| 6.4.2008
The Bulletin by George Binoy
Tea Sri Lanka 278
and 151 for 6 (Samaraweera 51*, Vaas 26*) lead West Indies
294 (Sarwan 57, Muralitharan 5-79) by 135 runs
scorecard
The
second Test at the Queen's Park Oval hung in the balance
at the start of the third day, waiting for one team to grab
the advantage. The West Indies' fast bowlers did exactly
that, rattling the Sri Lankan top order to reduce them to
32 for 4. However, Thilan Samaraweera led a dogged fightback
and extended Sri Lanka's lead to 135 by tea with four wickets
in hand.
That
incisive performance came after the West Indian tail had
scrapped hard to accumulate a first-innings lead of 16,
which effectively turned the Test into a one-innings contest.
However, after Sri Lanka had lost their top four batsmen
cheaply, Samaraweera was involved in a succession of useful
partnerships - 41, 26 and an unbeaten 52 - which propped
up Sri Lanka. Given that West Indies will have to bat last
on a pitch that's assisting pace and spin, a target of close
to 200 will be a tricky one to chase.
It
was imperative for West Indies to strike early and they
hardly had to wait for Jerome Taylor induced an edge from
Malinda Warnapura in the second over, which was taken by
Sewnarine Chattergoon at third slip. A risky single and
superb athleticism brought West Indies their second wicket.
Kumar Sangakkara pushed the ball towards silly mid-off and
sprinted through but Taylor was too quick for Michael Vandort
and his direct hit left Sri Lanka at 4 for 2.
Sri
Lanka needed Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene to consolidate
and see off a hostile opening phase but both batsmen failed
to deliver. Fidel Edwards came back strongly after going
for consecutive fours to force an inside edge from Jayawardene
on to his stumps while Sangakkara was cramped for room and
cut Daren Powell straight to Marlon Samuels at gully
Sri
Lanka were effectively 16 for 4 but Tillakaratne Dilshan
approached the situation in the way he knew best. He went
after Powell, cutting him for four, lofting him over the
square-leg boundary and driving powerfully through cover.
The aggression rubbed off on Samaraweera and he made use
of the width offered by Edwards to cut twice through point
and then drove Taylor through mid-on.
Dilshan
continued swinging, hooking and cutting but, like the first
innings, one expansive shot too many brought about his dismissal.
Jerome Taylor got a ball to swing back into the right-hander,
which went through the gap between bat and pad to uproot
off stump. Dilshan was gone for 25 off 19 balls after adding
41 for the fifth wicket with Samaraweera. Silva too showed
signs of fluency, the highlight being the splendid cover
drive off Taylor, but he chased at a wide ball and departed
for 13, caught by Samuels at gully.
Sri
Lanka were struggling at 99 for 6 and though Samaraweera
had started with consecutive boundaries after lunch, he
grew circumspect, and the runs dried down as Dwayne Bravo
bowled a hat-trick of maiden overs while Taylor and Edwards
kept the batsmen hopping at the other end with vicious bouncers.
Samaraweera had a bit of luck during the lull, a couple
of edges off Bravo fell short of the slips, but he latched
on to the scoring opportunities, driving Bravo straight
for four in his fourth over.
Samaraweera
did not hesitate to rotate the strike either for he had
an able partner in Chaminda Vaas, who tried his luck with
the pull when faced with the short ball. Together they added
52 runs for the seventh wicket and Samaraweera brought up
his half-century off a 100 balls just before the tea break.
Their partnership was beginning to assume worrying proportions
for West Indies, knowing how hard it would be to chase a
sizeable target.
West
Indies' tailenders had struggled to gain the lead this morning
against probing spells from Vaas and Muttiah Muralitharan.
In fact, West Indies might have never got the lead had Sri
Lanka held their catches. Taylor, who was baffled by Muralitharan,
tried to attack and his first attempt to clear the boundary
was a miscue which was dropped by Thilan Thushara at mid-off.
Denesh Ramdin was also let off, when Chamara Silva couldn't
hang on to a hard chance to his right at short cover off
Vaas. Had those catches been held, West Indies would have
been nine down and two runs in the deficit. Murali also
had three close lbw shouts in a row against Ramdin, any
of which might have gone his way on another day.
After
countless lbw appeals, Vaas finally got one in his favour
when he hit Taylor plumb in front with a delivery that bent
back into the right-hander. West Indies were 289 for 8 and
Murali wrapped up proceedings with a straighter one that
found Ramdin's edge to first slip, and a quicker offbreak
that struck Daren Powell in front to end West Indies' first
innings on 294. Murali finished with figures of 5 for 79,
his 63rd five-wicket haul in Tests.
Courtesy - cricinfo
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