Adam Gilchrist lived up to his billing as the most
dangerous batsman in the one-day game with a record
149 as Australia won an unprecedented third straight
ICC CWC final on Saturday.
Australia triumphed by 53 runs over Sri Lanka on the
Duckworth/Lewis method at Kensington Oval in a game
ruined as a spectacle by the weather.
Gilchrist's innings, the highest in a final surpassing
the 140 not out made by Australia captain Ricky Ponting
against India in Johannesburg four years ago, was the
centerpiece of the champions' 281 for four.
But the game ended in confusion with Australia thinking
the final was finished due to bad light after 33 overs
of the Sri Lankan innings, in a match reduced by rain
to 38 a side, only for play to resume in pitch darkness
on a ground without floodlights.
In all, Gilchrist, dropped on 31, faced just 104 balls
with eight sixes and 13 fours as Australia set a daunting
target in an innings reduced to 38 overs because of
rain.
Victory meant Australia had won their fourth ICC CWC,
improving their own record, in the tournament's nine-edition
history.
In the process they extended their unbeaten run of
games in the competition to 29 with 23 straight wins
after their semi-final tie against South Africa in 1999.
Sri Lanka, in reply, finished on 215 for eight after
a second rain break reduced their target to 269 off
36 overs.
They had a glimmer of hope during a second-wicket stand
of 117 between left-handers Sanath Jayasuriya (63) and
wicket-keeper Kumar Sangakkara (54).
The 1996 champions, who beat Australia in the final
11 years ago, lost Upul Tharanga early when he edged
left-arm quick Nathan Bracken to wicket-keeper Gilchrist,
Sri Lanka seven for one.
Jayasuriya, one of three survivors from the 1996 team,
was reprieved on eight when a trademark square cut off
fast bowler Shaun Tait was dropped by Shane Watson,
diving forward, at third man.
At 36 for one, Glenn McGrath came on in his last match
before retirement, the 37-year-old quick already this
tournament's leading wicket-taker with a record edition
haul of 25 wickets and the most successful ICC CWC bowler
of all-time.
But keeper Kumar Sangakkara hit him off his usual good
length for six over mid-wicket. Next ball the left-hander
cover drove for four and the following delivery was
disdainfully pulled to the boundary.
Jayasuriya then completed a 51-ball fifty before Sangakkara
reached the landmark at a run-a-ball.
But spinner Brad Hogg delivered again for Australia
when Sangakkara, on 54, pulled a long hop straight to
Ponting at mid-on to leave Sri Lanka 123 for two in
the 20th over.
And that became 145 for three in the 23rd when Jayasuriya
was bowled for 63, trying to slog part-time spinner
Michael Clarke.
Despite a fresh rain burst, the umpires kept the players
on the field until, with Sri Lanka 149 for three in
the 25th over, they called a halt.
Play soon re-started amidst confusion before the revised
target was confirmed and then Sri Lanka captain Mahela
Jayawardene was lbw to medium-pacer Watson.
Now, in gathering gloom, the game was up for Sri Lanka,
Gilchrist's diving catch on the run to dismiss Russel
Arnold giving Glenn McGrath a farewell wicket in his
final match.
Earlier, Gilchrist and fellow left-hander Matthew Hayden's
stand of 172 was a new first-wicket record for a ICC
CWC final, surpassing the 129 shared by England's Mike
Brearley and Geoff Boycott during West Indies' 92-run
win at Lord's in 1979.
Left-arm quick Chaminda Vaas saw his now maximum eight
overs cost 54 runs after Ponting won the toss.
Lasith Malinga took two for 49 in his eight overs after
his first four cost just six runs.
Crucially first-change Dilhara Fernando, retained despite
conceding 45 runs in five overs during Tuesday's 81-run
semi-final win against New Zealand, dropped a low caught
and bowled chance in his second over off Gilchrist's
checked drive.
It didn't get much better for Fernando, his eight overs
going for a hugely expensive 74, including Gilchrist's
two fours and a six off successive balls. Gilchrist's
fifty was up in 43 balls with two sixes and five fours
and he was on the way to passing his previous best score
this tournament of 59 not out against Bangladesh.
Perhaps his best shot was a six off Muttiah Muralidaran
that soared over mid-wicket, the Sri Lanka star's seven
wicketless overs costing 44 runs after he'd dismissed
23 batsmen in the tournament - second only to McGrath's
pre-final haul.
Malinga's first ball back was smashed for six by Hayden.
Gilchrist then also struck Malinga to the long-off
boundary to bring up a superb century in 72 balls with
six sixes and eight fours.
Hayden, renowned as a power-hitter and the tournament's
leading run-scorer, made a relatively subdued 38 before
falling to Malinga's fifth ball back when driving to
a leaping Jayawardene at extra-cover.
Gilchrist broke Ponting's record, with his skipper
at the crease, when he drove left-arm spinner Jayasuriya
for six.
Fernando eventually dismissed Gilchrist, skying to
Chamara Silva running round to mid-wicket, but the damage
had been done.