Sri Lanka will test their skills against West Indies when both sides
battle for their maiden World T20 title in a mouth-watering final in
Colombo.
Explosive
strength, as Sri Lanka have demonstrated throughout a consistently
entertaining tournament, is only one element in the shortest form of the
game.Gayle struck six sixes during his 75 not out
in West Indies' semi-final demolition of Australia on Friday while his
partners hit a further eight in a total of 205 for four.Although Gayle, who
intelligently tailors his approach to the pitch and to individual
bowlers, is the most dangerous one-day batsman in the world, Sri Lanka
captain Mahela Jayawardene will concentrate on the West Indies' team as a
unit and not on individuals.But the ability of Gayle,
Dwayne Bravo and Kieron Pollard to consistently clear the boundary even
with mishits can, as it did against Australia, put West Indies out of
sight."He
is just another player in a very good West Indies team," Jayawardene
told reporters on Saturday. "We never went after individual players.
That's why we controlled things the way we can control."West
Indies will hope, probably in vain, for a pitch on which they can play
their strokes in order to post the sort of total they managed against
Australia.In
common with the best T20 sides, Sri Lanka play their leading batsmen at
the top of the order with the left-handed Kumar Sangakkara coming in at
number three. They and their team mates will not have the problems
other teams have found with the West Indies' spinners Samuel Badree and
Sunil Narine.Jayawardene,
who will open the batting with Tillakaratne Dilshan, played in each of
Sri Lanka's two World Cup 50 overs finals losses in 2007 and 2011 and
the T20 final loss toPakistan in 2009."We
were not good enough to win those finals but we believe that we have
the capacity to win this one," he said. "We played good cricket to get
to this place and we are looking forward to an exciting final tomorrow."This
time Sri Lanka will have home advantage at the Premadasa stadium before
their ebullient fans plus the knowledge that they have players to cope
with all conditions and opponents.
Lasith Malinga
remains one of the most dangerous bowlers in limited overs cricket and
the burly left-arm spinner Rangana Herath, preferred to the unorthodox
teenage spinner Akila Dananjaya, took three cheap wickets in the
semi-final against Pakistan.The West Indians were the original kings of one-day international cricket but they have not won a global title since the 2004 Champions Trophy.
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