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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

New Zealand breeze past Sri Lanka despite Theekshana hat-trick

Jacob Duffy struck early blows to destabilise Sri Lanka's chase Getty Images

New Zealand 255 for 9 (Ravindra 79, Chapman 62, Theekshana 4-44) beat Sri Lanka 142 (Kamindu 64, O'Rouke 3-31) by 113 runs

New Zealand strode to 255 for 9 in their 37 overs, with a 112-run second wicket stand between Rachin Ravindra and Mark Chapman the bedrock of that innings. And then Sri Lanka's top order crashed and burned again. They were 4 for 22 inside the first five overs, their hopes of levelling the series almost completely dashed.

Kamindu Mendis attempted to revive the innings, but his 64 was not nearly enough to revive this innings. Sri Lanka slipped to a 113-run defeat, having also lost heavily to New Zealand in the first ODI. New Zealand take the series despite being significantly depleted by absences and injuries. Sri Lanka are essentially at full strength, but the failure of their top five continues to dog them, even in a rain-reduced match such as this.

New Zealand had some stutters too. They were modest at the death, as Maheesh Theekshana in particular was effective, taking a hat-trick across his last two overs, as New Zealand mustered no more than 63 in the last 10 overs, losing five wickets in that period. But they did not stumble so spectacularly as to undo the work of the Ravindra-Chapman stand. They had contributions through the middle, with Daryl Mitchell, Glenn Phillips, and Mitchell Santner chipping in.

And then they had their confident seam bowlers, who imposed themselves even with the older ball. Will O'Rourke took 3 for 31, Jacob Duffy 2 for 30, while Matt Henry and Nathan Smith claimed a wicket apiece. The only semblance of a partnership had been between Kamindu and Janith Liyanage, as the pair put on 57 together for the fifth wicket. Outside of that, New Zealand were picking their way through the batting order, and ultimately had them all out inside 31 overs.

Sri Lanka's required rate was 6.92 right from the beginning. Although this seems a monumental challenge, the pitch was good to bat on, and with rain having delayed the start of play by two-and-a-half hours, a damp ball was also proving a challenge for some bowlers. But Sri Lanka needed a strong start to put some wind in the sails of this chase, and what they got instead was a collapse.

Pathum Nissanka holed out to mid-off in the second over, badly miscuing a lofted drive against Duffy. Kusal Mendis then edged behind in Duffy's next over, before Avishka Fernando slapped a ball from Henry straight to point immediately after. Captain Charith Asalanka's horrendous judging of a run extended Sri Lanka's nosedive. He'd blocked one towards Mitchell Santner at mid-off and called his partner through. Santner swooped in the ball, hit the stumps with an under-arm throw, and caught Asalanka metres short. Kamindu had been out in very similar fashion, taking on the same fielder, only on Sunday.

At Asalanka's dismissal, Sri Lanka still had 234 runs to get off 194 deliveries, and only two specialist batters and two allrounders left to do it with. They didn't get especially far.

Contrast this to New Zealand's top order, who put their team in a powerful position inside the first 22 overs, with Ravindra stroking 79 off 63 and Chapman hitting 62 off 52.

What was most impressive about their stand was how comfortable both batters made brisk run-scoring appear. Ravindra was strong through the offside as usual, but found plenty of runs to leg, using the sweep and the pick-up shot off the pads to especially good effect.

Chapman meanwhile, was decidedly stronger on the legside, scoring 46 off his 63 runs in that direction. He hit two sixes - one top edged over the keeper, and another over midwicket off a short ball from Eshan Malinga to bring up his fifty off 44 balls as well as the century partnership. Ravindra had also got to his half-century with a six - down the ground off Hasaranga. He took 43 balls to get there.

Earlier, Asitha Fernando had bowled Will Young with an outstanding jagging delivery, but neither Ravindra or Chapman were tested for long by Sri Lanka's seamers. In fact, it was the spinners that introduced even a little discomfort - between them, Theekshana and Wanindu Hasaranga took six wickets.

Sri Lanka fielded well, and induced errors at a greater rate in the back half of the innings. Asalanka pulled off an excellent diving catch at short cover to get rid of Ravindra, and Theekshana's hat-trick featured some tumbling catches in the deep from Chamindu Wickramasinghe and Kamindu.

But even in the field, New Zealand outdid them. Their ground fielding was spectacular again, and the catch of the day belonged to Nathan Smith, who bounded along the deep-third boundary, threw himself off his feet and got his outstretched right arm to a ball that might otherwise have landed over the boundary to dismiss Malinga.

Sri Lanka 2nd innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st6WIA FernandoP Nissanka
2nd12BKG MendisWIA Fernando
3rd0WIA FernandoPHKD Mendis
4th4KIC AsalankaPHKD Mendis
5th57J LiyanagePHKD Mendis
6th47PHKD MendisC Wickramasinghe
7th3PHKD MendisPW Hasaranga
8th2PHKD MendisM Theekshana
9th5M TheekshanaE Malinga
10th6AM FernandoM Theekshana