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Sarwan ton
helps West Indies square series
TRINADAD—Each time West Indies or Sri Lanka took the upper hand in the
second Test in Trinidad, the other team clawed back to bring the match
into balance.
It took an innings of exemplary application from Ramnaresh Sarwan to
decisively swing the closely-fought contest towards West Indies on the
fourth day, and his partnership of 157 with Shivnarine Chanderpaul
levelled the series, ensuring Sri Lanka’s quest for a maiden series
triumph in the Caribbean remained unfulfilled. The six-wicket win was
West Indies’ first at the Queen’s Park Oval since 2000.
A target of 253 over two days with ten wickets in hand wasn’t the most
daunting but only twice had teams chased higher totals to win in
Trinidad. Add to that the unpredictably of the West Indian batting
order, the Chaminda Vaas-Muttiah Muralitharan factor and the task was
anything but simple. The fourth day began with Sri Lanka taking early
wickets before Sarwan started the recovery effort, single-handedly at
first, later finding a steady partner in Chanderpaul, who remained
unbeaten on 86 at the end.
Sri Lanka were banking on the wizardry of Muralitharan to run through
the batting order but he was blunted by Sarwan and Chanderpaul’s patient
approach. Not until the final stages did Sri Lanka’s bowlers give it up
but the pressure created by Vaas and Muralitharan was not sustained by
the inexperienced support cast of Thilan Thushara and Ishara Amerasinghe,
which allowed the batsmen to score steadily without having to look to
hit boundaries.
It was fitting that Sarwan sealed victory with a hundred because he had
scored three consecutive half-centuries in the series. West Indies
needed a century from one of their batsmen and Sarwan did not throw it
away after passing fifty. He started fluently, flicking and cutting
Thushara to the boundary, and eventually hit him out of the attack by
taking three fours - two straight drives and a leg glance - off his
eighth over. Against Vaas, Sarwan stayed in his crease and gave himself
time to drive the ball through the off side while his team-mates
struggled on the front foot.
He was reprieved early in his innings by Tillakaratne Dilshan, who
missed the stumps at the non-striker’s end with Sarwan well short. Had
he hit, one sensed that the chase would have been over, for apart from
Sarwan’s fluent innings the batsmen looked edgy. Even Chanderpaul had
testing moments against Vaas, who caught the left-hander by surprise
with a couple of deliveries that reared sharply off a good length.
The pair steered West Indies to 93 for 3 when rain forced the umpires to
take an early lunch, giving Vaas and Muralitharan an hour to recharge.
On resumption, they offered few scoring opportunities but Sarwan and
Chanderpaul were up for the challenge. Chanderpaul concentrated on
rotating the strike, often moving forward and across to work the ball
through the leg side for singles and twos. He had a calming influence on
Sarwan, who brought up his fifty with a slog-swept four followed by a
cut towards point, and talked him through lapses in concentration such
as a slash past the slips off Amerasinghe.
Sarwan used the cut effectively against the fast bowlers, forcing Mahela
Jayawardene to put a fielder on the point boundary and successfully
negotiated the threat posed by Muralitharan; he consistently worked him
for ones and twos and occasionally moved out of his crease to hit him
over midwicket or drive him straight down the ground. Sarwan was more
positive as he moved towards his hundred, swatting Thushara twice from
outside off stump to the wide mid-on boundary and the Trinidad crowd
grew louder as they sensed a West Indian win.
A significant psychological barrier was crossed when Chanderpaul drove a
full toss from Amerasinghe to the cover boundary to bring the runs
required below 100. Another shower made the players take tea early, with
Sarwan on 95, but when play resumed he reached his tenth Test hundred by
sweeping Muralitharan to the long-leg boundary. By then, Chanderpaul was
doing most of the scoring, repeatedly cutting and driving Vaas and
Amerasinghe through the off side. Sarwan was eventually caught at
bat-pad off Muralitharan for 102 but, with only 23 to get, the match was
nearly won. —Agencies |