[caption id="attachment_59532" align="aligncenter" width="580"]DQrqNG1W0AEsiRR Sri Lanka beat India by 7 wickets in the first ODI at Dharamsala. Image Source: ICC[/caption] Internet Desk: Sri Lanka registered a comprehensive seven wickets win over the hosts India in the first of three-match ODI series at Dharamsala today. They have taken a 1-0 lead in the series. While, chasing a mediocre total of 112 set by the Men in Blue in the first ODI, Sri Lanka also didn't get a good start as they lost their opener Danushka Gunathilaka on just 1. Their one down batsman Lahiru Thirimanne too returned back to the pavilion on a duck. After his depurture, veteran Anjelo Mathews and other opener Upul Tharanga held the innings together to take the score to 65 after which Tharanga got out on 49 which is a very good contribution in this wicket. After that Angelo Mathews (25*) and N Dickwella remained 26 not out to take their team home. Earlier, Sri Lanka skipper Thisara Perera sent the hosts to bat first after winning the toss. India’s top order failed miserably as at one stage the hosts were tottering 29 for 7. The scoreboard was just looked like a phone number. After that former India skipper, Dhoni and young chinaman spinner Kuldeep Yadav held the innings together to help India to get past it’s lowest total in ODI which is 54. Dhoni and Kuldeep added 41 runs for the 9th wicket. Kuldeep got out after scoring 19 runs. Dhoni played a knock of 65 runs and during this time he completed his 16000 international runs too. With an early start to the match, Lakmal, who completed his quota of 10 overs in a single spell, emerged as the wrecker-in-chief for Sri Lanka, returning with impressive figures of 10-4-13-4. Indian’s poor batting technique in seaming conditions came to the fore once again as Lakmal exploited the early testing conditions to the full. Such was the dominance of the Lankan seamers that India scored 11 for 3 in the powerplay overs, the lowest 10-over score in an ODI in the last five years, and second-lowest overall and it would be a timely reminder for the hosts who would be playing in seaming pitches when they tour South Africa next month. Sri Lanka put India on the backfoot right from the start with Mathews trapping opener Shikhar Dhawan in front of wicket in the last ball of his first over. The on-field umpire had given not out before a review by Sri Lankan team showed that the ball had hit him on line. Lakmal produced some extra bounce with his away going delivery and Rohit ended up poking at the ball to be back to the pavillion after the third umpire overturned another not out decision. With India tottering at 2-2, Dinesh Karthik joined debutant Shreyas Iyer in the middle. After four maiden overs in the first five overs, Iyer finally hit the first four and also got off the mark when he guided a Mathews delivery to the mid-wicket boundary. Living dangerously on the other end, Karthik was then sent back to the hut by Lakmal as India ended the powerplay overs at 11 for 3. Nuwan Pradeep replaced Mathews even as Perera persisted with Lakmal and it worked as the pacer produced a superb delivery to induce a thick outside edge off Manish Pandey as India slumped to 16-4. Two balls later, Pradeep uprooted Iyer’s stumps when the debutant inside-edged a delivery onto the stumps as the hosts lost half their side in the 14th over. Pandya then scored a couple of boundaries before giving an outside edge to Pradeep. Bhuvneshwar Kumar could not stay for long and it was left to Dhoni and Yadav to avoid the ignominy of being bowled out for their lowest ODI total of 54 against the same opponent in 2000 at Sharjah. Yadav looked in good touch as he blasted four boundaries but Dickwella produced a brilliant stumping off the bowing of spinner Akele Dananjaya to end his innings in the 26th over. Dhoni then added 17 and 25 runs with No. 10 Jasprit Bumrah and No. 11 Yuzvendra Chahal before being holed out in the 39th over at cover off Perera. Brief scores: India 112 all out in 38.2 overs (Dhoni 65; Lakmal 4/13). Sri Lanka 114/3 in 20.4 overs (Tharanga 49; Bumrah 1/32).