Dinesh Chandimal and Dimuth Karunaratne spearheaded a gritty Sri Lanka fightback on the second day of the first Test in Dunedin, New Zealand, yesterday.
They came together with the tourists looking fragile at 29-2 and put on 122 for the third wicket in reply to New Zealand’s first innings 431.
At stumps, Sri Lanka were 197-4, with Chandimal on 83 and Kithuruwan Vithanage on 10.
Photo: AP
Karunaratne was out for 84 after providing stubborn resistance with Chandimal, which was desperately needed after Sri Lanka failed to make the most of the conditions when they won the toss and sent New Zealand into bat. With six wickets in hand, Karunaratne believed Sri Lanka were in a position to save the Test from what had been a very tough situation.
“We’re slightly in a good position,” he said, adding patience would be key. “The wicket is a bit slower than we expected and it’s not turning much. It’s two-paced and we have to wait for the loose ball and get runs.”
However, New Zealand paceman Trent Boult thought there was still enough in the wicket to keep the advantage with the hosts.
“It’s going to be a big push in the morning. If we can get one early, the cliche of one brings two and we’ll be into the tail,” Boult said.
Boult saw signs of reverse swing developing “and that’s going to become a big factor with four seamers that can all exploit that.”
After the New Zealand innings wrapped up early yesterday, the outlook for Sri Lanka darkened when Test novices Kusal Mendis and Udara Jayasundera fell cheaply, both caught behind by B.J. Watling, but Karunaratne and Chandimal stepped up, curtailing their attacking instincts.
They delicately negotiated their way to bring up the 100 in the 45th over just before tea. The middle session produced only 65 runs, but while the New Zealand bowlers sent down a series of dot balls they seldom looked threatening.
As the pitch flattened in the final session, Sri Lanka upped the tempo and cracked 48 in 13 overs, before left-arm spinner Mitchell Santner made the breakthrough.
Karunaratne, a century-maker against New Zealand last year, had played patiently for 198 balls before he slashed at a drifting delivery and gave Watling his third catch.
Skipper Angelo Mathews only made 2 before he added to Watling’s collection and gave Tim Southee a 27th birthday present with the finest of edges to a bullet heading down the leg side. Umpire Nigel Llong said not out, but a New Zealand appeal showed a faint edge picked up by the Hotspot technology and Sri Lanka were four down for 156.
Vithanage had a life five overs before stumps when he drove Doug Bracewell hard at Kane Williamson at short-cover and was dropped. Chandimal, who played a chanceless innings, faced 208 deliveries for his 83.
When on 1, he kept out a yorker from Neil Wagner which the speedgun clocked at 160kph — close to Mitchell Starc’s Test record of 160.4kph — but the seamer has never bowled anywhere near that speed before and officials suspected a low-flying bird caused a misreading.
Wagner was one of four wicket-takers with Trent Boult, Tim Southee and Santner also sharing in the dismissals.
Mendis, in his second Test, was the first to fall when he edged Boult to be gone for 8 and provide Watling with his 100th Test dismissal. Jayasundera, on debut, made 1.
At the start of the day, New Zealand added a further 22 runs to their overnight score of 409-8.
Doug Bracewell reached 47, his highest Test score, before he was the last wicket to fall, trapped leg before wicket by Nuwan Pradeep.
Pradeep, the least threatening Sri Lanka paceman on the opening day, was ultimately their most successful with four for 112.
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