August
11, 2008
Sri Lanka v India, 3rd Test, PSS, Colombo, 4th day
The Bulletin by Sidharth Monga
Sri
Lanka 396 (Sangakkara 144) and 123 for 2 (Warnapura 54*,
Jayawardene 50*) beat India 249 (Gambhir 72, Mendis 5-56)
and 268 (Dravid 68, Laxman 61*) by eight wickets
Scorecard
Drip
by drip, Sri Lanka made their way to a comprehensive series
win, their first over India since 2001. On what turned out
to be the final day of the series, Sri Lanka did not attack
overtly, and kept their composure at crucial junctures -
when Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman had a long partnership,
and also when India struck with two early wickets after
Sri Lanka came out in pursuit of 122.
A
bowler short, a batsman limping, the No. 11 in no shape
to bat, and only 14 runs ahead with half the team gone,
India started the day as no-hopers, but they managed to
give Sri Lanka a few nervous moments. Dravid and Laxman
- who was nursing an ankle injury - provided resistance
for about 90 minutes. Harbhajan Singh played a cameo to
take the lead beyond 100, and then took a wicket in his
first over.
Sri
Lanka seemed in no hurry. They waited patiently, bowled
in the right areas, and got the last five Indian wickets
without much damage. It was Ajantha Mendis who broke the
resistance, dismissing Dravid half an hour before lunch.
And when Harbhajan, who hit five boundaries in his 26, looked
to take India towards a sizeable lead, Chaminda Vaas, that
epitome of discipline, struck in the first over he bowled
after his three with the first new ball.
When
India struck early, reducing them to 22 for 2, Sri Lanka
didn't look to hit out, and waited instead for Zaheer Khan
and Harbhajan to tire. Harbhajan, who opened the bowling
in Ishant Sharma's absence, bowled Michael Vandort with
an arm-ball; and Zaheer got Kumar Sangakkara soon after
on the check-drive. Malinda Warnapura and Mahela Jayawardene
weathered the storm, survived lbw shouts, and were content
to add only 23 in 10.3 overs before tea.
The
two went on to frustrate the Indian bowlers after tea, too.
They never looked harried, kept rotating the strike, and
by the time the Indians had frustrated themselves into exhausting
their reviews, started to have some fun with sweeps - both
orthodox and reverse. Soon the only point of interest was
whether Jayawardene would get to a half-century as Warnapura
had done earlier. Jayawardene was 46 and Sri Lanka three
short of the win when he square-cut Sourav Ganguly for a
four to end the match.
That
India had a semblance of a chance when they began bowling
was thanks to the partnership between Laxman and Dravid.
Coming out of their bad patches, they took the first steps
towards what briefly seemed to be an incredible comeback,
before they were stopped. Nonetheless it was the best partnership
between two of the Fab Four in this series. The two looked
comfortable reading the spinners, nudging and flicking for
singles at ease, and rotating the strike, capitalising on
the fields set. Laxman, who had Gautam Gambhir running for
him, was visibly in pain, limping away to square leg when
he got singles.
Dravid
and Laxman lasted as long as they did thanks in no small
measure to Sri Lanka's strategy: for much of the time, they
didn't employ conspicuously attacking fields, and gave away
singles for free as they tried to prevent boundaries. As
a result, despite the time consumed, India's lead never
reached threatening proportions.
The
day started with Dravid closing in on his first half-century
of the series, which he brought up with a punched boundary
off Mendis. He then settled down again, looking determined
as he played the most confident innings by an Indian middle-order
batsman in the series. Laxman at the other end received
plenty of favours from Sri Lanka. When he was on 35, he
edged Muttiah Muralitharan, but there was no slip. The field
at that time had no slip and no silly point, and had a short
mid-on, a short midwicket, a short square leg, and a backward
square leg. In Murali's next over, Laxman was dropped by
Thilan Samaraweera at short mid-on. After he got to his
second half-century of the series, he was dropped by Malinda
Warnapura at forward short leg.
In
between those drops and missed chances, he hit Dammika Prasad
for two delightful boundaries, but those were about the
only quick runs India got from Sri Lanka, who stuck to their
plan of not letting India run away with the game, testing
their patience and resolve, knowing the wicket-taking delivery
would come.
Come
it did, courtesy Mendis, who, bowling from round the stumps,
drew Dravid forward and got the ball to move enough to take
the edge. Then Murali, who had started from over the stumps,
came back round, and got Kumble lbw with an accurate offbreak.
Mendis ended with 26 wickets, the best for a debutant in
a three-match series, and Murali with 21.
Sri
Lanka have now won 13 of their last 16 series at home, and
have not lost to India at home since 1993. The way Mendis
and Murali bowled through the series bodes well for the
continuation of Sri Lanka's near-invincibility at home.
It could signal the beginning of the end for the most feared
middle order in world cricket.
Sidharth
Monga is a staff writer at Cricinfo
Courtesy - Cricinfo
|