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2nd Final: Australia v SL at Adelaide Mar 6, 2012

lockyno1

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I tend to agree with Locky, if Warner's groin is a problem, he shouldn't be risked. Let him recover so he can be fit for the rest of the year. Watson is a prime example of what happens when you put a player back in when he is not quite fit.

I think Warner should be given every opportunity to prove his fitness, and if he is fit, he should be played, but if there are doubts, he shouldn't be risked

Yes and with these injuries I would be very cautious as they tend to not go away that quickly especially if you re-injure it, and as a batsman they are so painful..and with the no runner rule you just can't take even 95% fit players into a match, not when Forrest (although he is not Warner) is sitting in the sheds.
 

aussies1st

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I'll leave it to the selectors, they have shown they are overly cautious with unfit players so if they deem Warner fit then he is fit.
 

AlwaysGreen

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On the tri series: Jim Maxwell on some ABC show mentioned that the tri series this year happened only because India wanted it and that it won't be back next year. Any truth to this or was I dreaming?
 

Horrie Is God

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On the tri series: Jim Maxwell on some ABC show mentioned that the tri series this year happened only because India wanted it and that it won't be back next year. Any truth to this or was I dreaming?

There is plenty of truth in it unfortunately..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Tri-Series

After the 2007-08 season, the tri-series format was abandoned. For three seasons (2008-09 until 2010-11), Australia still played ODIs against two touring teams, but these were staged as separate ODI series against a single opponent. The Commonwealth Bank of Australia was still the naming rights sponsor of ODI cricket in Australia during these summers, so all series were still known as the Commonwealth Bank Series during this time.

The tri-series format returned in the 2011-12 season, but according to the ICC Future Tours Programme, this will not herald a permanent return to the format. A shortened Australian Tri-Series is scheduled for the 2014-15 season in the lead-up to the 2015 World Cup in Australia; otherwise, all ODI series that Australia is scheduled to host up to the 2019-20 season will be played against a single opponent
 

lockyno1

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53,350
On the tri series: Jim Maxwell on some ABC show mentioned that the tri series this year happened only because India wanted it and that it won't be back next year. Any truth to this or was I dreaming?

I agree with the decision, it is all well and good having a tri series with the top 3 ODI sides...but if we had say NZ or Bangladesh the neutral games would be terrible!
 

lockyno1

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53,350
I'll leave it to the selectors, they have shown they are overly cautious with unfit players so if they deem Warner fit then he is fit.

You mean like Cummins being re-injured? I am over these physios as they are woeful, there is no harm giving the players an extra 2 weeks to recover!
 

aussies1st

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How can he be rushed back too soon? He hasn't even played for Australia or NSW.
 

Horrie Is God

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http://www.espncricinfo.com/commonwealth-bank-series-2012/content/current/story/556206.html

Australia v Sri Lanka, CB Series 2nd final, Adelaide

Hosts brace for final Sri Lankan surge..

Daniel Brettig in Adelaide
March 5, 2012

Match facts
March 6, Adelaide
Start time 1350 (0320 GMT)

Big Picture
Australia are a match away from sealing a dramatic and entertaining triangular series, but it is all too apparent that Michael Clarke's team is staggering towards the finish line. To wrap up the finals 2-0 the hosts will have to win two in a row for the first time since games one and two of the series, and do so on an Adelaide surface far more amenable to Sri Lanka than Brisbane's was supposed to have been. Mahela Jayawardene's Sri Lankan team, meanwhile, carries plenty of momentum from the Gabba, not least in terms of the fight shown by a lower order that was about as inclined to quit as the American revolutionaries at the battle of Bunker Hill in 1775.

Clarke's concerns entering the second final revolve principally around his bowling, which lurched into indiscipline as Nuwan Kulasekara and others provided an unexpected fright. It was not the first time the home attack had been exploited in the later overs this series, something Clarke was at pains to address in the aftermath of the match, when he spoke less as a victor than as a leader wary of how his men are flagging. Ben Hilfenhaus and James Pattinson were particularly loose, and only Shane Watson looked entirely in command of his length and direction. David Warner's fitness is also a problem following his match-shaping 163, and will likely force a change in the batting order.

