Just when England's players looked to be wilting under the oppressive wet
heat of Colombo they once again displayed their new-found propensity to fight
themselves out of tricky situations with a stirring comeback in the late
evening sunshine. Now, after the first day of this crucial Third Test Match,
an historic series victory remains a distinct possibility.
Sri Lanka, like they did in Kandy, batted themselves into a strong position
only to frivolously surrender their hard-fought advantage, losing four wickets
for 14 runs to finish the day on 221 for seven. With their tail weakened by
the replacement of Kumar Dharmasena with left arm spinner, Dinuk
Hettiarachchi, their immediate goal tomorrow will be to score 250.
So far in the Test series it has been the fast bowlers that have kept
England's hopes alive, as they claimed 18 of the 25 Sri Lanka wickets to
fall in the first two Test Matches. At the Sinhalese Sports Club today,
however, the spinners finally played their part. Ashley Giles and Robert
Croft bowled 58 of the 91 overs, both conceded less than two runs per over
and took five precious wickets between them.
It was Giles, who only had one solitary wicket and a sore Achilles
tendon to show for his efforts in the Test Matches before today, who
started the Sri Lankan slide, when he had Aravinda de Silva smartly caught
off bat and pad by Michael Vaughan for 38 to end a 97-run partnership for
the fourth wicket.
The loss of de Silva was followed soon after by that of Russel Arnold, who
once again padded up, only to be adjudged out leg before by umpire
David Orchard without scoring.
Tillakaratne Dilshan was deceived in the air by Croft as he slogged across the line and, although he lingered like a man wronged, he can have no complaints about his decision.
Moments before the close England then added the prize scalp of Mahela
Jayawardene to their late-evening pickings. Jayawardene scored yet another
elegant half-century today, leaving him with a run of 61, 101 and 71 in the
first innings in this three-Test series. Well as he batted, however, his
dismissal - caught behind as he tried to square cut Croft - was casual and
may cost Sri Lanka dear, for it has now exposed the Sri Lankan lower order
to the new ball.
Earlier in the day Sanath Jayasuriya won his 16th toss in 18 innings. The
only Buddhist cricket captain in world cricket is clearly on a different
plane when it comes to this important job. Unfortunately, his team has
generally failed to profit from his hand-spun advantage and they have only
won three of those 16 Test Matches.
When Andrew Caddick ripped through the usually tight defences of Marvan
Atapattu in just the second over of the day, Sri Lanka's cricketers may have
feared the worst. However, they enjoyed an excellent morning as Sanath
Jayasuriya returned to form with 45, his highest score in six Test matches, surpassing the 26 he made in Durban.
He was well supported by Kumar Sangakkara, the devil dressed in flannels, if
you listen to the English players. Like Sangakkara or not, you could not
deny the elegance of his stroke-play, as he flowed to 45, only to betray his
inexperience again with a loose back foot drive immediately after the
luncheon interval.
Jayasuriya and de Silva then added 20 runs before the Sri Lankan captain
skewed a catch to backward point - not for the first time in the series - as
he tried to loft Croft. Sri Lanka's innings was back in the balance
on 108 for three. Jaywardene and de Silva then weathered the immediate
danger, but failed to finish the job.