Sri Lanka's Ajantha Mendis and debutant Dammika Prasad restricted India to a modest first innings score of 249 in the third and final Test today despite a defiant last-wicket stand.Unorthodox spinner Mendis finished with 5-56 and paceman Prasad with 3-82 as India were bowled out in the last session of the opening day.India slipped from 151-3 to 198-9 before Zaheer Khan (32) and Ishant Sharma (17 not out) frustrated Sri Lanka with a 51-run partnership for the last wicket, the joint-highest stand of the innings.Fast bowler Sharma then returned to dismiss Malinda Warnapura before Sri Lanka reached 14-1 in reply at stumps. Michael Vandort was unbeaten on three and nightwatchman Chaminda Vaas had yet to open his account. Mendis continued to haunt the Indian batsmen, having so far grabbed 23 wickets in the series with clever variations. Left-handed opener Gautam Gambhir was the only specialist batsman to give a good account of himself, top-scoring with a solid 72 for his third successive half-century. He hit 10 fours before falling leg-before to Mendis.The series is tied at 1-1, with the hosts winning the first Test by an innings and 239 runs and India clinching a 170-run victory in the second match.India's famed middle order flopped yet again. Sourav Ganguly (35) and Venkatsai Laxman (25) failed to convert starts into big innings, while Sachin Tendulkar (six) and Rahul Dravid (10) were not allowed to settle.Prasad did the early damage with a triple-strike, having in-form opener Virender Sehwag caught behind in his first spell and then trapping Dravid and Tendulkar leg-before in the second before the lunch break.India got off to a sound start when Sehwag (21) and Gambhir put on 51 for the opening wicket, but faltered against the Sri Lankan pace-spin attack. Tendulkar, who became only the third cricketer to appear in 150 Tests after Australians Steve Waugh and Allan Border, was unlucky when he asked umpire to review his decision after being adjudged LBW. The umpire was proved right after consulting the TV official.
Posts Tagged ‘zaheer khan’
Mendis magic restricts India
Friday, August 8th, 2008India beat Sri Lanka by 170 runs to level series
Sunday, August 3rd, 2008Galle: Harbhajan Singh’s match haul of 10-153 helped India to a comprehensive 170-run victory over Sri Lanka with a day to spare in the second Test at Galle on Sunday. India’s victory gets them level with Sri Lanka in the three-match series, which is keenly poised with the decider to be played at the Colombo Oval.
Sri Lanka, who were set a target of 307 to win on a wearing fourth day wicket at the Galle International stadium, were blown away for 136 on a day that say 16 wickets fall in a little over two sessions.
India, resuming day four on 200-4, were bowled out after adding just 69 runs, but had amassed an overall lead of 306 runs, before fast bowlers Ishant Sharma and Zaheer Khan produced a hostile opening spell which left the hosts reeling at 23-4 before lunch.
While the Indian light artillery was waiting in the wings, Sri Lanka had fought a sensible rearguard in this second Test on Sunday.
Only it was accurate sniper fire of lanky fast bowler Ishant Sharma who broke through in the first over after tea on day four when he had Tillekeratne Dilshan caught behind by a ball which forced the all-rounder to push ungainly at the ball and edge a catch.
It left Sri Lanka 115 for five in the first over after the interval and meant that Thilan Samaraweera would need to put together a monumental effort to attempt to win this game as India closed in for a series-levelling victory.
While it was thought that Virender Sehwag and even Sachin Tendulkar might be soon called on to bowl a few overs to break an obdurate fifth wicket partnership, Sri Lanka had reached 109-4, needing a further 198 runs to win this Test.
But the Dilshan wicket falling so soon after the break to Sharma meant that all the hard work of the fifth wicket partnership of 76 went for nothing the way Dilshan lost his wicket.
While Samaraweera put together an impressive half-century and Sri Lanka recovered from 37-4 at the end of the 20th over, the fall of Dilshan meant that the impetus which Sehwag had kept going through his two innings was not being wasted.
The Samaraweera-Dilshan partnership was notable for its rotation of the strike as they built a total on sound understanding that has often served Sri Lanka well in the past. They batted with care and attention as Harbhajan Singh and Anil Kumble tried to break through after the lanky Michael Vandort was trapped lbw by Harbhajan for 10.
Playing back on this surface is not technically wise unless you are competent and there are few batsmen who can do it with such effect these days.
