England's batsmen shone under pressure to draw the second Test against Sri Lanka yesterday and keep their hopes alive in the three-match series.
The tourists, needing to bat out the fifth day after trailing by 197 runs on the first innings, played solidly to move to 250-3 in their second knock by tea before rain washed out the final session.
England now head for the final Test in Galle on Tuesday seeking a series-leveling win after losing the first Test in Kandy by 88 runs last week.
PHOTO: AFP
Alastair Cook, captain Michael Vaughan and Ian Bell hit half-centuries to keep the Sri Lankans at bay on a dead pitch where just 22 wickets fell over the five days.
Sri Lankan captain Mahela Jayawardene, who was later named man of the match for his 195 in the team's first innings total of 548-9, defended his decision to delay the declaration until after tea on the fourth day.
"I don't think even two days would have been enough to bowl out England in the second innings because the wicket was so flat and slow," he said.
Jayawardene, who surpassed Sanath Jayasuriya as Sri Lanka's highest Test run-getter in this match, said he missed the veteran's slow left-arm spin.
"We really missed his bowling," the captain said of Jayasuriya, who retired from Test cricket after the Kandy match. "But forcing a result was never going to be easy in these conditions."
Vaughan said he was delighted at his team's ability to draw the game.
"It's one of the most comfortable draws I have been involved in," the England captain said. "Normally we panic somewhere, but not today. We got through with some good batting and it has turned into a comfortable draw. The bowlers did well to keep running in on that pitch."
"We are still 1-0 down but have got a lot to fight for to go home with a draw. I hope the Galle wicket is a bit more balanced," he said.
Cook (62) shared an opening stand of 107 with Vaughan (61), their second successive century partnership in the match after putting on 133 in the first innings.
Sri Lanka had won 10 of their last 12 Tests at the Sinhalese Sports Club, but the slow wicket ensured there was no threat from champion spinner Muralitharan.
The off-spinner, who surpassed Shane Warne's tally of 708 wickets to become Test cricket's most successful bowler in Kandy, took 1-58 from 27 overs.
If the Wild finally break through and win their first playoff series in a decade, Minnesota’s top line likely will be the reason. They were all over the Golden Knights through the first two games of their NHL Western Conference quarter-finals series, which was 1-1 going back to Minnesota for Game 3 today. The Wild tied the series with a 5-2 win on Tuesday. Matt Boldy had three goals and an assist in the first two games, while Kirill Kaprizov produced two goals and three assists. Joel Eriksson Ek, who centers the line, has yet to get on the scoresheet. “I think the biggest
Noelvi Marte on Sunday had seven RBIs and hit his first career grand slam with a drive off infielder Jorge Mateo, while Austin Wynn had a career-high six RBIs as the Cincinnati Reds scored their most runs in 26 years in a 24-2 rout of the Baltimore Orioles. Marte finished with five hits, including his eighth-inning homer off Mateo. Wynn hit a three-run homer in the ninth off catcher Gary Sanchez. Cincinnati scored its most runs since a 24-12 win against the Colorado Rockies on May 19, 1999, and finished with 25 hits. Baltimore allowed its most runs since a 30-3 loss to
Arne Slot has denied that Darwin Nunez was dropped from Liverpool’s win against West Ham because of a training-ground row with a member of his coaching staff. The Liverpool head coach on Sunday last week said that Nunez was absent from the 2-1 victory at Anfield, having felt unwell during training the day before, although the striker sat behind the substitutes throughout the game. Speculation has been rife that the Uruguay international, whom Slot criticized for his work rate against Wolves and Aston Villa in February, was left out for disciplinary reasons. Asked on Friday to clarify the situation, Slot said: “He
CUNNINGHAM CONNECTS: In the Eastern Conference, the Pistons snapped their record 15-game playoff losing streak by beating the Knicks to level their series at 1-1 Kawhi Leonard on Monday scored 39 points on 15-of-19 shooting as the Los Angeles Clippers evened their first-round NBA Playoffs series against the Nuggets with a 105-102 win in Denver. “It feels like he didn’t miss a shot,” James Harden said. “His shot-making ability is elite.” Good thing, too, because his teammates were a combined 26 of 66 for a 39 percent clip. “I made shots tonight,” Leonard said. “I just keep playing, try to stay in the zone no matter if I’m making or missing shots.” The fifth-seeded Clippers needed every bit of his brilliance to snatch the homecourt advantage in the series