Chevrons  battle Lions Heath Streak
Heath Streak

Heath Streak

THE third One Day International between Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka today is delicately poised.

The two teams will battle in the magnificent Hambantota International Cricket Stadium on level terms.

Their five-match ODI series is tied after two games. Zimbabwe won the first match at the Galle International Cricket Stadium last Friday, shocking the hosts who were looking for a series sweep on the rebound from the disappointment of the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy, whose aftermath has seen the departure of coach Graham Ford and a public spat between sports minister Dayasiri Jayasekera and bowler Lasith Malinga, resulting in a fine and suspended ban for the latter.

Then came the second ODI match, also in Galle. Against headline news that he would no longer be taking part in the series because of illness after the first match, Malinga turned up and so did the rest of the Lions to beat Zimbabwe and level the series.

And now comes Hambantota. It comes in a tour that coach Heath Streak has described as so far “enjoyable and challenging”, as his charges have struggled to acclimatise to the plus-30 degree temperatures and humidity of the Sri Lankan coast line, after suffering the minus-20 degrees, rain and wind of Scotland, followed by the warmer though still wet Netherlands.

“But we are happy with such a historic win and despite losing the second ODI, the team morale is high,” said the former national team captain.

The morale will be higher when Tendai Chatara passes his fitness test — the “Dangamvura Express” sustained a hip injury when he rolled after a dive while fielding in the second ODI match on Sunday.

Since then, Chatara has only left Anesu Mupotaringa’s physiotherapy bed for more rehabilitation on the field and in the pool. Zimbabwe will need his pace. But the Lions have had their pride severely dented by Zimbabwe’s first win. Their first home loss ever to the southern African nation. And that nation ranked a whole 11th on the 12-team ICC ODI table.

Sri Lanka wanted a series sweep against Zimbabwe to move ahead of seventh-placed Bangladesh. Having clinched the historic first win in the tour opener but then conceding the series advantage in the second match, are Zimbabwe under any additional pressure to re-assert themselves tomorrow?

“There is always pressure playing at international level whether you are hosts or visitors . . . the key is how you handle it,” said Streak, adding: “After all, pressure is a mental barrier rather than a physical one.”

It all points to a high-stakes encounter at the MRIC Stadium in Hambantota. Zimbabwe wound up their preparations for the match with an afternoon practice session at the match venue yesterday, followed by a team meeting. What has Streak been telling his players?

“Remain positive, play to win and make smart decisions.” — zimcricket.

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