Both batsmen looked comfortable until Sharma was brought back into the attack and the pace, bounce and length unsettled the both batsman although Dinesh Karthik’s appeal for a catch gave the impression that the wicketkeeper was taking a chance when a referral was made but turned down.
It was the clever footwork displayed by Dilshan and Samaraweera that put India under some pressure as they leaked runs in all directions.
Yet the day has not been without its drama and rarely have the freeloaders atop the munificent ramparts of Galle Fort experienced such a feast or seen avalanche of wickets in a morning’s session.
India crumbling from an overnight 200-4 to 269 and along the way wrenching a valuable overall lead of 306, quickly had Sri Lanka’s second innings efforts under pressure with three quick wickets.
On a morning of that has provided drama and remarkable bowling performances Sri Lanka, at lunch were 24-3, were on decidedly shaky ground with a required target of 283 and only seven wickets remaining as Sharma and Zaheer Khan ripped the top off the innings in an impressive display of pace and swing.
Sharma, who has made a habit of taking out important batsmen in his short Test career, in successive overs dismissed Malintha Warnapura and the big one of Sri Lanka captain Mahela Jayawardene as India’s slips and gully cordon clung to valuable catches.
All this left a packed home crowd, in a buoyant mood after Ajantha Mendis earning his first 10 wicket Test haul with four for 92 to add to his six in the first innings, stunned as they went to lunch. Whether they will enjoy it is another matter.
Yet for India to stretch the lead past the 300 mark and on a pitch where bounce was often irregular and as near a minefield as you would discover without the mines, required some effort and explains why Virender Sehwag’s half century along with that of Gautam Gambhir on day three are important sign posts in an innings where today batsmen have struggle to come to terms with the pitch.
There were several referrals for lbw as well that delayed the flow of the game with Sourav Ganguly surviving one that he requested of the umpire from a Mendis appeal before being stumped by Prasanna Jayawardene off Muttiah Muralitharan’s flight and guile.
It is a match where pickings have been lean for Murali with five wickets, as India worked hard towards achieving that 300 runs lead.
From the moment VVS Laxman on the backfoot was trapped in front for 13 by Mendis with the floating off-spinner, the feeling was that India would struggle to reach the 300 mark. There was none of the positive batting seen after lunch on day three when Virender Sehwag thrashed the ball around with aggressive intent or when Rahul Dravid and for a time Sachin Tendulkar were batting.
There was a certain desperation in the batting pre-lunch and it showed the way Dinesh Karthik was fooled into going for the lofted drive, suckered by the floating delivery that Murali tossed up.
But if the referral for lbw decisions took an age and frankly, after the Dravid decision, the accuracy of the technology, or those handling it, needs to be questioned, the stuttering start to the Sri Lanka second innings left the hosts wondering.
Not all the strokeplay today has been of the highest quality and not all of this is to do with the pitch. While it was good bowling that had batsmen in a tangle, the shot that Jayawardene played was not one that would like to remember.
There was also the catch that Laxman took off Zaheer Khan’s bowling to get rid of Kumar Sangakkara that emitted volumes in confidence. It was a juicy delivery that held its line and swing and pulled the batsman forward, but the way he aimed to defend had the ball flying from the edge to Laxman.
When Jayawardene departed, India knew they were in with a chance to level the series.
Sri Lanka 85 for two on rain-hit day one
Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008Indian pacers struck early to reduce Sri Lanka to 85 for two at stumps in rain-curtailed day one of the first Test at the Sinhalese Sports Club grounds here Wednesday.Only 22 overs were possible on the opening day as the combination of rain, wet outfield and bad light deprived the teams of a full day's action in what was expected to be a closely fought Test series.Just less than two hours of play was possible after the tea interval and play was called off early at 5:15 pm local time due to bad light with Malinda Warnapura (50) and skipper Mahela Jayawerdene (16).Ishant Sharma (1 for 21) removed Michael Vandort (3) while Zaheer Khan took the wicket of dangerous Kumar Sangakkara (12).Opener Warnapura made a strong start to the series making a half-century. The left-hander, playing only his fifth Test Match, looked solid and faced 74 balls, hitting six boundaries with three of them coming in an Ishant over.After the first two sessions were lost, play resumed eventually at 3:30 pm local time and Ishant got good assistance from the gloomy conditions moving the ball significantly.He claimed the wicket of Vandort, with a sharp rising delivery and the left-hander chased the ball that he could have left alone and wicketkeeper Dinesh Karthik took a good catch moving to his left.Vandort could have saved his wicket had he committed himself to running a third run two balls earlier. Having pulled Ishant to midwicket, Vandort was too slow and declined to take the third run and that resulted in his dismissal.Warnapura then added 50 runs for the second wicket with Sangakkara before Zaheer struck. The left-arm seamer bowled nine overs on the trot and got the prize scalp with a delivery that pitched on middle stump and moved away to off and Sangakkara got a thick edge and Rahul Dravid at first slip got his palm under the ball to take a sharp catch.Warnapura was solid right from the start. He got off the blocks by driving Zaheer sweetly pass mid-off for four and then hit three successive fours off Sharma.Zaheer did trouble him with a few short deliveries while Sharma beat him once, but other than that it was a polished effort by the 29-year-old trying to make the opener's slot a permanent one.
