March
22, 2008
The Bulletin by Jamie Alter
Tea
Sri Lanka 190 for 1 (Warnapura 114*, Vandort 52, Sangakkara
23*) v West Indies
scorecard
Malinda Warnapura's maiden Test hundred put West Indies
completely on the back foot © AFP
Malinda Warnapura had a very good warm-up game at the Providence
Stadium and three days later, as the ground became the 97th
to host Test cricket, the left-handed Sri Lankan opener
celebrated with a maiden Test century. Warnapura, in his
third match, was the aggressor in a century opening stand
with Michael Vandort (52) and made the most of a life on
95 to take tea with Sri Lanka on a very healthy 190 for
1. For a West Indies supporter there was little to cheer
as the visitors' left-handed top order batted fluently on
a bald, bare surface only certain to get slower.
With
no swing, seam movement or bounce the Sri Lankan openers
could quite easily come onto the front foot and drive. Warnapura
didn't refrain from going for aerial drives in the arc between
cover and point, and his first four was a slash off Jerome
Taylor as early as the second over. Daren Powell generated
some good pace but his short-pitched stuff was comfortably
negated and there were a few too many wide deliveries; one
scorching drive through extra cover was especially pleasing.
The
square boundaries at the venue were long - certain full-blooded
shots would have been four at the old Bourda - and so Warnapura
and Vandort relied on their running between the wickets
to keep the runs coming. Warnapura was particularly strong
on the offside - he scored 86 runs with bottom-hand punches
into the covers and past point compared to 27 nudged the
other side of the square - and despite driving uppishly
he continued to prosper.
West
Indies should have had an early wicket but debutant Suleiman
Benn, the 268th player for West Indies, missed the stumps
from the slips, allowing Vandort a life. Apart from consecutive
steers through gully Vandort drove tall and upright, bat
close to body. With Warnapura playing so freely at the other
end he didn't need to go hard at the ball and so quietly
nudged his way through the first passage of play.
The
odd ball from Benn turned - one inside-edge snuck between
Vandort's legs - but there was little for the bowlers to
shout about. Only 32 were scored from 17 overs going into
lunch but importantly the openers remained together.
They
made their way out after the lunch interval and Warnapura
began with a free-flowing drive through his preferred arc.
Another such extravagant slash just evaded Dwayne Bravo's
fingers over third slip just after and a Vandort leading-edge
went just out of Benn's reach at gully. The 100 stand came
up as Vandort slapped Benn through midwicket but he was
beaten for appreciable pace and swing by Taylor in the 42nd
over, and West Indies had finally broken through. The 131-run
partnership was a solid platform.
A
big opportunity went begging in the 54th over when an off-balance
Bravo spilt a catch at a wide slip. Warnapura rocked back
to cut Gayle but the ball flew off the outside-edge to Bravo,
who juggled and let it go. Warnapura collected himself for
a moment and raised his maiden hundred from 182 deliveries
with another cut to point, who fumbled and allowed the single.
Further boundaries off the back foot took Warnapura to 114
by the break.
If
there was one batsman West Indies would've really worried
about, it was Sri Lanka's No. 3. Batting middle stump, Kumar
Sangakarra confidently played with the spin, often shuffling
across. That he had collected 23 from 53 deliveries so far,
adding 60 with a well-set Warnapura, was only bad news for
the hosts, whose pre-match confidence had fallen flat on
a comatose pitch.
Jamie
Alter is a staff writer at Cricinfo
Courtesy -Cricinfo
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