3. Lack of partnerships
Sri Lanka were put in to chase in both the games, and while chasing you need to build effective partnerships. But that was another area where Sri Lanka were practically non-existent.
They had only one partnership over fifty in both the games combined – Dananjaya de Silva and Upul Tharanga added 54 runs for the second wicket against Afghanistan. They registered only three partnerships above the 30-run mark, which is a sorry statistic.
4. Run outs
In the must-win encounter against Afghanistan, Sri Lanka lost two wickets to run-outs just when things seemed to be going in their favor.
Upul Tharanga and Dananjaya de Silva added 54 runs for the second wicket and the latter departed due to poor communication between them. At one point, both batsmen were running towards the same end.
Captain Angelo Mathews and Shehan Jayasuriya had stabilized Sri Lanka’s chase for a while, adding 20 runs for the fourth wicket. But poor calling from Mathews left Jayasuriya stranded in the middle of the pitch, and he was run out by a big margin.
Mathews was also involved in a run-out in the first game against Bangladesh. Due to his slow calling, Dasun Shanaka was run-out by a long distance.
5. Ineffective death bowling
Sri Lanka bowled brilliantly upfront in both the games. However, in the last five overs they allowed their opposition to get to a competitive total.
In the first game, Bangladesh scored just 219 at the end of 45 overs. However, with a late assault they finished with 261 on the board – scoring 42 runs since the start of the 46th over.
In the second game, Afghanistan went from a par score of 208 at the 45-over mark to 249 at the end of their quota – adding 41 runs in the last five overs.
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