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Friday 8 March 2013

1st Test Day 1 Sri Lanka v Bangladesh

Lunch Sri Lanka 132 for 1 (Dilshan 54, Sangakkara 44*) v Bangladesh
 

At the toss, neither captain fancied bowling first. Angelo Mathews wanted his new-look batting order make first use of the pitch before it started to get slower and lower. The top order took advantage of the good batting conditions in Galle, motoring along to 132 for 1, led by a typically aggressive start from Tillakaratne Dilshan. What looked ominous for Bangladesh was that Sri Lanka's most experienced batsmen in the line-up had set the platform, thus relieving the burden on the younger players to come.

Sri Lanka adopted a positive approach from the beginning. Dimuth Karunaratne pulled a short ball from Shahadat Hossain and was rewarded for placing it just wide of deep square leg. He attempted to repeat the shot the following ball but played too early and was hit flush on the left arm, forcing him to retire hurt. It was hardly a sign of good fortune for Bangladesh as Kumar Sangakkara - returning from an injury lay-off himself - joined Dilshan to put on a commanding half-century stand.
 
Dilshan maintained a healthy strike-rate of close to a run-a-ball, scoring 36 runs off boundaries alone, but not all came off the middle of the bat. He looked wobbly in the first over of the game, getting away with a leading edge that sneaked past gully and rolled to third man. His knock also included a mistimed pull past the keeper and a top-edged hook that fetched boundaries. In between were crisply driven boundaries through cover, a sweep and an effortless drive past mid-on that brought up his fifty.
 
Bangladesh turned to spin from both ends from the 13th over, but there wasn't much purchase for them straightaway. Dilshan was intent on using his feet to disturb their rhythm and Bangladesh to their credit took the first real opportunity that came their way. Sohag Gazi tossed it up wider, Dilshan came down the pitch and spooned it to mid-off off the toe of the bat.
 
It took Sangakkara just one ball to find his rhythm, slashing a wide delivery past point for four. He was strong against the spinners, rocking back and cutting when they dropped it short and wide. He survived a stumping chance when he was beaten in flight and bounce off Gazi, managing to drag his back foot back just in time. He was luckier to survive a close shout for lbw off Gazi on 38 and replays showed the ball striking him in front of middle stump. In the absence of DRS, Bangladesh had to accept the umpire's call and move on.

Tea Sri Lanka 247 for 2 (Dilshan 54, Sangakkara 104*) v Bangladesh

Kumar Sangakkara had been out of action since injuring his finger in the Melbourne Test in December. The lack of match practice over the last three months - he was forced to pull out of the tour game in Matara due to the contracts crisis - didn't matter as he eased back into Test match action with a positive century, scored inside two sessions in the first day in Galle to put Sri Lanka in a commanding position. Tillakaratne Dilshan's attacking fifty had eased the pressure not just on Sangakkara but also the inexperienced middle order, missing two stalwarts ahead of this series.

At the toss, neither captain fancied bowling first. Angelo Mathews wanted his new-look batting order make first use of the pitch before it started to get slower and lower. The top order took advantage of the good batting conditions in Galle, motoring along to 132 for 1 at lunch. Bangladesh claimed just one more wicket in the second session, that of the Dimuth Karunaratne, and the session was all the more one-sided given their inability to check the run flow. An innings run-rate of close to four and a half after two sessions was ominous enough for the bowlers.
 
Dilshan maintained a healthy strike-rate of close to a run-a-ball, scoring 36 runs off boundaries alone, but not all came off the middle of the bat. He looked wobbly in the first over of the game, getting away with a leading edge that sneaked past gully and rolled to third man. His knock also included a mistimed pull past the keeper and a top-edged hook that fetched boundaries. In between were crisply driven boundaries through cover, a sweep and an effortless drive past mid-on that brought up his fifty.
 
Bangladesh turned to spin from both ends from the 13th over, but there wasn't much purchase for them straightaway. Dilshan was intent on using his feet to disturb their rhythm and Bangladesh to their credit took the first real opportunity that came their way. Sohag Gazi tossed it up wider, Dilshan came down the pitch and spooned it to mid-off off the toe of the bat.
 
Sangakkara walked in when Karunaratne was forced to retire after hurting his arm when trying to pull a short ball. It took Sangakkara just one ball to find his rhythm, slashing a wide delivery past point for four. He was strong against the spinners, rocking back and cutting when they dropped it short and wide, and it was a pattern through his innings. He survived a stumping chance when he was beaten in flight and bounce off Gazi, managing to drag his back foot back just in time. He was luckier to survive a close shout for lbw off Gazi on 38 and replays showed the ball striking him in front of middle stump. In the absence of DRS, Bangladesh had to accept the umpire's call and move on.
 
Shahadat Hossain attempted the bouncer, but the lack of pace on the pitch enabled Sangakkara and the returning Karunaratne to stay back and pull. Gazi's drift into the left-handers from round the wicket kept the batsmen in check, but when he dropped short or too wide, he was punished through the off side.
 
Two such cuts past point brought up two milestones for Sangakkara - his fifty and past Sunil Gavaskar's tally of 10, 122 runs.
 
There was temporary relief for Bangladesh when Karunaratne was trapped lbw on the back foot to Gazi, who was rewarded for his drift. Sangakkara's was the wicket they needed, though. Lahiru Thirimanne had the benefit of a set batsman at the other end, and after a watchful start - he scored only 4 from his first 25 balls - took on the spinners and added an unbeaten 66 with Sangakkara.
 
The latter raced towards his century with a six and a four off the part-timer Mohammad Ashraful, and then reached his 31st Test century with a clip wide of midwicket.

