HOBART:
Kumar Sangakkara became the first batsman to hit four successive
centuries in one-day internationals to help Sri Lanka wrap up their
World Cup pool campaign with a 148-run romp over Scotland at Bellerive
Oval on Wednesday.
His team had already booked a place in the
quarter-finals but Sangakkara's insatiable appetite for runs continued
unabated as he added 195 runs with Tillakaratne Dilshan (104) against
Scotland's limited bowling resources on a perfect batting track.
Down
the order, captain Angelo Mathews (51) clobbered six sixes in a 21-ball
blitz in the frantic final phase of the innings when ropes were cleared
and wickets tumbled regularly.
Freddie Coleman (70) and skipper
Preston Mommsen (60) tried their best but Scotland simply lacked the
batting firepower to chase down such a huge victory target and folded
for 215 in the 44th over.
For Sri Lanka, who rose to second in
Pool A with the win, Dushmantha Chameera and Nuwan Kulasekara justified
their selection claiming three wickets apiece.
Earlier, Mathews won the toss and decided to bat first but Scotland did well to restrict Sri Lanka to 46-1 after 10 overs.
Dilshan
and Sangakkara counter-attacked near the halfway mark when Dilshan hit
Davey for back-to-back fours and followed it with a six.
Sangakkara also accelerated and soon the former captains got into a competition -- who reaches the century first.
Dilshan
completed his 22nd ODI hundred in the 34th over with a single that
brought Sangakkara on strike and the 37-year-old southpaw achieved his
own on the very next ball.
Sangakkara went on to consolidate his
position at the top of the tournament's run-getters' list with a
scintillating knock that contained 13 boundaries and four sixes.
Dilshan hit 10 fours and a six in his fluent innings before falling to Josh Davey (3-63) in the 35th over.
After Dilshan's exit, Sangakkara hit Alasdair Evans for four boundaries and a six in a 24-run over.
Davey
dealt a double blow in the next over, dismissing Mahela Jayawardene and
Sangakkara off successive deliveries to become the tournament's highest
wicket-taker.
Boundaries kept flowing though as Mathews hammered
Matt Machan for four successive sixes to race to a 20-ball fifty before
perishing in his quest for the fifth of that 25-run over.
At 216-1 in the 35th over, Sri Lanka threatened to go beyond 400 but lost eight wickets for 147 runs and fell short of the mark.
Sangakkara also went past Australian Adam Gilchrist's (52) World Cup record of most dismissals by a wicketkeeper.
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