Kusal Mendis on SL's day three plans: We want to bat as long as possible
With a lead of 43 and eight wickets still in hand, the hosts have a chance to dictate how the remainder of this game goes
Andrew Fidel Fernando
26-Jun-2025 • 18 hrs ago
Pathum Nissanka's quick feet got him runs on day two • Associated Press
Sri Lanka are only two wickets down but are 43 runs ahead at the SSC. Another 150-ish runs will help them dominate the match, says Kusal Mendis. He is yet to bat, and in fact three further wickets likely have to fall before he is required to.
But having kept wickets for 79.3 overs, and having played plenty of his cricket at the SSC, Mendis has some idea of how the pitch is behaving. The plan, he said, is to go big in the second innings, and put as little pressure on their batting in the second dig as possible.
"What we're trying to do is to bat long enough now that we don't have to bat in a fourth innings, and to give them a good target from here," Kusal said. "Tomorrow we are trying to bat as long as possible and put 150-200 runs on the scoreboard."
The aversion for batting last is down to the expectation that this pitch will dry substantially from here. On day two, there was some turn for the spinners, but that turn is expected to get faster and more pronounced if the pitch continues to dry out through the course of the Test.
"We think it's going to turn on day four and five, so we need to make the most of this batting opportunity," Kusal said. "Even the grass that was quite green is dry now, so we expect it will get better for spin. If we can get to those runs quickly, that will give us options."
Driving Sri Lanka forward again is Pathum Nissanka, who is not out on 146 off 238 balls overnight. This was his fourth Test hundred, having also made 187 in the first innings of the last match.
"Pathum's been among the runs for a while," Kusal said. "He missed his 200 in the last match, but I think he'll get there in the next innings. In recent times he's the only opener who has been scoring runs. He's scoring across formats. He puts a lot of effort in."
Andrew Fidel Fernando is a senior writer at ESPNcricinfo. @afidelf