Prior's nifty footwork and Harmy's wait
Andrew Miller provides the plays of the second day between Sri Lanka and England at Colombo
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Innings of the day
His resistance at Kandy was heroic but in vain, but Matt Prior said
he'd take huge encouragement from that two-and-a-half hour vigil, and
today he was true to his word. None of England's batsmen - not Ian
Bell in the first Test nor Michael Vaughan on Sunday morning - has
looked as assured in their strokeplay as Prior, who strode forward and
hopped back with energetic footwork, and aggression foremost in his
mind. He set out to dominate and did so impressively, thanks in no
small part to yet more obdurate crease occupation from Ryan
Sidebottom. And as their eighth-wicket stand swelling, England nudged
themselves towards a very defendable total.
Catch of the day
Talking of footwork, this was a gem. Prior was accused of sluggishness
behind the stumps during the India series last summer, particularly in
the decider at The Oval when he tipped Sachin Tendulkar, of all
people, round the post. Upul Tharanga was not so fortunate today. The
bowler once again was Sidebottom, but Prior this time was quite
literally on his toes. He took off in the direction of first slip,
held the chance comfortably in a single mitt, then had the foresight
to close his other glove around it as he landed. Tidy stuff.
Wicket of the day
Prior's second take was much more routine, but the celebrations were
far from it. Another cracking delivery from Sidebottom - on off stump
and nibbling away, and Kumar Sangakkara had no option but to offer a
shot. Cue pandemonium, with Sidebottom doing his best Monty Panesar
impression as he hurtled in the direction of fine leg with his limbs
flailing left, right and centre. Sangakkara was gone for 1, the first
time in seven innings he had failed to reach at least a half century.
Relegation of the day
It was the moment we'd all been waiting for. Steve Harmison's first
over for England since the last week of June. His date with destiny
had been postponed after Michael Vaughan had won the toss (although
he'd done his best to hurry the moment along with a first-ball duck)
but then, finally, came the innings break. The Barmy Army launched
into supportive hymns of praise to "Super Steve Harmy" as he warmed up
on the outfield, but against all expectation it was Sidebottom and
Broad who were handed the new ball. Harmison's back, but the scars -
it would seem - aren't fully healed.
Chant of the day
"He's big, he's bad, he's better than his dad ... Stuart Bro-oad, Stuart
Broad." That was how the Barmy Army serenaded young Mr Broad as he
came in to bowl his first over of Test cricket. Those who recalled his
father's exploits as a cricketer - belting stumps out of the ground in
Bicentenary matches and mouthing obscenities in front of the Lord's
pavilion, for instance - might dispute that he could possibly be
badder than his old man. But two warnings from the umpire within half
an hour of his first spell was a pretty rock'n'roll beginning.
Umpiring incident of the day
After all the kerfuffle about Kevin Pietersen's dismissal on Sunday,
Vaughan appealed for the umpires to use their common sense. By
luck rather than judgment, that happened today, when Sidebottom was
struck on the shoulder by a bouncer and caught low in the slips by
Mahela Jayawardene. Umpire Harper's line of vision could not have been
obscured during the incident, hence the decision should not have been
referred. But up it went anyway - the implication, of course, being
that he believed there had been a nick. As it turns out, the catch was
clean but Gamini Silva spotted the thud on the shoulder, and ... would
you believe it ... common sense prevailed.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo
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