Sri Lanka Cricket A Team Triangular Series in 2005-06

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Sri Lanka Cricket A Team Triangular Series was a one-day cricket tournament held in Sri Lanka from 21 September 2005 to 1 October 2005. Three A teams participated - Sri Lanka A, South Africa A New Zealand A. These were not the national cricket teams, but rather second XIs made up of players who are not judged good enough for the national side by the national selectors. There was an initial group stage where each team played each other twice, making a total of six matches, before the one-game final determined the winner. Six of seven matches were played in Colombo, while the seventh took place in Moratuwa.

South Africa A dominated the tournament, perhaps surprisingly after coming off a 0–1 defeat in the first class series against Sri Lanka A. In this tournament, however, they were dominant, and won all their five games in the tournament. The hosts Sri Lanka A were knocked out, as they had the same win-loss record as New Zealand A but fewer bonus points. South Africa A relied on the depth of their bowling attack, with seven different bowlers taking more than four wickets - Dale Steyn took the most with nine - while their captain Jacques Rudolph was the highest run-scorer with 147. However, New Zealand A had players who scored more runs (Mathew Sinclair, James Marshall and Michael Papps all exceeded Rudolph's total) and took more wickets (Chris Martin ended with 11), but the players rarely fired together.

Contents

[edit] Squads

New Zealand A South Africa A Sri Lanka A
Name Role Team Name Role Team Name Role Team
Peter Fulton CPT, RHB, RM Canterbury Jacques Rudolph CPT, LHB, LS Eagles Avishka Gunawardene CPT, LHB Sinhalese SC
Gareth Hopkins WK, RHB Otago Thami Tsolekile WK, RHB WP Boland Prasanna Jayawardene WK, RHB Nondescripts CC
James Franklin LHB, LFM Wellington Paul Adams RHB, SLA WP Boland Shantha Kalavitigoda RHB, LS Colts CC
Chris Harris LHB, RM Canterbury Hashim Amla RHB, RM Dolphins Kaushal Lokuarachchi RHB, LS Bloomfield C & A
Jamie How RHB, RM Central Districts Loots Bosman RHB, RM Eagles Dilhara Lokuhettige RHB, RFM Moors SC
James Marshall RHB, RM Northern Districts Johan Botha RHB, OB Warriors Farveez Maharoof RHB, RFM Bloomfield C & A
Bruce Martin RHB, SLA Northern Districts Zander de Bruyn RHB, RFM Titans Jeewan Mendis LHB, LS Sinhalese SC
Chris Martin RHB, RFM Canterbury Jean-Paul Duminy LHB, OB WP Boland Jehan Mubarak LHB, OB Colombo CC
Iain O'Brien RHB, RM Wellington Albie Morkel RHB, RMF Titans Upul Tharanga LHB Nondescripts CC
Michael Papps RHB Canterbury Justin Ontong RHB, OB Lions Michael Vandort LHB, RM Colombo CC
Jeetan Patel RHB, OB Wellington Robin Peterson LHB, SLA Warriors Sajeewa Weerakoon LHB, SLA Burgher RC
Jesse Ryder LHB, RM Wellington Andrew Puttick LHB, RM WP Boland Nuwan Zoysa LHB, LFM Sinhalese SC
Matthew Sinclair RHB, RM Central Districts Dale Steyn RHB, RF Titans
Daryl Tuffey RHB, RFM Northern Districts Alfonso Thomas RHB, RFM Boland
Johannes van der Wath RHB, RF Eagles
Monde Zondeki RHB, RF WP Boland

[edit] Schedule

Group stages
Date Match Venue
September
21

RSA A v SRI A

R. Premadasa Stadium
22 NZL A v SRI A R. Premadasa Stadium
24 NZL A v RSA A Sinhalese Sports Club Ground
25 NZL A v SRI A Tyronne Fernando Stadium
27 RSA A v SRI A Colts Cricket Club Ground
28 NZL A v RSA A R. Premadasa Stadium
Final
October
1

NZL A v RSA A

Sinhalese Sports Club Ground

[edit] Match details

[edit] Warm-up matches

These matches were arranged to give the visiting teams match practice before the tournament started on 21 September.

