Nagpur, Dec 17: After the high-scoring humdinger in Rajkot, India will seek to overcome their bowling and fielding shortcomings when they go into the second cricket one-dayer against Sri Lanka here on Friday with Yuvraj Singh being a doubtful starter.
Yuvraj sat out of the first game because of a finger injury and it remains to be seen whether the dashing left hander was fit enough to take the field in what promises to be another run feast.
Injury Woes
Both the teams are struggling with injuries with India having worries on the fitness of Yuvraj and the dangerous Virender Sehwag who had hurt his knee in the last game but was expected to play.
Lanka will be without key spinner Muttiah Muralitharan and paceman Dilhara Fernando due to finger injuries as the duo has been ruled out of the series.
The Lankan team management have called up new players — medium pacer Muthumudalige Pushpakumara and young off spinner Suraj Randiv — to bolster their bowling ahead.
The visitors are though confident that sling-arm bowler Lasith Malinga would be available to play after his indisposition that kept him out of the Rajkot match.
The two teams were totally drained after playing out a heart-stopping and energy sapping opening match at Rajkot where the hosts just about managed to pull off a thrilling victory to take a 1-0 lead in the five-match series. The three-run margin of victory gives the right indication that the teams are evenly matched.
Dew Factor
The playing surface in this Orange City is also expected to be batting-friendly. The match was shifted here by the BCCI from Vishakapatnam due to security concerns.
The encounter can become a bit tricky because of the cool weather and the dew factor that would come into effect as it’s a day-night game.
The dew-fall is certainly going to make matters that much more difficult for the side fielding second as the wet ball, would make things a bit difficult for the bowlers.
The dew-kissed wicket would also help the ball skid rather than grip the surface, which would add to the bowlers’ troubles.
While batting clicked for both the teams, the fielding — especially the catching — and the bowling came under severe pressure and once again this could turn out to be an important factor in the outcome.
The hosts dropped catches of all three top-order Lanka batsmen — Dilshan, Upul Tharanga and captain Kumar Sangakkara — and were lucky these lapses did not result in a defeat.
A much better fielding effort would be expected by Dhoni, who entered the record books by completing 200 victims in 152 ODIs at Rajkot as well as 5000 runs, from his teammates.
Lanka too would be hoping for a better display on the field but they are certain to miss the tall Fernando and off-spin ace Muralitharan.
India’s bowling woes continued in Rajkot though the wicket was so good for batting that they got very little help.
Praveen Kumar bowled well in the initial overs, Harbhajan Singh applied the breaks in the middle while Ashish Nehra and Zaheer Khan did well in the death.
As Lanka coach Trevor Bayliss pointed out, it was not only by taking wickets that a team can win in ODIs but also by denying the rival batsmen the opportunity to hit them for fours and sixes as Nehra and Khan showed.
The batting power play is also a key area with both teams losing a clutch of wickets during this period.
The home team could have scored even higher than 414 had they not lost Sehwag, Dhoni and Gautam Gambhir during the batting power play.
The visitors would also have benefited had they not lost Sangakkara, Sanath Jayasuriya and Dilshan at this stage after needing 123 runs in 90 balls at the start of their batting power play.
–PTI