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The Report by Brydon Coverdale at the MCG
December 26, 2012
Australia 3 for 150 (Warner 62) trail Sri Lanka 156 (Sangakkara 58, Johnson 4-63) by 6 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
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Players/Officials:
Jackson Bird
| Mitchell Johnson
Matches:
Australia v Sri Lanka at Melbourne
Series/Tournaments:
Sri Lanka tour of Australia
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Kumar Sangakkara became the second Sri Lankan to reach the 10,000-run milestone in Tests but there was little else for Sri Lanka to celebrate on their first Boxing Day at the MCG since 1995. A day that began with Mahela Jayawardene winning the toss and choosing to bat ended with Australia at the crease and having already nearly passed Sri Lanka's 156, an awfully disappointing total brought about by some disappointingly awful shot selections from the Sri Lankan batsmen.
Mitchell Johnson was awkward to face, collecting three wickets and breaking the thumb of Prasanna Jayawardene; Jackson Bird was impressively consistent in his first day of Test cricket and picked up two wickets; and Peter Siddle and Nathan Lyon also collected two each. Australia's selectors must have breathed a sigh of relief at the effectiveness of the attack, after their decision to rest the Hobart match-winner Mitchell Starc due to concerns over his workload.
Not that Australia did everything right. After a strong opening partnership of 95 between David Warner and Ed Cowan, both openers and Phillip Hughes fell within the space of seven overs late in the day, leaving Sri Lanka a sliver of hope if their bowlers can do some damage on the second morning. At stumps, Australia were 3 for 150, trailing by six runs, and they had their in-form captain Michael Clarke at the crease on 20, alongside the vice-captain Shane Watson on 13.
Clarke had been passed fit in the morning, ending speculation that the hamstring injury he picked up in Hobart would allow Watson to become Australia's 44th Test captain, and he showed no real signs of discomfort while batting late in the day. Both men had been given lives though: Clarke put down by Tillakaratne Dilshan at silly mid-on when he chipped Rangana Herath to the leg side and Watson by the acting wicketkeeper Kumara Sangakkara, who dived to his right and grassed an edge off Chanaka Welegedara.
Sangakkara was wearing the gloves due to a hairline fracture Prasanna Jayawardene suffered while batting, and although he dropped that chance he was part of one dismissal, whipping the bails off at the striker's end to run Phillip Hughes out for 10. Ed Cowan had worked the ball to the leg side and called Hughes through for a single, but the non-striker's hesitation led to his demise; Dilshan misfielded and Hughes could comfortably have made the run had he set off immediately.
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In the next over, Cowan departed with no further addition to the score, caught at second slip for 36 when he slashed at Dhammika Prasad, who had been brought in to replace Nuwan Kulasekara. Cowan and Warner had given Australia a strong start until Warner was caught at deep midwicket for 62 off the bowling of Angelo Mathews. Warner was trying to maintain the brisk pace he had set early, having raced to his half-century from 34 balls.
Warner had shown the Sri Lankans that the MCG pitch was good for batting with some crisp strokeplay, finding boundaries all around the wicket. Especially disdainful was his slap for six over long-on off the bowling of Welegedara, a shot more out of Twenty20 than Test cricket. It was appreciated by the 67,138 spectators in the crowd, an impressive attendance that outstripped the Boxing Day numbers for the 2008 and 2009 Tests against South Africa and Pakistan.
There was a healthy sprinkling of Sri Lankan fans among the crowd and they were disappointed with the way their side batted, apart from the half-century scored by Sangakkara. His 58 was the only innings of note and while several of his team-mates made starts none showed the patience required against good bowling, many throwing their wickets away with loose shots.
Sri Lanka went to lunch at 3 for 79 and lost their final seven wickets in the second session for the addition of only 77 runs as Johnson rattled several players with his short deliveries and Siddle and Bird were rewarded for their accuracy. The final two wickets went to the offspinner Nathan Lyon, who had Herath caught off a top-edged sweep at fine leg for 14 and two balls later had Welegedara taken at long-on.
