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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Sri Lanka chase 232 in 37 overs after rain cuts West Indies revival short

Sherfane Rutherford played his shots when he got the chance Associated Press

West Indies 185 for 4 (Rutherford 74*, Carty 37, Chase 33*, Hasaranga 2-18) vs Sri Lanka

Sherfane Rutherford's counter-attack was cut short by rain in Pallekele as West Indies' innings was brought to a premature close on 185 for 4 after 38.3 overs. The game has now been shortened with Sri Lanka given a DLS-adjusted target of 232 in 37 overs.

Prior to the rain intervention, West Indies had been in the process of regaining some lost momentum with Rutherford and Roston Chase in the middle of an 85-run fifth-wicket stand off 78 deliveries. After a period of consolidation, following some early dominance by Sri Lanka's spinners on a helpful surface, the pair had struck 43 in the last five overs they faced, before play was halted.

For Sri Lanka, Wanindu Hasaranga had grabbed two wickets, while Jeffrey Vandersay and Charith Asalanka had one apiece. But on an dry Pallekele surface, West Indies knew a trial by spin was always on the cards after they had won the toss and elected to bat.

Dunith Wellalage was into the attack as early as the fifth over - and even before medium pacer Janith Liyanage had resorted to offcutters on a hard length - while spin was in effect from both ends not long after. West Indies, to their credit, had begun positively, with Brandon King pouncing on anything loose, two flashy drives through the covers off Asitha Fernando the highlights. It meant they were able to maintain a fairly health run rate at a tick over five an over during this early period.

However, once King fell, playing all around a googly from Hasaranga - introduced in the eighth over of the innings - the tempo fell drastically. Another googly had an advancing Alick Athanaze stumped at the start of Hasaranga's next over, and it wasn't long before Sri Lanka's third lead spinner, Vandersay, was into the action. Shai Hope is traditionally a good player of spin, but a good review from Vandersay proved that a regulation forward defence had been pad first as Hope was trapped lbw.

That wicket left West Indies reeling at 54 for 3, with Rutherford joining Keacy Carty in the middle and the scoring rate now hovering at around four an over. It was during this period that Sri Lanka's spinners took total control, as West Indies were content to play it safe, racking up numerous dot deliveries, and picking up the odd ones and twos.

A Rutherford cut for four in the 17th over was the first West Indies boundary in 47 deliveries; by the traditional halfway point of 25 overs, they had inched to 94 for 3. It was here that a frustrated Carty unleashed a powerful one-handed loft over long-on for six to break the shackles somewhat, but that relief was shortlived as he fell going for a repeat performance the very next delivery. That brought to an end a 46-run partnership - the West Indies' best of the innings until that point.

But with the dependable Chase alongside him, Rutherford continued as before, picking off singles and attempting to pounce on any rare loose deliveries. This suited Sri Lanka just fine as it allowed Asalanka to run through nine overs for 40 runs. Though perhaps he ought to have cashed out at that point, taking heed of Rutherford's warning - a monster six over cow corner at the end of his ninth over. But instead, the Sri Lanka skipper overplayed his hand and went for one final over, which Chase and Rutherford duly dispatched for 16 runs - something which provided the innings with some much-needed momentum.

With a persistent drizzle wetting the pitch and making the ball slide on a touch more, the next five overs went at above a run-a-ball and West Indies were likely eyeing a total in the region of 275. But then the rains came.

West Indies 1st innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st34BA KingA Athanaze
2nd7KU CartyA Athanaze
3rd13SD HopeKU Carty
4th46KU CartySE Rutherford
5th85RL ChaseSE Rutherford