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Saturday 9 August 2014

1st Test Day 4 PAK 451 & 4/1 V SL 533/9d

Pakistan 451 and 4 for 1 trail Sri Lanka 533 for 9 dec (Sangakkara 221, Mathews 91, Silva 64, Ajmal 5-166) by 78 runs

Kumar Sangakkara continued to torment Pakistan with his tenth double-century that took him past Brian Lara and put him only behind Don Bradman's 12. Sri Lanka began the day 199 runs behind but Sangakkara and Angelo Mathews wiped off the deficit with a 181-run partnership for the fourth wicket.

Mathews fell just before tea for the fifth time in the nineties, the last three of which have all been against Pakistan, and all 91s. But Sangakkara carried on after equaling Bradman for 18 scores of 150-plus and ensured Sri Lanka had a healthy lead before they declared to leave Pakistan's tired batsmen 20 minutes to survive till stumps.

Sri Lanka had almost the perfect finish to the day when Khurram Manzoor nicked Rangana Herath behind. After conceding 451 in the first innings, they kept Pakistan in the field for six sessions, and now have the chance to put the visiting batsmen under serious pressure on the final day.

Pakistan did not help themselves by dropping Sangakkara first ball in the morning off Junaid Khan, and then on 168 off Saeed Ajmal. They did take out Mahela Jayawardene with the fourth ball of the day, but it was all Sri Lanka after that on a largely unresponsive pitch.
The first over of the day began with immense promise for Pakistan. 

The second new ball was available at the start and Junaid had Sangakkara driving the first delivery straight to Abdur Rehman at point, only for it to go through his hands. 

Junaid had Jayawardene edging the second past the cordon and beat him with the third. The fourth moved back to hit the pad, and Pakistan reviewed successfully against umpire Ian Gould's decision, replays showing the ball hitting the stumps near the top.

The slight movement that had brought the wicket disappeared soon and the drop only made Sangakkara concentrate harder. Unless the ball was really full or short, he was not going for it. He was alert enough into his fifth session of batting to keep working singles and twos regularly. At the other end was a man whose batting average as captain gets more unbelievable by the day.

Mathews calmly eased Junaid through extra cover to start off. Saeed Ajmal found plenty of slow turn and bounce at times, but his good length allowed Mathews to go right back and either hit him through off or work him to leg. A few did pop up off Mathews' pad, but they could not snare the inside edge.

Mohammad Talha lacked Junaid's discipline and even as he beat the batsmen now and then, he also did not make them play much. Talha tried the short ball against Mathews after lunch, and did have him top-edging a pull, only for the ball to sail over long leg.

Again, Rehman was used much less than Ajmal was, and again, he was less penetrative. Pakistan were also poor in the field, unable to cut out a few boundaries and singles. With no pressure exerted by either bowlers or fielders, Sri Lanka added 111 in 31 overs in the second session, and 84 in 23.1 after tea.

Just a couple of overs before tea, Ajmal had Mathews edging a doosra, and Younis Khan, who had put down Sangakkara, did not miss this time at slip. Ajmal now toyed with Kithuruwan Vithanage, beating him with doosras and offbreaks. 

He ended the session by ripping one past Sangakkara's outside edge, and consumed Vithanage, Niroshan Dickwella and Dilruwan Perera soon after the interval. Ajmal had waited 46.2 overs for a wicket, the longest he has ever had to; he would pick up five in just under 13 overs. It was his most expensive five-for, at 166 runs. 

Tea Sri Lanka 449 for 4 (Sangakkara 189*, Vithanage 5*) trail Pakistan 451 by 2 runs


Kumar Sangakkara continued to torment Pakistan as he and Angelo Mathews wiped off the deficit in a productive second session. Mathews fell just before tea for the fifth time in the nineties, the last three of which have all been against Pakistan, and all 91s. Sangakkara equaled Don Bradman for 18 scores of 150-plus and was 11 short of what would be his tenth double, putting him only behind Bradman's 12.

