Friday, May 27, 2011

Sri Lanka rebuild after England strike back


The opening stages of the first Test continued to be closely fought as Sri Lanka refused to buckle despite favourable conditions for England's pace bowlers. The home side clawed back ground with a wicket apiece for the dangerous James Anderson and Chris Tremlett, but Thilan Samaraweera survived some tricky moments to lift Sri Lanka to 207 for 4 at lunch on the second day.
The visitors hadn't added a run to their overnight score of 133 for 2 when England made the first breakthrough of the day as Mahela Jayawardene edged Anderson to Andrew Strauss, who held a superb catch diving to his right behind second slip. The wicket was brought about by trademark swing bowling from Anderson who began by probing Jayawardene's outside edge with a series of outswingers before bring one back into him. Jayawardene tried to drop his hands but couldn't react in time.
Runs continued to be hard to come by as Anderson strung together four testing maidens and Stuart Broad was a little more threatening than the first day as he located a better length although he remained inconsistent. Broad was replaced by Tremlett, the pick of the quicks yesterday, and he immediately had the batsmen in two minds with an awkward length.
He struck Paranavitana a painful blow on the inner thigh which required some attention from the physio and in his next over Tremlett found his inside edge to end a determined 191-ball innings. In the previous over against Broad, Paranavitana had survived a huge appeal for lbw which Strauss opted not to review and it was again the right decision with not enough of the ball hitting leg stump to get it overturned.
Paranavitana had only managed to add eight to his overnight total but had shown the same good judgement and resilience that characterised his effort on the opening afternoon. However, it was due reward for Tremlett who continued to look dangerous and benefited from a hint of uneven bounce when he struck Samaraweera a nasty blow on his arm.
Samaraweera lived a little dangerously as he played away from his body but also collected some confident boundaries including a straight drive off Anderson. Whenever the England bowlers strayed onto his pads he was quick to pick them off although he wasn't far off edging to third slip when the ball just eluded a diving Alastair Cook. Still, it was comfortably Samaraweera's best effort on British soil having failed to reach double figures in his previous four Test innings.
Prasanna Jayawardene, batting a place higher than normal at No. 6 to allow Sri Lanka to field five bowlers, accompanied Samaraweera until lunch with a sparky innings that kept the scoreboard ticking over. He twice gained boundaries to third man through the slip cordon but batsmen deserve some fortune when the ball moves and the fifth-wicket stand was worth a valuable 48 by the interval.

No comments:

Post a Comment