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This is an archive article published on February 3, 2009

A study in contrast

Confident India and struggling Sri Lanka prepare differently for third ODI

Sri Lankan coach Trevor Bayliss was busy shunting from net to net on Monday morning before settling to work with Tillakaratne Dilshan,adjusting his body position while playing the expansive over-the-infield shots. Shift the frame to Team India in the afternoon,when Virender Sehwag was on autopilot as he effortlessly whacked the white ball while Gary Kirsten stood behind and applauded.

It was a contrasting picture of simmering doubts and oozing confidence between the two teams,but in a series where the new-ball needs urgent and aggressive tackling,a surprise can never be too far away. Burdened with frequent-flier miles in the past month,a jaded Sri Lanka took the intense-practice option on Monday while Team India had an optional session which even Mahendra Singh Dhoni decided to skip ahead of the third one-day international.

Dhoni,already hailed for his tactics as skipper,awaits a statistical approval on Tuesday to join the ranks of Sunil Gavaskar,Kapil Dev and Sourav Ganguly for an eighth win in a row,a victory that would also give his side back-to-back series wins against Sri Lanka.

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Going into the match,his team have its share of niggles — Yuvraj Singh was a latest addition on the list after getting a rap on the fingers while fending a short-pitched delivery from Ishant Sharma — but there aren’t any serious injury worries after Laxmipathy Balaji,hopping from Rajkot to Chennai,reached Colombo late in the evening in a direct swap for Munaf Patel.

Given the circumstances,Irfan Pathan would’ve been the ideal choice for a third seamer,but Praveen Kumar’s brilliance in swinging the new ball makes dropping him a difficult bargain. Even though Dhoni has several options in the middle overs,it’s been difficult to get breakthroughs,and unless the seamers provide early wickets the pressure can be difficult to handle with the batting powerplay a perpetual threat in the late overs.

“It is a bit of difficultly with the make-up of our team. We have three specialist seamers,but we don’t have an all-rounder who can bat and bowl seam as well. The batting powerplays are important these days and we’ve realised that seamers are important then. At the same time,we also need to use three seamers in the first 15 overs because the ball swings a bit,so it’s difficult to use them in the middle overs,” said Kirsten.

The Indian batsmen have been adopting a similar strategy against Sri Lankan spinners Muttiah Muralitharan and Ajantha Mendis in the middle overs — playing through their spells with the idea of keeping for a final onslaught. They haven’t fired so far in the batting powerplays,but have at least managed to take the sting out of Mendis and Murali,giving them just three wickets so far in the series.

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Tuesday is the final chance for Sri Lanka to hit back,and they will hope to bridge the small distances left untravelled in the last match to keep the series alive.

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