| Peter
English in Hobart
November 18, 2007
 |
Five
visiting leaders have got centuries in Australia since
2001-02 and improved their standing. Mahela Jayawardene's
stock is up, but his team remains down. © Getty
Images |
Visiting
captains carry an extra-large target when they come to Australia
and if they can avoid being hit it enhances their reputation.
Mahela Jayawardene deserves to be pleased with his stand-alone
century - the swinging first pump showed how much it meant
- but the personal achievement was diminished by another
limp overall performance.
Surviving
against a mean attack requires diligence and determination.
Michael Vandort managed it once in the first Test and Jayawardene
built on his starts in Brisbane to produce his defining
innings against Australia. It was essential to prove there
was more to his aims than vocal intent, but the job has
barely started. Declining to enforce the follow-on, Australia
reached a lead of 407 entering the fourth day. In private
Jayawardene must want to weep.
Australia
are buoyant and each segment of the side is wedged to back
up the captain. Owning match-winners in most corners assists
Ponting's pursuits, but Sri Lanka also carry a batch of
stars who are fearless until lining up against green or
gold caps. The returning Kumar Sangakkara flickered with
57, but the third-best collection was Marvan Atapattu's
25. Jayawardene had been let down again.
A
stunning example of the lack of support for the captain
came when Farveez Maharoof was run-out by his runner. Communication
difficulties increase significantly when three batsmen are
involved, but the breakdown between Mahela and Prasanna
Jayawardene was preventable on a handful of occasions before
the wicketkeeper was eventually caught short. The loss was
made more horrible because Maharoof had batted in his normal
position despite hobbling with a foot fracture.
Instead
of winning help for his courage, Maharoof was cut loose
by a colleague's mistake and his leader lost his last run-scoring
ally. Jayawardene's effort with the tail was superb and
he was able to push the total to 246. They needed at least
another 200 to make the game safe.
Australia
bowled extremely well again - Stuart Clark swung the ball
deliciously and Brett Lee was a menace - but Jayawardene
showed anything could be handled. There were imposing cover
drives against the fast men and silky inside-out pushes
off Stuart MacGill. A strong defence added to the all-round
quality of the 104, which included two spilled catches in
three balls from Lee as Jayawardene chased his century.
A
cover-driven boundary off Lee was followed by a cut over
slips for four, taking him to 97, and he repeated the previous
shot to capture his 19th Test hundred and first against
Australia. Unfortunately he will require an even bigger
return in the second innings, especially if his partners
continue their unproductive trend.
Jayawardene's
worth as a leader was confirmed long before today, but he
gains credibility for standing up to the Australians in
their home. Five visiting leaders have got centuries here
since 2001-02 and improved their standing. Jayawardene's
stock is up, but his team remains down.
Peter
English is the Australasian editor of Cricinfo
Courtesy
- Cricinfo
|