In the end it was a breeze. Whatever doubts England might have had about
chasing 94 to win the second Test at the end of a tormented Asian
winter did not manifest themselves as they gambolled to a victory that,
for the moment at least, preserves their status as the No. 1 ranked side
in the world.
Lurking memories of their collapse to 72 all out, in pursuit of 145, in
Abu Dhabi barely two months ago were banished as Alastair Cook proceeded
from the outset at a one-day rate and Kevin Pietersen added a
lighthearted singalong to his majestic first-innings century. England
had it all wrapped up within 20 overs, levelling the series at 1-1 and
preventing Sri Lanka from achieving their own first Test series win for
three years.
It was a steamy Colombo day - one reading showed 42C - so hot that
holidaymakers along Sri Lanka's coast would be dragging sunbeds into the
shade. England lost their captain, Andrew Strauss, for nought, bowled
by Tillakaratne Dilshan as he met one that turned with ponderous
footwork and an angled blade, and Jonathan Trott followed lbw to Rangana
Herath as Sri Lanka successfully asked for a referral, but they were
not about to wilt in the sun.
Sri Lanka, who had added another 60 in the morning session, relied
entirely upon their spinners in recognition that the P Sara pitch had
finally become the minefield that many had long forecast. Cook signalled
his intent by driving and cutting Dilshan for successive boundaries and
set the tone, scoring 30 of England's first 40 runs. When he cut three
times in one over at Herath, and missed the lot, Sri Lanka must have
realised there would be no miracle.
Then Pietersen came over all Frank Sinatra, confident again to do it his
way, gliding down the pitch to loft Herath straight for six.
Appropriately, the match ended with Pietersen v Dilshan, reviving
memories of the contretemps over Pietersen's switch hit. Mahela
Jayawardene brought the field in and challenged Pietersen to win it with
a six and he did so, launching the ball over midwicket. What did he
think of April Tests in Colombo when the climate was at its fiercest?
"A joke," said Pietersen, ingenuously.
Sri Lanka, six down overnight, lost three wickets in a rush, but Angelo
Mathews countered briefly to turn an overnight lead of 33 into something
a little more substantial. Their chief tormenter was Graeme Swann who
had rolled in, sunglasses not quite disguising a scampish intent, to
turn the game with two wickets in the penultimate over of the fourth
day. He spun the ball viciously at times on a pitch that, for him at
least, finally had become the spin bowler's minefield that had long been
predicted.
Samit Patel also chipped in with his first Test wicket when Herath
anticipated Swann-like turn, found Patel-like turn instead and offered
the simplest of chances to James Anderson at slip.
For Sri Lanka, the onus rested once more on Mahela Jayawardene. Swann,
who took 6-106 to finish with ten wickets in the match, finally removed
him an excellent ball which turned and bounced to hit the glove and lob
easily to Cook, plunging forward at short leg. It was the end of a
polished defensive innings - 64 from 191 balls with only four
boundaries.
Jayawardene made 354 runs in four innings with two centuries and his
stock has rarely been higher. It was easy to carp that Sri Lanka had not
helped themselves by a scoring rate not much above two an over, but
only Pietersen, whose rapid century had created the time in which
England could win the game, had played with any panache on this pitch
and to try to ape Pietersen in that mood would be to fly too close to
the sun.
Two overs later and another Jayawardene followed, this time Prasanna,
coming in two places lower at No 9 thanks to Sri Lanka's recourse to
nightwatchmen on the previous two evenings. It was a briefly
unimpressive stay, ended when he tried to sweep and was bowled around
his legs.
Mathews' survival owed much to a calamitous morning for Cook at short
leg. Three times in five overs Swann had expectations of dismissing
Mathews to a nudge to short leg, but Cook failed to cling to two low
chances and then a third fell wide of him as Swann looked as dangerous
as at any time on England's winter tours.
There was further frustration for England, too, when Mahela Jayawardene,
on 58, was adjudged lbw by umpire Asad Rauf only for the decision to be
overturned on review when the tv umpire, Rod Tucker, spotted an inside
edge.
As wickets fell, Mathews eventually had little choice but to formulate
an attacking response, but eventually an erratic surface betrayed him as
Steven Finn made one stick in the surface and Mathews, intent upon
advancing to drive, could only chip into the legside. England's run of
failures were soon to be put behind them.
England 460 (Pietersen 151, Cook 94, Herath 6-133) and 97 for 2 beat Sri Lanka 275 (Mahela Jayawardene 105, Swann 4-75) and 278 (Mahela Jayawardene 64, Swann 6-106) by eight wickets
FREE TV BANGLADESH VS SRI LANKA 2nd TEST
ReplyDeleteFREE TV BANGLADESH VS SRI LANKA 2nd TEST
FREE TV BANGLADESH VS SRI LANKA 2nd TEST
FREE TV BANGLADESH VS SRI LANKA 2nd TEST