MUMBAI, (Reuters) – Off spinner Muttiah Muralitharan ignored a hamstring problem as he picked up four wickets to propel Sri Lanka to a thumping 112-run win over New Zealand in their final World Cup Group A match today.
The win catapulted the co-hosts, who were playing away from home for the first time in the tournament, to the top of the group but their final position will be determined only after Saturday’s match between Australia and Pakistan.
The two sessions at the Wankhede Stadium were dominated by two of Sri Lanka’s most experienced cricketers — captain Kumar Sangakkara and Muralitharan, who made life uncomfortable for the Kiwis despite picking up a hamstring injury which forced him off the field for a while.
“I dived and got injured a little bit. I strained a hamstring. It’s not a big tear, maybe a small one but it was a discomfort,” said the 38-year-old, who explained he picked up the injury while batting.
His captain was keeping his fingers crossed that the injury did not rule out cricket’s most prolific bowler from the knockout stages.
“We’ve got a few days… hopefully he can be fully fit within that time period,” said Sangakkara.
“We’ve had guys with injuries before and we managed to fix them up pretty quickly. Hopefully we will have him again for the quarter-finals.
“He needs to play. This is his last World Cup. We enjoy playing with him, he wins a lot of matches for us. What he does really well is bowl and take wickets so we just want him to do that.”
Sangakkara (111) led from the front by scoring his maiden World Cup century to rescue his team after some early jitters and set New Zealand a 266-run target.
Then the Sri Lankan spinners, led by Muralitharan (4-25), made sure that the New Zealand batsmen never found their footing to launch a fitting reply.
FOXED BATSMEN
On a track that offered a bit of turn, Muralitharan foxed the batsmen by mixing his sharp off-spinners with the occasional ‘doosras’.
The Kiwis failed to read his line and length and were skittled for just 153 in 35 overs, with seven wickets going to the spinners.
Earlier, left-handed Sangakkara braved sweltering heat and humidity to reach his 11th ODI hundred and added crucial 145 runs for the third wicket with Mahela Jayawardene after Sri Lanka were tottering at 19 for two.
Tim Southee, with three for 63, was the most successful New Zealand bowler as the co-hosts ended their innings at 265 for nine after opting to bat first.
Sangakkara, who hit 12 fours and two sixes, took just six deliveries during the batting powerplay to canter from 80 to his hundred after blasting three boundaries and a six.
Jayawardene (66) provided able support with some cheeky hits to the fence after the islanders lost openers Upul Tharanga and Tillakaratne Dilshan cheaply.
While on 26, the right-hander was lucky to survive a caught and bowled attempt by a diving Nathan McCullum after the third umpire gave the benefit of doubt to the batsman.
Tensions flared up following the decision as stand-in New Zealand captain Ross Taylor and the off-spinner had a heated debate with the on-field umpires.
New Zealand suffered another injury scare as fast bowler Hamish Bennett limped off the field after spraining his left ankle during his delivery stride at the start of his fifth over.
He returned to bat during the New Zealand innings with Kane Williamson as his runner.
The Kiwis are already without regular captain and frontline spinner Daniel Vettori and paceman Kyle Mills, who are recovering from injuries to get fit for the knockout stages.