth, and final, World Cup on a high. Leading the run-charts for West Indies in the tournament, the 39-year-old has shown signs of vintage form in the recent past. With no pressure of qualifying, a liberated Gayle could end up doing the damage at the top of the order.

Conditions

Playing host in their first game of the tournament, the Riverside Ground in Chester-le-Street produced a sluggish surface in Sri Lanka’s nine-wicket loss to South Africa. Durham is expected to have clear skies on Monday, with extremely low chances of rain.

Squads

Sri Lanka: Dimuth Karunaratne (c), Avishka Fernando, Suranga Lakmal, Lasith Malinga, Angelo Mathews, Jeevan Mendis, Kusal Mendis (wk), Kusal Perera (wk), Thisara Perera, Dhananjaya de Silva, Milinda Siriwardana, Lahiru Thirimanne, Isuru Udana, Jeffrey Vandersay, Kasun Ranjitha

West Indies: Jason Holder (c), Chris Gayle, Kemar Roach, Darren Bravo, Sunil Ambris, Shai Hope, Sheldon Cottrell, Evin Lewis, Shannon Gabriel, Carlos Brathwaite, Ashley Nurse, Shimron Hetmyer, Fabian Allen, Oshane Thomas, Nicholas Pooran

https://www.cricbuzz.com/cricket-match-facts/20275/sl-vs-wi-match-39-icc-cricket-world-cup-2019
 
Sri Lanka have won five of their last six men’s ODI clashes against West Indies, including a
nail-biting one-run victory in their last meeting in November 2016.
• Sri Lanka have won their last three ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup games against the Windies;
however, they had lost each of their four completed games at the tournament prior.
• The only completed ODI game in England between Sri Lanka and the Windies occurred in
June 1975, when the Windies picked up a nine-wicket victory at Old Trafford; it was an ICC
Men’s Cricket World Cup match.
• Each of Sri Lanka’s last seven completed men’s ODI have seen the result alternate between
a win and a loss (W3, L4), with their most recent fixture ending in a nine-wicket defeat to
South Africa.
• Sri Lanka will be aiming to avoid back-to-back defeats in a single edition of the ICC Men’s
Cricket World Cup for the first time since succumbing to Australia and India in consecutive
games during the 2003 campaign.
• West Indies have lost their last five men’s ODIs in a row; the last time they lost more was an
eight-game streak in their final eight matches of 2017.
• West Indies are playing their third men’s ODI fixture at the Riverside, Durham after playing a
brace of games there during the 2000 NatWest Tri-Series against England and Zimbabwe –
they are yet to register a win at the venue in this format (L2).
• West Indies are one of only two teams (2+ games) against whom Kusal Perera (Sri Lanka)
boasts a career batting strike rate of 100 or higher in ODIs (105.4 v Pakistan & 100.6 v
Windies).
• Chris Gayle (West Indies) is set to play his 294th men’s ODI game, moving just one shy of Brian
Lara (295) for the joint-most of any player in the history of the format for the Windies; he also
needs a knock of just 53 runs to eclipse Lara (10,348) as the most prolific Windies’ run scorer in
men’s ODI history.
• Sheldon Cottrell (West Indies) will be the only player featuring in this fixture between Sri Lanka
and the Windies to have taken 10 or more wickets at the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2019;
this will be his first clash against Sri Lanka in any format.
 
Proper dead rubber if there ever was one.... Would be nice to see Windies show some of their flare in this inconsequential match
 
EngvsNZ on same ground & probably same pitch. It would be interesting to see how the conditions are. Pakistan's only chance is a low scoring match b/w Eng & NZ. NZ could have a chance on slow wicket with sodhi/santner & kw/taylor pairs.
 
Eng v Nz no chnace for NZ only a miracle cab help Pakistan Eng have better hitters than NZ better all round attack than Nz not sure how Eng will slip up only likely chance is NZ batting first and scoring 330+ and then getting Eng into submission :snack:

On Sl v Wi lets hope someone ignites up this game like Gayle or Heytmer for a quick 100 or Kusal Perear for a ton and Sl captain is woefully out of form
 
EngvsNZ on same ground & probably same pitch. It would be interesting to see how the conditions are. Pakistan's only chance is a low scoring match b/w Eng & NZ. NZ could have a chance on slow wicket with sodhi/santner & kw/taylor pairs.

The pitch should be a bit slower right when a match has been played already on it?
 
I'll get some work done in the office today ha ha.
 
The pitch should be a bit slower right when a match has been played already on it?

Yes. If weather remain sunny then it could assist spin even more. Eng crumbled to 99 against SL chasing 250 odd in 2014. But since then it has generally been a high scoring ground.
 
It would be really ironic if the only match that windies win would be their win against us.
 
West Indies won toss and opted to bowl
 
184-2 Sri Lanka going along nicely windies need a wicket soon seems like Sri Lanka can get 320
 
221-3 for Sri Lanka . West Indian bowler Fabian took an amazing catch of his own bowling
 
Sl playing like Sl of old hapless WI only turned up against us
 
Dre Russ was the main difference. He was fully fit and bowled with steam. After Pakistan match, he got injured and could not repeat his performance.
 