Pakistan dropped Sangakkara first ball in the morning off Junaid Khan, and then on 168 off Saeed Ajmal. They did take out Mahela Jayawardene with the fourth ball of the day, but it was all Sri Lanka after that. Sangakkara and Mathews put on 181 for the fourth wicket as Pakistan flagged on a largely unresponsive pitch.

The first over of the day began with immense promise for Pakistan. The second new ball was available at the start and Junaid had Sangakkara driving the first delivery straight to Abdur Rehman at point, only for it to go through his hands. 

Junaid had Jayawardene edging the second past the cordon and beat him with the third. The fourth moved back to hit the pad, and Pakistan reviewed successfully against umpire Ian Gould's decision, replays showing the ball hitting the stumps near the top.

The slight movement that had brought the wicket disappeared soon and the drop only made Sangakkara concentrate harder. 

Unless the ball was really full or short, he was not going for it. He was alert enough into his fifth session of batting to keep working singles and twos regularly. At the other end was a man whose batting average as captain gets more unbelievable by the day.

Mathews calmly eased Junaid through extra cover to start off. Saeed Ajmal found plenty of slow turn and bounce at times, but his good length allowed Mathews to go right back and either hit him through off or work him to leg. A few did pop up off Mathews' pad, but they could not snare the inside edge.

Mohammad Talha lacked Junaid's discipline and even as he beat the batsmen now and then, he also did not make them play much. Talha tried the short ball against Mathews after lunch, and did have him top-edging a pull, only for the ball to sail over long leg.

Again, Rehman was used much less than Ajmal was, and again, he was less penetrative. Pakistan were also poor in the field, unable to cut out a few boundaries and singles. With no pressure exerted by either bowlers or fielders, Sri Lanka added 111 in 31 overs in the second session. 

Just a couple of overs before tea, Ajmal had Mathews edging a doosra, and Younis Khan, who had put down Sangakkara, did not miss this time at slip. Ajmal had waited 46.2 overs for a wicket, the longest he has ever had to, and he now toyed with Kithuruwan Vithanage, beating him several times with doosras and offbreaks. Ajmal ended the session by ripping one past Sangakkara's outside edge, but with Sri Lanka set to take what could become a troublesome lead, it is Pakistan's batsmen who will be more worried.


Lunch Sri Lanka 338 for 3 (Sangakkara 140*, Mathews 43*) trail Pakistan 451 by 113 runs


Pakistan dropped Kumar Sangakkara first ball in the morning and took out Mahela Jayawardene with the fourth, but it was all Sri Lanka after that. Sangakkara and Angelo Mathews cut the deficit down to 113 by lunch as Pakistan flagged on the still unresponsive pitch.

The first over of the day began with immense promise for Pakistan. The second new ball was available at the start and Junaid Khan had Sangakkara driving the first delivery straight to Abdur Rehman at point, only for it to go through his hands. 

Junaid had Jayawardene edging the second past the cordon and beat him with the third. The fourth moved back to hit the pad, and Pakistan reviewed successfully against umpire Ian Gould's decision, replays showing the ball hitting the stumps near the top.

The slight movement that had brought the wicket disappeared soon, and barring beating both edges of the bat on occasion, Pakistan did not come close to breaking through again. The drop only made Sangakkara concentrate harder. Unless the ball was really full or short, he was not going for it.

Saeed Ajmal was left wicketless so far for only the sixth time in his 64 Test innings. He sent down 39 of the 109 overs till lunch, and the good length that he operated on allowed the batsmen to play him off the back foot on the slow pitch. A few did pop up off Mathews' pad, but they could not snare the inside edge.

Mathews' batting average as captain continues gets more unbelievable by the day, and he calmly eased Junaid through extra cover to start off. Ajmal found plenty of slow turn and bounce at times, but his length allowed Mathews to go right back and either hit him through off or nudge him fine down leg.

Mohammad Talha lacked Junaid's discipline and even as he beat the batsmen now and then, he also did not make them play much. Again, Rehman was used much less than Ajmal was, and again, he was far less penetrative.

Pakistan were poorer in the field, unable to cut out a few boundaries and singles. With no pressure exerted by either bowlers or fielders, Sangakkara and Mathews had added 81 by the break. 

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