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Jayawardene,
Vaas shut out sloppy Windies
GUYANA—Sri Lanka’s quest for a first Test win in the Caribbean took
shape in a manner they’ve mastered back on home soil: put up the runs,
session by session, and hand it over to two experienced bowlers.
A distinctly subcontinental surface at the Providence Stadium allowed
Mahela Jayawardene his first hundred against West Indies and Chaminda
Vaas a second fifty in as many innings before Sri Lanka declared on 476
for 8. The 16 overs left in the day were enough for Vaas to remove his
bunny Chris Gayle for his fifth duck against this opposition and brought
the shutters down on a lamentable day for the hosts, who let five
chances go down in the field.
From the time he came to the middle it was evident Jayawardene wanted to
play an innings for the long haul. It was a disciplined hundred, shorn
of risks and flashy shots, and efficiently extended Sri Lanka’s
dominance. With the track being so sluggish it was a bit hard to force
the ball away - Jerome Taylor and Daren Powell bowled very well in the
first session - and Jayawardene relied on singles and the odd double as
they came.
There weren’t a lot of runs scored in the first two hours but
importantly for Sri Lanka Jayawardene played himself in. Taylor was the
only bowler to really offer any threat, removing Tillakaratne Dilshan
early, but West Indies were let down by ordinary fielding.
Some edges went agonisingly close to being caught, some should have been
caught, and some shots were just superbly timed. Jayawardene was also
the recipient of a life, when on 39 he cut hard and Gayle watched the
thick edge fly to his right at slip. Sulieman Benn was denied a maiden
Test wicket on that occasion but he was also to blame soon after as he
misjudged a chance off Prasanna Jayawardene, who mistimed a pull off
Powell to midwicket.
One sweetly-timed straight drive was about as stylish as Mahela
Jayawardene got. Otherwise it was soft-handed dabs and tucks to square
leg or midwicket. His half-century under his belt, he added 53 with
Prasanna Jayawardene and 126 with Vaas after Powell struck with the
second new ball just after lunch.
There were no extravagant shots as Jayawardene worked his way through
the 80s and 90s, except for one classical flick across the line off
Taylor. Jayawardene had been run out on 99 against the same opposition
in Galle in 2001but this time he scampered down the pitch hurriedly to
reach his 22nd Test hundred before tea. It came from 189 deliveries,
seven more than Malinda Warnapura’s had taken, and it was no less
significant. Sri Lanka clearly wanted to bat just once and Jayawardene
did his best to ensure that by just dropping anchor.
He was given another life on 124 by Dwayne Bravo at short fine leg in
the 152nd over but an innings of great discipline and control ended with
a shot of extravagance and an error by the umpire Billy Bowden. Going
for another reverse-sweep against Gayle, Jayawardene was adjudged lbw
although replays showed the ball struck glove first.
Vaas, who was the beneficiary of two early lives in the slips, made West
Indies pay with a dogged effort that helped his captain past three
figures and his team past 400.
Like the other left-handers before him Vaas had few hassles as he swept
and cut his way past fifty for the 14th time in Tests. His unbeaten 54
took his batting average in the last 12 months to 78.75. Gayle got a
second wicket but Rangana Herath used his first chance at the crease in
two-and-a-half years to biff some quick runs before the declaration.
Vaas showed no signs of weariness after 162 minutes of batting and
struck quickly to get Gayle lbw. Gayle’s record of just 112 runs in nine
Test innings against Sri Lanka stayed where it was and it was his fifth
duck against them; Vaas has dismissed him seven times in those ten
innings. Vaas would have been encouraged by the bit of reverse-swing on
view while batting and used it craftily.
—Agencies |