Another promising youngster SLC selectors will probably destroy.
 
Seeing how all the other teams are trashing West Indies is like putting salt on a Pakistani fan's wounds. It hurts badly.
 
How did we lose to this WI team?

Cause we got big hearts.

We not just lost to them we barely managed to score 100runs. Which 8sbstill hurting us after so many wins.
 
How’s the pitch behaving? Flat or it has a thing for bowlers?

Eng vs NZ is going to be played on the same ground.
 
Rihanna is in the house.

Ian Bishop “I should get my umbrella”
 
Pakistan batted like a bunch of timid pussycats.....2 points was there for the taking.
The pitch was very helpful for the fast bowlers early on.Pakistan batsmen failed to adapt.All they had to do was to play the first 10-15 overs and see off the new ball.They were not expecting persistent short pitch bowling from WI and got done.A good team would have easily dealt with short balls.The team management is to blame as well.Pakistan started practising against the short ball after WI match which proved too late.Anyway I will not be too disappointed if Pakistan doesn't make it to semis.Our standing in the table reflects out level of ability.
 
West Indies look so miserable.

They don't have a plan in the middle, their RBW is woeful. They don't have any bonding and what not.

If you look at WI, they have some potent cricketers but as a team they have been really poor.
 
West Indies look so miserable.

They don't have a plan in the middle, their RBW is woeful. They don't have any bonding and what not.

If you look at WI, they have some potent cricketers but as a team they have been really poor.

Think team is done and dusted mentally

SL 338/6 (50.0)
WI 94/4 (19.5) CRR: 4.74 REQ: 8.12
West Indies need 245 runs
 
West Indies look so miserable.

They don't have a plan in the middle, their RBW is woeful. They don't have any bonding and what not.

If you look at WI, they have some potent cricketers but as a team they have been really poor.

I think so from the team selection (Just one spinner in Nurse who isnt that good) to fitness, mindset and planning nothing was upto the mark. They just went with bouncer barrage in every match, worked against Pak as a surprising factor but other teams saw that already and WI had no plan B.
 
I think so from the team selection (Just one spinner in Nurse who isnt that good) to fitness, mindset and planning nothing was upto the mark. They just went with bouncer barrage in every match, worked against Pak as a surprising factor but other teams saw that already and WI had no plan B.

Tried it with Bangladesh as well, and when it was not working they didn't have anything to fall back upon. They don't have spin bowling allrounders like Hafeez, Riad, Jadhav, Jeevan mendis. Gayle and Russell both key players but neither of them had any batting plan, just tried to play however they want and not for the team cause.

And their fielding was mediocre too at times. They expected that pitches will flat and they will score 350+ and blow the oppositions. The only good period of play they had was their bowling in the PP against Pakistan and Australia and middle over batting against Bangladesh. Otherwise they barely won too many phases. I won't be surprised if they even go on to lose to Affghanistan.
 
Holder, Brathwaite, Russell. 3 identical cricketers. Pace bowling big hitting allrounders. Apart from Shai Hope, they didn't have any proper accumulator.
 
Holder, Brathwaite, Russell. 3 identical cricketers. Pace bowling big hitting allrounders. Apart from Shai Hope, they didn't have any proper accumulator.
They should have dropped one and played specialist batsman instead
 
West Indies batsmen baffle me. Really talented but they can't build an innings to save their lives.
 
West Indies batsmen baffle me. Really talented but they can't build an innings to save their lives.

Too much domestic cricket on raging turners and unfit pitches for many years, plus excessive T20 league exposure means a generation of WI batsmen have forgotten art of constructing a long innings.
 
Building innings is also part of skills and talent

EXACTLY

Being able to play a long innings, rotate strike and putting a price on your wicket is so important in international cricket.

If West Indies played smart cricket they would not have been in this situation EVER.
 
West Indies need to improve their pitches back at home for ODI and FC cricket.
 
Holder, Brathwaite, Russell. 3 identical cricketers. Pace bowling big hitting allrounders. Apart from Shai Hope, they didn't have any proper accumulator.

There's Darren Bravo in the squad but for some reason he hasn't featured much.
 
Too much domestic cricket on raging turners and unfit pitches for many years, plus excessive T20 league exposure means a generation of WI batsmen have forgotten art of constructing a long innings.

Pooran is playing well here but I'd hope if I were was a WI fan that Hetmyer and Hope would be getting to 50 and beyond consistently with the talent they have.
 
Just compare this West Indies chase to India. 6 wickets down at 200 and with arguably inferior batsmen, WI are going for it unlike the Indian cowards who have an inferiority complex and were playing for politics. Indians are bereft of any sportsmanship except for Kohli.
 
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India, are you watching?
You could have played a lot better.
 
Incredible talent these windies guys have ..only thing is it has to be channelled in a right way
 
WI pretty much in the same spot as India were yesterday and look at how they are approaching this target. :sanga
 
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