It was a rapid end for the Sri Lankans, who were relying heavily on Sangakkara to steer them to a competitive score. However, when he top-edged a hook off Johnson and was brilliantly taken by Matthew Wade, who sprinted two-thirds of the way to the boundary and dived to reach the dropping ball, Sri Lanka were in serious bother at 8 for 147.
That was Johnson's 200th Test wicket and he joined elite company as the seventh Australian to the milestone of 200 Test wickets and 1000 runs. He had provided some awkward moments for the Sri Lankans during a spell full of quick bouncers and at one stage was on a hat-trick after he had Prasanna Jayawardene (24) caught at third slip fending a snorter of a short ball and Prasad caught behind off another bouncer next ball.
The hat-trick delivery was set up to be a bouncer, with a leg gully, short leg, four slips and a gully, but Johnson instead went for a good-length ball on off, which Herath defended. In any case, the bowler overstepped and it was called a no-ball. But Johnson had certainly provided some spark for Australia after a brief rally from Sangakkara and Prasanna Jayawardene following the dismissal of Mathews.
Mathews flashed wildly at a Siddle ball outside off and his edge was snapped up by Hussey at second slip. It was a catch that required outstanding reflexes, but it was also one that arrived only because of an atrocious shot from Mathews. Thilan Samaraweera was equally guilty when he went for a hook off Bird straight after lunch and lobbed a top-edged catch to midwicket for 10. It was uncharacteristic of Samaraweera but characteristic of Sri Lanka's day.
Before lunch, Bird struck in his second over with the new ball when he angled a ball across the left-hander Dimuth Karunaratne (5) and nipped it away off the seam, and the thick edge was snapped up by the wicketkeeper Wade. Bird was very impressive in his initial Test spells, hitting a nagging line and length and offering few scoring opportunities for the batsmen.
More runs came off Johnson, but he also picked up an important wicket when Dilshan stood flat-footed and tried to heave a delivery from just outside off stump through the leg side. Dilshan, on 11 at the time, succeeded only in inside-edging the ball back onto his stumps and it was a particularly ugly dismissal for a man who was fresh from a century in the first Test in Hobart.
Siddle also broke through when Mahela Jayawardene, who had been tied down, drove at a ball that moved away slightly and edged behind for 3 from 26 balls. The only highlight for Sri Lanka was when Sangakkara brought up his 10,000th run in the final over before lunch with a square drive for four off Johnson and received a hug from Samaraweera and a round of applause from the Australian players.
But Sangakkara couldn't last in this innings, and neither could Sri Lanka, and by stumps they faced an enormous task to keep themselves in the Test.
Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. He tweets here
© ESPN EMEA Ltd.
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Assistant Editor Possibly the only person to win a headline-writing award for a title with the word "heifers" in it, Brydon decided agricultural journalism wasn't for him when he took up his position with ESPNcricinfo in Melbourne. His cricketing career peaked with an unbeaten 85 in the seconds for a small team in rural Victoria on a day when they could not scrounge up 11 players and Brydon, tragically, ran out of partners to help him reach his century. He is also a compulsive TV game-show contestant and has appeared on half a dozen shows in Australia.
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I cant believe Johnson takes 4/63 and people want to still have a go. He was a class bowler three to four years ago winning us tests. It looks like he has rediscovered that form and I would have him in our best 3 bowlers at the moment. He is swinging the new ball and when the ball gets older can really hurry batsman and not a lot of bowlers in the world can do that. I've now seen two tests since he has returned and been very impressive in both. Johnson has the ability to take us to many more victories, those having a go at the 4.5 an over really no jack about cricket, we had 3 early wickets Johnson courageously pitched up to get Sangakkara wicket and break through the Sri Lanka bowling line up yes he went for several boundaries but also beat the bat regularly. It was an outstanding display from Mitch.