While Sri Lanka's attack looked powerless at times on a flat surface in Brisbane, they can expect a little more help in Adelaide, on a pitch that may slow up and turn in the evening. Most pressing among Jayawardene's requirements will be that one or more of his team's vaunted top order provides a more worthy contribution than they managed at the Gabba, where the late fightback masked the earlier inattention that made such a stirring rearguard necessary.

143183.2.jpg

Michael Clarke wants more from his weary team to close out the series in Adelaide © Getty Images

Form guide
Australia WLWLW (Most recent first)
Sri Lanka LWLWW

In the spotlight
Xavier Doherty bowled tidily at the Gabba, maintaining his knack for the useful. However in Adelaide he will expect to play a more central role, taking wickets as well as keeping the runs down. David Hussey managed to burgle four wickets in Brisbane, and Doherty's lack of a major haul across his matches in this series will be the one thing nagging away at him. These finals are the last ones he will play as the undisputed No. 1 ODI spinner, as Nathan Lyon will vie for a place against Doherty in the Caribbean.

Nuwan Kulasekara is nobody's idea of a conspicuous cricketer, his steady right-arm medium fast bowling the sort of handy skill that can make an ODI career of substance rather than fanfare. However the way he crashed into Australia's bowlers with the bat at the Gabba suggested greater depths of flair lurk beneath, and must have caused more than a few to ask "who was that masked man?" as he left the scene with 73 to his name. His challenge in Adelaide will be to replicate that impact, with ball or bat. Another star-turn would help keep the series alive.

Team news
David Warner is in extreme doubt due to a groin injury picked up during his Gabba innings, leaving Peter Forrest the most likely reinforcement while Shane Watson returns to the top of the order. One of Pattinson or Hilfenhaus should make way for Clint McKay.

Australia (possible) 1 Shane Watson, 2 Matthew Wade (wk), 3 Peter Forrest, 4 Michael Clarke (capt), 5 Michael Hussey, 6 David Hussey, 7 Daniel Christian, 8 Brett Lee, 9 James Pattinson, 10 Clint McKay, 11 Xavier Doherty.

An extra spinner is a likely gambit by the visitors, while they are also waiting on the fitness of Angelo Mathews.

Sri Lanka (possible) 1 Mahela Jayawardene (capt), 2 Tillakaratne Dilshan, 3 Kumar Sangakkara (wk), 4 Dinesh Chandimal, 5 Lahiru Thirimanne, 6 Upul Tharanga, 7 Farveez Maharoof, 8 Sachithra Senanayake, 9 Nuwan Kulasekara, 10 Lasith Malinga, 11 Rangana Herath.

Pitch and conditions
Adelaide's surface can be expected to be of similar character to that which hosted the domestic limited-overs final. The match was a dramatic tie that ended with South Australia and Tasmania locked on 285 runs apiece, a comfortable batting surface offering some turn in the evening. The weather forecast is fine and temperate.

Stats and trivia
Sri Lanka were victorious the last time they met Australia in a final at Adelaide Oval, in 2006.
That night Tillakaratne Dilshan had a hand in no fewer than four run-outs
This will be the last international match (or matches) hosted by Adelaide Oval before the start of redevelopment work that will dramatically reconfigure the ground.

Quotes
"A win is a win. But we have a lot of work to do with our Powerplay and death bowling. It hasn't been good enough all series. It continues to let us down. We are the No.1 one-day team and we have to be better than that. Hopefully that [scare] allows us to understand that we have to be better than that."
Michael Clarke was unimpressed with his bowlers in Brisbane

"The boys, at the end, showed some real character and kept fighting which is something you want to cultivate in a team."
Mahela Jayawardene saw something at the Gabba to build on in Adelaide

Edited by Siddarth Ravindran

Daniel Brettig is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo
 

Xfactor1979

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why's games 2 and 3 scheduled to be played in Adelaide?

Did Adelaide win the war of Australia and suddenly became the cricket capital of Australia?
 

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