India and Sri Lanka to rely on spin in first Test
Tuesday, July 22nd, 2008Both India and Sri Lanka will rely heavily on spin bowling, playing two specialist spinners, in the first Test match at Singhalese Sports Club ground that starts here Wednesday.While off-spinner Harbhajan Singh returns from a ban and will partner captain andleg-spinner Anil Kumble, Sri Lanka have included mystery spinner Ajantha Mendis to support Muttiah Muralitharan.Both sides indicated in the pre-match media briefing that they will play six specialist batsmen apart from a wicketkeeper at number seven. That means there's room for only two seam bowlers. While Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma will share the new ball for India, Sri Lanka will depend on the two left-arm combination of Chaminda Vaas and Thilan Tushara Mirando.Both captains welcomed the new referral system that will be tried during the Test series.The trial was initially supposed to be introduced in England, but following objections by the English players, it was shifted to Sri Lanka.According to the trial system, a player or the captain of the team can challenge an umpiring decision if he perceives the decision is incorrect. There are three referrals per innings and every decision that is successfully challenged ensures that the quota of three referrals remain intact.'It's for the obvious error that happens on the field. It's not something where you question every decision of the umpire. Sometime on the spur of the moment, they might not have picked up an edge during an lbw appeal and they give you out and those kind of moments probably will be sorted out and that might change the course of the game,' Indian captain Anil Kumble said supporting the new referral system.Opposition captain Mahela Jayawardene too echoed the same sentiments.'Every decision is important because one wrong decision can affect the outcome of the series or end somebody's career. This will be eradicated by the referral system. It's not going to be a case of referring each and every decision. We need to keep it very simple,' Jayawardene said.While the third umpire for the game is local Asoka de Silva, the ICC has flown in experienced umpire Rudi Koertzen of South Africa to function in the role of TV Technology Trial Umpire.Jayawardene said the ongoing saga on the manager of the Sri Lankan cricket team had not affected the moral of the Sri Lankans.'Our priority is focusing on the Test Match and prepare ourselves. I honestly don't know what exactly has been going on. Trevor (Bayliss) is the one who has had chats with the cricket board and he is looking after that right now and we are just focusing on the Test match,' he added.Although the euphoria surrounding mystery spinner Ajantha Mendis has been ever growing since his remarkable six wicket haul in the Asia Cup final, Kumble felt the pressure will be on the debutant, who is yet to face this his kind of pressure.'We discussed Mendis as we did other bowlers. This is his first Test, so the pressure is on him. A youngster who plays the first Test will be nervous. If you look at our line up, most of our batsmen have played more than 100 Test Matches,' Kumble said.Sri Lanka (from): Mahela Jayawardene (captain), Kumar Sangakkara, Michael Van Dort, Malinda Warnapura, Thilan Samaraweera, Tillekeratne Dilshan, Chamara Silva, Prasanna Jayawardene, Chaminda Vaas, Muttiah Muralitharan, Nuwan Kulasekara, Thilina Thushara Mirando, Ajantha Mendis and Chamara Kapugedera.India (from): Anil Kumble (captain), Virender Sehwag, Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly, V.The Test will be crucial for former Indian captain Sachin Tendulkar, who is 172 runs short of overtaking Brian Lara's World Record of runs in Test cricket.Umpires: Mark Benson (Eng) and Billy Doctrove (WI) TV Technology Trial Umpire: Rudi Koertzen (RSA)