š India tour of Sri Lanka: Sri Lanka vs India, 2nd ODI, Colomboš
India set to take on Sri Lanka in the second ODI at Colombo.
India have just one more ODI series scheduled between their current tour of Sri Lanka and the Champions Trophy in February-March 2025.
It's an unusual period for bilateral ODIs, even more so for a series involving Sri Lanka, who have not qualified for the Champions Trophy.
Thus, it was fitting that Friday's match turned into a classic encounter, a thrilling, slow-burning tie that demonstratedājust as last year's World Cup did repeatedlyāthat the ODI format remains an excellent showcase for cricketing skills.
After three consecutive collapses in the T20Isā9 for 30, 7 for 31, and 7 for 22āSri Lanka will draw some confidence from their recovery from 101 for 5 in the first ODI on Friday and will hope to challenge India further in the remaining two matches.
The third T20I in Pallekele and the first ODI in Colombo both demonstrated that spin-friendly conditions can considerably narrow the quality gap between the teams. If Khettarama continues to offer substantial grip and turn, the outcome of this series remains uncertain.
A 21-step stride towards the crease by a broad-shouldered, 6-foot 4-inch figure can seem imposing, but Shivam Dube releases the cricket ball with all the urgency of a leisurely afternoon stroll, at a modest sub-130 kmph.
The Sri Lankan top order, which had opted to dig in on Friday, made the medium pacer appear more menacing than he actually was in the first ODI. The slow pitch at the R. Premadasa Stadium might have been his ally, but the batters' reluctance to put him under pressure proved to be his greater weapon.
Even his mid-120 kmph deliveries were made to look like a jaffa when Kusal Mendis was trapped LBW while playing the wrong line to an angling-in delivery that had just slightly straightened after pitching. Yet, that was merely one ball in a spell of 24 that Sri Lanka had faced from Dube, the genial medium pacer who was allowed to operate comfortably within his limitations.
Gill's bowling is merely an extension of what the new team management has done on this tour with its part-time bowlers, which include Riyan Parag, Suryakumar Yadav and Rinku Singh. The increased bowling involvement of part-timers is a move India had attempted in short bursts under the previous coaching regime, but it has now picked up frequency and consistency. Whose turn will it be next to look to continue their control in the middle overs?
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