Cuttack: Sri Lanka will seek to extract revenge on South Africa when they lock horns in the fifth-place match of the ICC Women's World Cup at the Barabati Stadium here on Friday. South Africa trounced the islanders by 110 runs for their first win in the Super Six stage of the tournament on Friday. Both teams are out of the tournament and will be playing for pride.
Sri Lanka, after a good start with wins over England and India, which knocked the hosts out of the tournament, suffered some big defeats that affected their net run-rate and dented their prospects. Save the win over Sri Lanka, South Africa have flattered to deceive at the Super Six stage having lost all their matches.
In the inconsequential match between the two sides on Wednesday, a combination of poor shot selection and temperament saw Sri Lanka make a mess of their chase of 228, with only Chamari Athapaththu offering some resistance with an elegant 63. With just one other batter in Sandamali Dolawatte (21), getting to double figures, the chase was as good as over even before Sri Lanka had reached the half way mark.

Sri Lanka will seek to extract revenge on South Africa when they lock horns in the fifth-place match at the Barabati Stadium.
It was due to Dane van Niekerk's all-round performance that South Africa emerged winners. Van Niekerk played her part with the bat, contributing a fine 38-ball 40, before taking four wickets. Shandre Fritz struck 64 while Cri-Zelda Brits played a knock of 52.
(For updates you can share with your friends, follow IBNLive on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Pinterest)













IPL 6 play-offs: Final week of action beckons
Team owners are biggest victims of spot-fixing: Preity Zinta
Blame guilty, not IPL for spot-fixing: Murali Kartik
Spot-fixing: Baburao's family claims he is innocent
Live: Players face last round of questioning before being taken to court
Spot-fixing: Legalise betting, says KXIP owner Preity Zinta
Heavyweights Mumbai and CSK clash in fight for the final
Chennai have played smart cricket this season, says Fleming