[edit] Sri Lanka Under-23s v South Africa A, 19 September

South Africa A won by 174 runs (Cricinfo scorecard)

[edit] Sri Lanka Cricket XI v New Zealand A, 19 September

New Zealand A won by 153 runs (Cricinfo scorecard)

[edit] First Match: Sri Lanka A v South Africa A, 21 September

South Africa A won by ten wickets

South African fast bowler Dale Steyn took apart the Sri Lanka A batting line-up, as Sri Lanka A subsided for 45 - only five days after they had completed a 1–0 series win in the first class matches earlier in the week. However, in this match only Jeewan Mendis managed to get into double figures, and only two partnerships got into double figures. Intriguingly, 9 runs came off wides - 20 % of the Sri Lankan total. Steyn finished with five wickets for 20 runs, Tyron Henderson took two for 14, while Albie Morkel and Johannes van der Wath finished off the innings by removing the last three batsmen. Andrew Puttick and Loots Bosman spent half an hour facing 29 balls to canter to 47 without loss, with Nuwan Zoysa conceded 31 from 17 deliveries - including four no-balls and a wide. (Cricinfo scorecard)

[edit] Second Match: Sri Lanka A v New Zealand A, 22 September

Sri Lanka A won by 12 runs

The Sri Lankan captain Gunawardene was dismissed for his second successive duck, as Daryl Tuffey and Chris Martin took early wickets and the hosts struggled to two for two. However, a 98-run stand between Jehan Mubarak and Upul Tharanga gave the initiative back to Sri Lanka, and all-rounder Dilhara Lokuhettige could increase the run rate in the final overs, hitting 57 off 39 balls. New Zealander Chris Harris went without a wicket, but only conceded 19 off ten overs, but the other bowlers leaked too many runs as Sri Lanka closed on 251 for 6 off 50 overs. New Zealand A's innings started off with a maiden over from Zoysa, followed up by Jesse Ryder being caught behind for 0. Matt Sinclair and Peter Fulton added half-centuries, and New Zealand were going along nicely at 189 for 5, but the four last wickets were lost to Jehan Mubarak - who ended with five for 59. Thus, New Zealand ran out of men to score the required runs, with their total score 239 for 9. (Cricinfo scorecard)

[edit] Third Match: New Zealand A v South Africa A, 24 September

South Africa A won by six wickets

(Cricinfo scorecard)

[edit] Fourth Match: Sri Lanka A v New Zealand A, 25 September

New Zealand A won by 72 runs

(Cricinfo scorecard)

[edit] Fifth Match: Sri Lanka A v South Africa A, 27 September

South Africa A won by four wickets

(Cricinfo scorecard)

[edit] Sixth Match: New Zealand A v South Africa A, 28 September

South Africa A won by one wicket

(Cricinfo scorecard)

[edit] Group tables

Group Stage Standings
Team M W L NR Pts NRR
South Africa A 4 4 0 0 22 +1.60
New Zealand A 4 1 3 0 8 -0.04
Sri Lanka A 4 1 3 0 6 -1.50

[edit] Final, New Zealand A v South Africa A, 1 October

South Africa A won by six wickets

(Cricinfo scorecard)


International cricket in 2005-06
Preceding season International cricket in 2005
August 2005 Zimbabwe v New ZealandSouth Africa Academy in PakistanVideocon Tri–SeriesSri Lanka v Bangladesh
September 2005 South Africa A in Sri LankaAustralia A in PakistanZimbabwe v IndiaA-team Tri Series in Sri Lanka
October 2005 ICC Super Series – New Zealand A in Sri Lanka – South Africa v New Zealand (one-day matches) – India v Sri Lanka
November 2005 Australia v West Indies – England Women in Sri Lanka and India – Pakistan v EnglandIndia v South Africa – Afro–Asia Cup Under–19 Tournament – England Under–19s in Bangladesh
December 2005 Chappell–Hadlee TrophyAustralia v South AfricaNew Zealand v Sri Lanka
January 2006 VB SeriesPakistan v India
February 2006 ICC Under–19 World CupNew Zealand v West IndiesBangladesh v Sri Lanka – Australia Women v India Women – South Africa v Australia – England A in West Indies – Kenya v Zimbabwe
March 2006 India v England – New Zealand Women v India Women – Bangladesh v Kenya – Sri Lanka v Pakistan
April 2006 Bangladesh v AustraliaSouth Africa v New Zealand (Test matches) – DLF Cup (India v Pakistan)
Following season International cricket in 2006