Sri Lanka 361 for 3 (Sangakkara 142, Thirimanne 74*, Dilshan 54) v Bangladesh

It was all one-way traffic on the opening day in Galle as Sri Lanka's batsmen, with varying levels of experience, set the platform for a massive score and never allowed the initiative to slip. Kumar Sangakkara had been out of action since injuring his finger in the Melbourne Test in December. The lack of match practice over the last three months - he was forced to pull out of the tour game in Matara due to the contracts crisis - didn't matter as he eased back into Test match action with a positive century, getting to the landmark inside two sessions.

Tillakaratne Dilshan's attacking fifty had eased the pressure not just on Sangakkara but also the inexperienced middle order, which was missing two stalwarts ahead of this series. One of the newer players to benefit from the pressure-free scenario was Lahiru Thirimanne, who remained unbeaten on a steady 74.
 
It was a deflating day for the Bangladesh bowlers, with the exception of the offspinner Sohag Gazi, who took all three wickets. He didn't have adequate support from the other end and from day one, Bangladesh were left to regret the absence of Shakib Al Hasan, missing the series due to injury. Aside from the lack of wickets, what hurt the visitors more was the inability to check the scoring. An innings run-rate of close to four and a half after two sessions was intimidating enough for the bowlers.
 
At the toss, neither captain fancied bowling first. Mathews wanted his new-look batting order to make first use of the pitch before it started to get slower and lower. Dilshan maintained a healthy strike-rate of close to run-a-ball, scoring 36 runs off boundaries alone, but not all came off the middle of the bat. In between a few edgy boundaries were crisply driven fours through cover, a sweep and an effortless drive past mid-on that brought up his fifty.

Smart stats

  • Kumar Sangakkara's century is his 31st in Tests taking him level with Mahela Jayawardene among Sri Lankan batsmen with the most centuries. Sangakkara is joint-eighth on the list of batsmen with the most centuries.
  • Sangakkara also became the first batsman to pass the 1000-run mark in Tests against Bangladesh. He has now scored 1018 runs at an average of 78.30 with three centuries and five fifties.
  • For only the second time, Sri Lanka had four fifty-plus stands for the first four wickets in an innings against Bangladesh. The previous such occasion was at the SSC in 2001. Overall, they have done so nine times.
  • Sri Lanka's run-rate (4.22) is the second-highest in the first innings of a match in Sri Lanka since 2000 (min 80 overs bowled). The highest is 4.94 for Sri Lanka against Bangladesh at the P Sara Oval in 2005.
  • This is the 11th time (since 2005) that three or more of the top four Sri Lankan batsmen have passed fifty in an innings. Overall, it is the second such occurrence for Sri Lanka against Bangladesh since the SSC Test in 2001.
  • The 124-run stand between Sangakkara and Lahiru Thirimanne is the fifth-highest third-wicket stand for Sri Lanka against Bangladesh and their fourth-highest third-wicket stand in Galle.


Bangladesh turned to spin from both ends from the 13th over, but there wasn't much purchase for them straightaway.
 
Dilshan was intent on using his feet to disturb their rhythm and Bangladesh to their credit took the first real opportunity that came their way. Gazi tossed it up wider, Dilshan came down the pitch and spooned it to mid-off off the toe of the bat.
 
Sangakkara walked in when Karunaratne was forced to retire after hurting his arm when trying to pull a short ball. It took Sangakkara just one ball to find his rhythm as he slashed a wide delivery past point for four.
 
He was strong against the spinners, rocking back and cutting when they dropped it short and wide, and it was a pattern through his innings. He survived a stumping chance when he was beaten in flight and bounce off Gazi, managing to drag his back foot back just in time. He was luckier to survive a close shout for lbw off Gazi on 38 and replays showed the ball striking him in front of middle stump. In the absence of DRS, Bangladesh had to accept the umpire's call and move on.
 
Shahadat Hossain attempted the bouncer, but the lack of pace on the pitch enabled Sangakkara and the returning Karunaratne to stay back and pull. Gazi's drift into the left-handers from round the wicket kept the batsmen in check, but when he dropped short or too wide, he was punished through the off side. Two such cuts past point brought up two milestones for Sangakkara - his fifty and took him past Sunil Gavaskar's tally of 10,122 runs.
 
There was temporary relief for Bangladesh when Karunaratne was trapped lbw on the back foot to Gazi, who was rewarded for his drift. Sangakkara's was the wicket they needed, though. Thirimanne had the benefit of a set batsman at the other end, and after a watchful start - he scored only 4 from his first 25 balls - took on the spinners. Sangakkara smacked a six and a four off the part-timer Mohammad Ashraful, and then reached his 31st Test century with a clip wide of midwicket. 
 
There was no letting up after tea. If it was tossed up, Sangakkara was down the pitch to loft; if it was banged in short - not recommended on this surface - it was clubbed over midwicket. A sloppy effort by Ashraful at mid-on - he mistimed his jump - gave Sangakkara another life, on 111. Ironically, it was a sound reflex catch at cover that ended his innings. Gazi bowled it wide and Sangakkara tried clearing the off side but Jahurul Islam jumped, fumbled and managed to turn around and take it on the second attempt. The drop cost Bangladesh 31 runs, but the damage had already been done.
 
Thirimanne matched Sangakkara shot for shot particularly through the off side against the spinners. The cover drive in particular stood out for its poise and follow-through. Mathews found his timing against the seamers when the second new ball was taken. None of the seamers managed any movement, despite the persistent cloud cover. The heavens opened with less than five overs left, but Bangladesh, after a draining day in the field, would have been relieved to pack it in early.

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