Virat Kohli top scored with 77 and Yuvraj Singh struggled for form as Sri Lanka restricted India to a modest 130-4 in 20 overs.
Virat Kohli continued his stupendous form with a classy 77 but India managed a below-par 130 for four against Sri Lanka who bowled brilliantly in the death overs in the final of the ICC World T20 here on Sunday.
Kohli struck his fourth half century of the tournament with yet another superb effort but the Lankan bowlers applied the brakes on a struggling Yuvraj Singh, which certainly hampered the scoring rate to a large extent.
Kohli struck five fours and four sixes in his 58-ball knock as Yuvraj turned out to be a complete disaster as he looked completely out of sorts, which frustrated even the in-form batsman at the other end. The last four overs produced only 19 runs due to Yuvraj’s failure to get big hits.
While Kohli peppered all parts of the field with his blazing blade, Yuvraj found it difficult to even pick up Sachithra Senanayeke’s ‘doosra’ and Lasith Malinga’s blockhole deliveries. His struggle became so apparent that even Kohli’s anger was palpable at the other end as the hero of India’s 2007 triumph consumed delivery after delivery.
Rangana Herath (1/23) and Angelo Mathews (1/25) gave away only 48 runs in eight overs as it became a Kohli versus Sri Lanka duel. Even Nuwan Kulasekara (1/29) had a decent day in office despite 16 coming off his one over.
When Yuvraj was finally out for 11 off 21 balls as he holed out in the deep, the loudest cheer came from the Indian fans, who were relieved to see him back in the dugout.
Skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni came in with only 11 deliveries left and found it difficult to accelerate the pace of scoring as Malinga and Kulasekara bowled pinpoint yorkers.
Ajinkya Rahane (3) looked completely shaky during his eight-ball stay at the crease. Angelo Mathews pitched it on length and the opener played on to his stumps trying an ambitious pull.
Kohli entered the crease twirling his bat as Vivian Richards used to do during his playing days.
He clipped Kulasekara’s in-swinging half volley through the deep mid-wicket region for a boundary. Rohit got his first boundary when Senanayeke couldn’t pitch the carrom ball properly as he pulled it towards square leg for a one bounce boundary.
Malinga’s first was the last of the Powerplay overs as Rohit got his second boundary, smashing an over-pitched delivery from Malinga back past him.
India were 31 for one at the end of the Powerplay and it was not one of the smoothest start by the favourites.
Herath would consider himself unlucky as he could have got Kohli, then on 11, with the first delivery of his spell. He dropped it a bit short and Kohli got on the backfoot to play the pull shot. Malinga standing at short mid-wicket got his hands to it but it bounced off.
Rohit, on the other hand, got the first six off the match, with an effortless lofted drive over wide long-off.
Herath bowled a much better second over by constantly altering the length of his deliveries as Kohli tried to give him the charge on multiple occasions.
India reached one of their slowest 50’s in the tournament in the 10th over of the innings bowled by Mathews when the Indian duo showed their intent of trying to up the ante.
Rohit brought up the 50-run stand with a slash through point while Kohli hit the bowler over deep mid-wicket for a six. Having given only 11 in his first three overs, Mathews finished it with decent figures of 4—0—25—1.
Rohit (29) again frittered away a good start as Herath got him in his third over. The batsman tried to make room moving towards leg stump and the bowler followed him with an angular delivery which he hit straight to the cover fielder Senanayeke. Rohit hit three fours in his 26-ball knock.
Kohli continued to get the boundaries as he delightfully lofted Senanayeke over extra covers for a one-bounce boundary.
Kohli’s third six was a straight lofted shot off a Herath delivery but the left-arm spinner’s figures of one for 23 from four overs were respectable. The batsmen were never comfortable against him as he varied the length and pace of his deliveries.
The 50 came off 43 balls with a slice for a single to deep point off Malinga with the help of two fours and three sixes.
While Yuvraj struggled at the other end against Senanayeke’s away-spinning deliveries, there was no stopping Kohli as he spanked Kulasekara over deep mid-wicket for a six and followed it up with an extra cover drive. The next was a pull shot which went over deep mid wicket fielder’s head for a boundary. Kohli got 15 off the first four deliveries and 16 came off the over.
Earlier, Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bowl first. India played an unchanged side while Sri Lanka made one change, bringing in Thisara Perera for Seekkuge Prasanna for the title clash.
Scoreboard:
India:
Rohit Sharma c Senanayake b Herath 29
Ajinkya Rahane b Mathews 3
Virat Kohli run out (Senanayake) 77
Yuvraj Singh c Perera b Kulasekara 11
Mahendra Singh Dhoni not out 4
Extras: (B—2, LB—2, W—2) 6
Total: (for 4 wickets in 20 overs) 130
Fall of wickets: 1—4, 2—64, 3—119, 4—130
Bowling: Kulasekara 4—0—29—1, Mathews 4—0—25—1, Senanayake 4—0—22—0, Malinga 4—0—27—0, Herath 4—0—23—1.
Teams:
India: Mahendra Singh Dhoni (capt), Rohit Sharma, Yuvraj Singh, Suresh Raina, Virat Kohli, Ajinkya Rahane, Ravichandran Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja, Amit Mishra, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohit Sharma
Sri Lanka: Lasith Malinga (capt), Kusal Perera, Tillakaratne Dilshan, Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sangakkara, Angelo Mathews, Lahiru Thirimanne, Thisara Perera, Nuwan Kulasekara, Sachitra Senanayake, Rangana Herath.
Keywords: ICC Twenty20 World Cup, Twenty20 World Cup, India-Sri Lanka final match