When the sheets hit the fans
Andrew Miller provides the plays of the fifth and final day between Sri Lanka and England at Kandy
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Innings of the day
For the second time in the match, Ian Bell looked a million dollars
for as long as he was in the middle. But, once again, he let his poise
slip at the critical juncture of the innings. While he and Matt Prior
were in harness, adding 109 for the seventh wicket, England's survival
seemed assured. But then he fell with his century in sight, beaten -
much like Paul Collingwood in the first innings - by Murali's devious
new-ball weapon, the non-spinning offbreak.
Ball of the day
It didn't take a wicket, but if any delivery was designed to put the
heebie-jeebies into England's batsmen, it was the one that Lasith
Malinga sent down to James Anderson in the very first over of the
morning. Outside off stump, it exploded through the top of the pitch,
took off like a jump jet, and fizzed past Anderson's flinching
defences and all the way for four byes. Malinga's grin brought to mind
the look on Curtly Ambrose's face after a similarly trampoline-like
delivery at Edgbaston in 1995. And for the rest of the season, England
batted as if they were on a minefield.
Bowler of the day
Chaminda Vaas has been a largely peripheral figure in his 100th Test
match. The combined efforts and announcements of Muttiah Muralitharan,
Kumar Sangakkara and Sanath Jayasuriya have squeezed his milestone to
the margins for the last four days. But in the opening salvoes of
England's second innings, he was unstoppable. Three cheap wickets,
including both openers and the nightwatchman, James Anderson, paved
the way for the main man to work his magic. Extraordinarily, Murali
was then made to wait until his 32nd over for a breakthrough. Though
he made amends quickly enough.
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Distraction of the day
England did their damnedest to string out the final overs, with
glove-changes, runners and medical attention all eating up precious
minutes, not to mention some of the slowest coming-and-goings from the
wicket since Inzamam-ul-Haq made his last lugubrious trudge to the
pavilion. One break in play wasn't quite so opportune, however. Soon
after the new ball had been taken, onto the pitch trotted a dog, who
promptly decided to curl up and go to sleep at long-on, before Mahela
Jayawardene chased it off the park to resounding boos. The wasted
minutes were no compensation for what happened next, however. Back
came Murali, and out went Bell.
Howler of the day
Asad Rauf's lbw decision against Ryan Sidebottom in the closing overs
of the game. Unfortunately it was a shocker, cannoning off a big
inside-edge before rapping the pads in front of middle-and-off. In
truth it probably would not have made too much difference to England -
the breach in their batting had been made and Murali by this stage was
swarming like the bees that held up play on day four. But Sidebottom
had shown in his first-innings stickability an appetite for the fight
that few had credited him with. Another 20 minutes with him in the
middle could conceivably have made a difference. But then again, Sri
Lanka need only mention Sangakkara's saw-off in Hobart last month.
What comes around goes around in cricket.
Incident of the day
English wickets weren't the only things that went tumbling in the
first hour of play. Midway through the 15th over of the innings, Kevin
Pietersen had to pull away from his stance after an almighty clatter
in the stands behind him. A gust of wind had ripped three panels of
corrugated iron off the roof of the special enclosure at the
Hunnasgiriya End of the ground, injuring four supporters and causing a
hasty evacuation. It was a literal case of the sheets hitting the
fans.
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo
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