Sri Lanka overcome Afghanistan to claim cricket gold at Asiad

Published October 4, 2014
Sri Lanka’s Hettige Don Rumesh Thirimanna plays an aggressive shot during the Asian Games Twenty20 final against Afghanistan at the Yeonhui cricket ground on Friday.—Reuters
Sri Lanka’s Hettige Don Rumesh Thirimanna plays an aggressive shot during the Asian Games Twenty20 final against Afghanistan at the Yeonhui cricket ground on Friday.—Reuters

INCHEON: Test-playing nation Sri Lanka denied Afghanistan their first ever Asian Games gold medal as they overcame a batting slump to win the cricket final by 68 runs here on Friday.

Bowled out for 133, the Sri Lankans hit back to skittle the impatient Afghan batsmen for 65 in the Twenty20 match watched by a full house here at the 2,500-capacity Yeonhui field.

Leg-spinner Jeevan Mendis grabbed three wickets for 13 runs and Isuru Udana and Chaturanga de Silva chipped in with two wickets apiece as the Afghans folded up in 17.4 overs.

Eight batsmen failed to reach double figures for Afghanistan, who are set to make their debut in the 50-over World Cup in Australia and New Zealand next year.

It was Sri Lanka’s first Asiad gold medal since the 2002 Games in Busan when Susanthika Jayasinghe won the women’s 100m and Damayanthi Darsha picked up the women’s 400m title.

“It is a great feeling to win a gold for the country after 12 years,” said Sri Lankan captain Lahiru Thirimanne. “We are getting a lot of calls from home congratulating us.”

India declined to send any side, while Pakistan fielded only the women’s team which retained the gold medal it won four years ago.

Afganistan have so far won five silvers — including two in cricket — and six bronzes since starting out in the inaugural Asiad in New Delhi in 1951.

The cricket silver was their second medal in the current Games after Roman Abasi’s bronze in taekwando.

“We had a good chance to win a gold but our batsmen just could not settle in,” said Afghanistan’s captain Mohammad Nabi. “But I am still happy my young team was able to win silver.

“Hopefully it will be a gold next time.”

Sri Lanka, who elected to bat after winning the toss, rode on Dinesh Chandimal’s 33 and Thirimanne’s 57 off 37 balls to race to 79-1 in 10 overs. The spirited Afghans fought back to claim the last nine wickets for 54 runs and bowl the Lankans out with five deliveries to spare.

Nabi took four wickets for 18 runs in 19 deliveries of off-spin and seamer Gulbadin Naib claimed two for 20 to cause an unexpected collapse.

Earlier, defending champions Bangladesh, who lost a rain-abandoned semi-final to Sri Lanka by the flip of the coin, claimed the bronze with a 27-run win over Hong Kong.

Star allrounder Shakib Al Hasan smashed 46 off 37 balls and claimed two for 23 as the Tigers displayed superior skills than the minnows. Bangladesh, batting first, piled up 162-6 in their 20 overs as Mohammad Mahmudullah smashed 35 off 21 balls lower down the order.

Hong Kong’s Pakistan-born left-arm spinner Nadeem Ahmed took three wickets for 36 runs.

Hong Kong managed only 135-7 in reply, with Mark Chapman leading the way with a 31-ball 38 that contained two sixes and as many fours.

Published in Dawn, October 4th, 2014

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