10.8.2008
Sri Lanka v India, 3rd Test, PSS, Colombo, 3rd day
The Bulletin by Sidharth Monga
India
249 and 161 for 5 (Dravid 46*, Mendis 2-39, Prasad 2-46)
lead Sri Lanka 396 (Sangakkara 144, Prasanna 49, Prasad
36) by 14 runs
Scorecard
For
40 minutes before tea India sparkled, but Sri Lanka hit
back hard, kept gnawing away, and by stumps had closed in
on maintaining their unbeaten home Test series record against
India since 1993.
Kumar
Sangakkara and the Sri Lankan lower order frustrated India
and made them look a sorry bunch for the best part of two
sessions, and Dammika Prasad again provided the crucial
breakthroughs before the spinners took charge. Ajantha Mendis
dismissed Sachin Tendulkar for the first time - his 25th
wicket in Tests, making his the best debut in a three-match
series.
The
two spells of Sri Lankan dominance sandwiched a brisk start
by Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir, but the Indian openers
played two shots too many. The Fab Four, two of them walking
wounded, couldn't come up with resistance enough, bar Rahul
Dravid, who struggled and fought his way to his highest
score of the series, 46.
After
India had fallen behind by 147, Sehwag and Gambhir reacted
to the situation the only way they knew, by attacking. There
were boundaries in each of the nine overs before tea. Prasad
was hit for a first-ball four, as he had been in the first
innings. Before many noticed, Sehwag and Gambhir had brought
up their fourth half-century partnership in a row. When
Gambhir cut Muttiah Muralitharan for a single in the last
over before tea, he reached 1000 Test runs.
Like
he had in the first innings, Prasad struck, dismissing the
two in successive overs. The wickets were more fortuitous
this time: Sehwag cut straight to gully, and Gambhir played
a pull shot on. Enter Rahul Dravid and Sourav Ganguly, looking
determined to play the day out, giving Tendulkar and VVS
Laxman, who were both injured, some time to recover.
Dravid
and Ganguly managed to put on the longest partnership by
any two members of India's big four in the series, but they
never got Mendis and Murali out of their faces. It sometimes
seemed the two were just delaying the inevitable. Dravid
looked more comfortable than he had in the series till then,
but he was almost bowled twice, by classical offbreaks from
the two spinners - both times he was saved by an inside
edge. Ganguly narrowly escaped a stumping, and finally fell
while sweeping a Murali doosra.
In
came Parthiv Patel, and three balls later, out he went,
forcing the injured Tendulkar out into the middle. Tendulkar,
his left elbow bandaged, seemed to have made his mind up
to not play at most deliveries. Murali thrice came close
to getting him lbw, but it was Mendis who finally got him,
with a googly Tendulkar did not pick. Not only did an injured
Tendulkar never really look comfortable, for the first time
in the series, he looked helpless.
It
was an interesting comparison: did India look more abject
in the final session or the first two, when they were run
ragged by Kumar Sangakkara's rediscovered appetite for big
runs, and lower-order partnerships? Early in the day they
were short on manpower (Ishant Sharma didn't take the field
today), and exhausted by the effort of keeping the game
in the balance yesterday. Sri Lanka's batsmen made sure
they capitalised, and even after Sangakkara was dismissed
shortly before lunch, Prasanna Jayawardene and Prasad frustrated
the tired Indians. The last three took the lead from 75
to 147.
The
spinners persisted in letting Sangakkara take easy singles,
but India were slow, both mentally and physically, as they
also repeatedly allowed Sangakkara to retain the strike
by either not bringing the field up at the end of overs
or simply by misfielding.
Sangakkara
enjoys it when he has a team down: 11 of his 17 centuries
have been scores of more than 150; the lowest he has been
dismissed for after having made a century is 128. Today
he continued in much the same vein as he had played yesterday,
but as if he had started a new innings. The expansive strokeplay
was not on offer, as the fields were deep and the bowling
defensive. But he didn't miss a single opportunity to convert
half-runs.
As
the lead passed 50, Sangakkara started to take a few more
liberties with the bowling, manufacturing a shot or two.
But after seven hours and seven minutes of exceptional batting
in the heat of Colombo, he misread the spin on an Anil Kumble
delivery, got a thin edge, and walked off. He fell short
of what would have been a 12th 150, but his disappointment
suggested he had been eyeing a seventh double.
The
Sri Lankan tail had some fun after that. The first ball
Prasad faced in Test cricket, he sent to the third-man boundary
- revenge, perhaps, for being hit for four by Gambhir off
the first ball he bowled. The next ball, the first of a
Zaheer Khan over, was pulled away through square leg for
four by Prasanna, who also came up with an exquisite cover-drive
in the same over. Their partnership finally ended at 43,
as Prasanna fell one short of a half-century, but that didn't
spell relief for India. Mendis and Prasad stuck around for
eight overs, surviving bouncers, looking ungainly, and yet
managing outrageous boundaries. Mendis was the last man
out, but not before he had taken his career runs to within
four of his wickets tally.
That
wickets tally swelled in the final session by two, and in
a testing ten-over spell before stumps it seemed he would
take more. But Laxman, nursing an injured left ankle, and
Dravid, fighting to keep his reputation intact, saw India
through to stumps.
Sidharth
Monga is a staff writer at Cricinfo
Courtesy - cricinfo
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