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Muralitharan spun a web around Rajin Saleh who, having scratched around
for 29 deliveries, failed to read the doosra and edged to slip for 0 © Getty Images
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Only 29 overs were possible on a rain-marred first day's play at Kandy's
Asgiriya International Stadium but those 110 minutes of play were enough
for Sri Lanka to continue their domination over Bangladesh. Mahela
Jayawardene won his third consecutive toss and given the moist conditions
ahead of the start, put Bangladesh in to bat in the dead rubber. With each
rain delay the pitch turned into a skiddy track and the bowlers plugged
away amid the showers to leave the tourists on 72 for 4.
Three slips and a gully awaited the Bangladesh openers as a fully peroxide
Lasith Malinga, spearheading an inexperienced pace attack, tore in and let
loose a volley of lifters and swinging deliveries. Two low full tosses in
the third over got Javed Omar boundaries, but then Malinga pitched one
shorter on middle, got it to straighten, and a leaden-footed Omar was out
leg before. Malinga continued to probe as a stiff breeze blew across from the west,
but just 12 overs into the match rain sent everyone inside the pavilion.
Farveez Maharoof, in the XI in the absence of a Middlesex-bound Chaminda
Vaas, gave Sri Lanka their second wicket in the first over on resumption.
Habibul Bashar, who had begun to look confident against the same bowler in
the first session, couldn't get glove out of the way as he fended a lifter
and was given out caught behind.
Muttiah Muralitharan, after bowling a solitary over before the first rain
came down, returned under overcast conditions with just one catcher
close-in. Clearly bowling quicker to get the ball to skid through, he had
the batsmen working overtime to get over the ball. He didn't get a wicket
then, but with the pitch slower than at the SSC or P Sara Stadium, it was
only a matter of time before he struck.
Rain returned to hold up play again, for 117 minutes this time, and when action
resumed the ball was skidding quite low and all over the place.
Muralitharan spun a web around Rajin Saleh who, having scratched around
for 29 deliveries, failed to read the doosra and edged to slip for
0.
Batting was not easy, and the deteriorating light didn't help. Shahriar
Nafees, who in the first passage of play cut a confident figure either
leaving the ball or flicking to leg, got bogged down by Muralitharan and
threw it all away. The bowler proposed, tossing one up outside off stump,
but Nafees' peculiarly atrocious attempt at a slog back down the ground
disposed it to mid-off's lap. He made 29 from 77 deliveries.
Deteriorating light forced Jayawardene to turn to Tillakaratne Dilshan,
who started off from around the stumps to get some drift into the pads,
and with his quick round-arm action had the batsmen on the back foot
before the umpires decided the light wasn't good enough. Mohammad
Ashraful, batting on 4, was only too keen to get back inside.
Inclement weather is likely to have its say throughout this game, and the
first day has proven to be a very damp affair.
Jamie Alter is an editorial assistant on Cricinfo