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sport / rec.sport.cricket / A grudge ODI match between Sri Lanka and England for the ages

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A grudge ODI match between Sri Lanka and England for the ages

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https://www.thecricketmonthly.com/story/1384864/20-greatest-odis-no--20---the-grudge-match-sri-lanka-won

The grudge match Sri Lanka won

Years of resentment and antipathy boiled over in a game where ugly
scenes were trumped by a sublime Jayawardene hundred and a chase for the
ages
Andrew Miller | August 16, 2023

England vs Sri Lanka, Adelaide 1999

Sri Lanka won by 1 wicket

It was quite possibly one of the most foul-tempered cricket matches ever
played. It was most definitely one of the greatest chases ever pulled
off. And the extent to which the latter fact was informed by the former
beef ensures that the events of Adelaide 1999 deserve a special place in
sport's hall of infamy.

Like a malevolent artichoke, this was a contest made up of layer upon
layer of resentment, prejudice, personal antipathy and historical
injustice. And if that doesn't sound like a rip-roaring recipe for
edge-of-the-seat entertainment, then chances are you're not much of a
sports fan.

The historic element was two-fold. On a national level, Sri Lanka had
had enough of being treated as an afterthought by their supercilious
English opponents - or, more specifically, their Generalissimo of a
leader, Arjuna Ranatunga, had had enough.

And to be frank, Ranatunga had a point. For years, the "rivalry", such
as it could be, had consisted of Sri Lanka being invited for one-off
Test matches at the fag end of the English summer. However, for this
particular Adelaide encounter - and notwithstanding two earlier defeats
in the Carlton & United Series, they came armed with two sensational
pieces of one-upmanship.

Firstly, Sri Lanka were the reigning World Champions in ODI cricket. And
not only that, en route to their historic 1996 triumph, they had
unleashed on England a hiding of truly epochal proportions in their
quarter-final clash in Faisalabad - a defeat so one-sided that, had the
boot been on the other foot, Sri Lanka might well have faced calls to
have their Full Member status revoked.

Instead, on their subsequent one-Test stop-over in England in 1998, they
confirmed beyond any remaining doubt that they were here to stay. In an
extraordinary display at The Oval, Sri Lanka blazed their way to a
ten-wicket win despite England posting 445 in their first innings,
thanks to Sanath Jayasuriya's double-century and the 16-wicket efforts
of a certain Muthiah Muralidaran.

Ah yes… Murali. Here comes the grit in the Adelaide oyster. In Brisbane
three years earlier, umpires Ross Emerson and Tony McQuillan had
no-balled Murali for chucking on five separate occasions, and now by a
strange quirk of fate, they were back as the designated on-field
umpires. All the ingredients for a rumpus were there. All they needed
was a stir.

That moment duly arrived in the 18th over of England's innings.
Despite allowing Murali's first over to pass without comment, Emerson at
square leg duly thrust out his arm to a loud cry of "no-ball!", and
Ranatunga wasted no time in raising the stakes to DEFCON 1. After a
jabbed-finger altercation, he marched his team from the field, thus
instigating a 12-minute stand-off as phone calls fizzed between senior
board officials.

When the contest did resume, the antipathy was unrelenting. After
Emerson refused to shift his position to allow Murali to run up between
him and the stumps, Ranatunga embarked on a public humiliation,
scratching a line on the turf for the umpire to stand behind, and
informing him: "You are in charge of umpiring, I am in charge of
captaining."

All the while, mild-mannered Graeme Hick just took charge of batting,
and at the halfway mark his unbeaten 126 from 118 balls had hoisted
England to an imposing 302 for 3. Soon, Sri Lanka were 8 for 2 in reply,
seemingly distracted by the mayhem in their midst, and though
Jayasuriya's 51 from 36 served notice of the runs still on offer, the
situation was asking an awful lot of Sri Lanka's latest batting prodigy,
the 21-year-old Mahela Jayawardene.

He answered the call with an outstanding 120 from 111 balls, his first
overseas hundred, and an innings as composed as the rest of the contest
was fraught. He was helped along the way by an inevitable contribution
from Ranatunga himself, whose 41 from 51 came with a lecture from Alec
Stewart behind the stumps: "Your behaviour today has been disgraceful
for a country captain."

But England's sheer weight of runs looked capable of carrying the day,
especially when Jayawardene's epic ended at 269 for 7, with 34 still
needed from the remaining 28 balls.

Now things got truly fraught. In an innings that would ultimately
contain three run-outs, Darren Gough thought he'd been deprived of a
fourth when Roshan Mahanama appeared to barge him off the ball with Upul
Chandana struggling to make his ground - Gough feigned a headbutt in the
terse exchange of words that followed.

But such an epic bunfight would not be complete without an encore for
the inadvertent man of the moment. With five runs required, and eight
balls to get them, Mahanama torched his own innings with a non-existent
run to midwicket, whereupon Murali and No. 11 Pramodya Wickramasinghe
were left to scramble their side over the line.

An exchange of fraught singles, including a leg-side wide and a careless
overthrow from a wayward shy, and suddenly it was scores level and
Murali back on strike. A swing for the hills and a thick outside edge
off Vince Wells, and Sri Lanka had prevailed in a grudge match for the ages.

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