Australia 2 for 370 (Langer 159*, Hayden 117, Martyn 56*) v
Sri Lanka
Scorecard

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Justin Langer: drove the Sri Lankans crazy
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For those of a statistical bent, Justin Langer and Matthew Hayden were
quietly becoming the weak link in Australia's juggernaut: only one century
stand in their past 21 attempts. Those of a statistical bent were today
nearly given the thrill of their lives. Ultimately two belated wickets on
this opening day at Cairns kept Australia to 2 for 370, offering Sri Lanka
some respite and dashing dreams of Langer and Hayden going where no men had
gone before. For until then, they had hoisted 250 on the scoreboard so
nonchalantly that no opening tally seemed ungettable.
And yet, the attraction of Langer and Hayden's batting had more to do with
the how than the how much. Usually there is a hint of helter-skelter, of
frenzied crossbat innovation, about their business. For four hours today they
offered the broadest of bats and not a ghost of a chance. They scurried hard
singles and dispatched anything loose, of which there was plenty. Only
occasionally, and then very purposefully, did they lunge across the line.
Seldom did they clout in the air.
Of course, these two are nothing if not flexible in their mindset, and
shortly after lunch, with Sri Lankan heads sinking, Hayden saw fit to flout
that commonsense mantra. Few sixes are genuinely elegant, but Hayden picked
up a Chaminda Vaas outswinger so early, and so cleanly, that seagulls could
have perched on his immaculately vertical bat. That ball sailed 20 metres over mid-on. A couple of overs later, more wristily this time, he deposited an
offbreak from Thilan Samaraweera over mid-off.
This was their sixth double-century stand in Tests, two more than even
Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes ever managed. Never before, though, had
slaughter seemed quite this straightforward.
To suggest that Langer and Hayden have been less dynamic of late is to talk
of them collectively. Individually speaking, Langer's unbeaten 159 is his
seventh hundred in 19 Tests, a ratio few openers in history have bettered.
Hayden's ratio, all the while, splurges ever more Bradmanlike - and this,
for once, is not a far-fetched analogy. Hayden's 117 was his 15th century in
his past 31 Tests; Don Bradman, in his last 31, made 16.
Where Hayden and Bradman differ is in the latter's insatiability. Why grind
out one hundred when three are in the offing, was Bradman's philosophy.
Hayden gets bored faster. After tea he started wandering extravagantly
across his stumps, physically taunting the bowlers. At one point he charged
at Vaas and, with the flattest of bats, hoicked a delivery from wide of off stump over midwicket's head.
He might have been dobbed in for intimidatory batting. Instead Samaraweera
was brought back and Hayden, with the partnership worth 255, shovelled a
leg-side half-tracker from a half-baked part-timer down backward square leg's
throat.

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Matthew Hayden: cautious to start with but brutal thereafter
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Marvan Atapattu's decision to bowl upon winning the toss had long since
backfired. Inevitably he was seduced by the pre-match whispers of a
trampolining, lightning-fast, WACA-style wicket. Atapattu is not the first
to be sucked in: this was the seventh Queensland Test in a row where a
captain has chosen to bowl, with mixed success, after winning the toss.
In the event, the bounce was plentiful but also reliable. It was the
batsmen, chained down last week by a low and slow Darwin pitch, who relished
it most. Atapattu's blunder became obvious from the eighth over onwards, by
which point Nuwan Zoysa had been clobbered out of the attack and Samaraweera
introduced in desperation.
Samaraweera, an offspinner, turned out to be the tidiest of the bowlers.
Zoysa was hopelessly wayward and lasted just 11 overs. Vaas, steady of line,
seemed strangely sluggish of speed. The legspinner Upul Chandana, employed only
reluctantly, mixed up his pace but was otherwise innocuous. Lasith Malinga,
with his hard-to-detect low slinging action, should have been called on
before the score had scaled 60. By then the batsmen were set, the initiative
lost.
It was Malinga who ousted Ricky Ponting, who himself had been inclined to
bowl first, when he wafted eagerly at a widish delivery and holed out at
cover (2 for 290). He had looked utterly at ease since Hayden's departure,
driving gunbarrel straight and packing up clinically in defence. Damien
Martyn, at his most silky and sublime, followed the captain's example and
scooted imperiously to his fifty in 56 balls.
Langer had punched the tropical air ecstatically after raising his hundred
courtesy of a wild overthrow. He then faded contentedly into the background.
He was the aggressor early, particularly severe on Zoysa's dismal early
overs, launching into two savage pulls off the backfoot and two crunching
cover-drives off the front. His lunchtime 56 comprised 10 fours, most
drilled along the ground and all clumped with a muscular backswing.
Still outpacing Hayden, he added another 62 in the second session but only
41 between tea and stumps, battening down with intent. Everything Langer did
today - from the manner in which he power-walked off for lunch, to the way
he returned after tea wrapped in a sleeveless sweater - bore the image of
man who planned to carry on and on.
For those of a masochistic bent, tomorrow might be well worth watching.
Christian Ryan is the editor of Wisden Cricinfo in Australia.