Perth when India visited Australia revisited. What a game for Aussies. Warner can just break it down when the opponents are on defensive and he gets his offense going right!! Demoralising for the SL players and fans as i felt the same when he took away the game in a session and half that time. Good for Australia though. What a set of bowlers they got.. To win in Australia, go with tall and fast bowlers who can extract bounce off the track. Like England and SA did. I think other teams will struggle unless they get the pitch and conditions that will suit them.
A magnificent stroke to the boundary saw his name permanently illuminating on the scroll of the elites . Except one player who is a shade under 50,every batsman on this roll averages 50 or more runs per innings in test cricket.Kumar Sangakara has become the most recent candidate of a rare group I call "the greats".Like most of the greats,I have admired his gallantry on the green fields.His off shots and the straight drives back past the bowler are just some of his finesse.Surely with an avg:of around 56 and 30 test hundreds, he is one of the greatest cricketer of all time. Congratulation to a remarkable young man.
I must agree with Tappee74, two of the best bats in world cricket are Jayawardene and Sangakara. Many Congratulations for Kumar S. who seems a really nice bloke as well as a "cricket GREAT".
I just love all the mugs here, who at best last played competitive cricket at junior school XI, telling the world that Mitch Johnson can't bowl. Not bad for a bloke who has 200 test wickets. Personally I thought Johnson was the best Aussie bowler in Perth. G. Smith was so unnerved by Johnson that he promptly lost his wicket to Old Lumbering Watson. Staying in Perth, who the hell picked Hastings ahead of B. Cutting or J. Bird? His FC record is one wicket per match, so how could they pick him as a front-line bowler? I still consider M. Starc as more a one day or T20/20 bowler. He bowled poorly in the early parts of both innings at Perth, but got a heap of lower order bats when they were past 500 runs. At Hobart he didn't look too effective until the last session when lower order collapsed.
Posted by Gangnam_Gangsta on (December 27, 2012, 0:39 GMT)It is not looking good for SL. This partnership is choking the life out of them. With all the preceding hype I would have not imagined even Ireland and certainly not Bangladesh to fold for 150 odds on boxing day. I remember few years back Sehwag lit up the boxing day by scoring 195 by tea time at the MCG. So it is not that subcontinent bastman can't do this, it is just that SriLankan batsman play on very docile pitches and get very used to it. A case in point is Samarveera who was averaging in 60s with very poor overseas record. These anomalies can be corrected by producing sporting pitches in srilanka especially in and around Colombo area.
Posted by maximum6 on (December 26, 2012, 23:08 GMT)Is there anything more nauseous than the comments of Australians who actually believe their own sad propaganda? Straight out of the Goebbels handbook...
Posted by 158notout on (December 26, 2012, 22:30 GMT)@Marcio - I agree with everything you have said. Australia are obviously on the way up. All I have said is that this Ashes tour is too sooon for them and that their bowling still has a lot of promising bowlers but not enough that are really putting their hand up. Perhaps it would be more helpful if you could reply with a little more intelligence than to simply dismiss my comment because I am English. I know that might be a Australian tactic but it doesn't really work.
Posted by Ozcricketwriter on (December 26, 2012, 22:08 GMT)The bowling was so good we almost forgot that Australia's best non-injured bowler, Mitchell Starc, was absent. It just shows what I have been saying for the past 5+ years straight - Australia's fast bowling stocks are the best in the world. And we were still missing Alistair McDermott - check out his record guys!
Posted by valleypf on (December 26, 2012, 21:33 GMT)hhillbumper on (December 26 2012, 17:01 PM GMT) Perhaps but do you realize he has reached 200 Test wickets 3 Tests quicker than Jeff Thomson did and at near the same average?
Posted byMitchel Johnson is back, very good news for Australia. Aussies have a good pace attack. But MJs batting ability will add some strength in the lower order.