India squander away good start
Charlie Austin - 14 August 2001
They say you should never judge a book by its cover. It's wise advice
that holds true for a cricket pitch too. In the first Test between Sri
Lanka and India in Galle today, pundits and players alike were
deceived by a green pitch that was far from the seamers' paradise that
it had been purported to be.
Nevertheless, Sri Lanka, who picked four fast bowlers this morning, an
unprecedented number in a home Test, and then put India in to bat were
saved embarrassment after failing to make early inroads, as they
clawed themselves back into the game with the second new ball.
Sri Lanka had expected greater pace, bounce and movement from the
pitch, but it turned out to be devoid of moisture and as flat as the
blue Indian Ocean in the foreground. India started well, adding 79 for
the first wicket before ending the day on 161 for five.
Sri Lankan coach Dav Whatmore defended the team's strategy. "We knew
that the wicket was dry underneath, but it was a natural reaction to
bowl first with the way it appeared this morning. However, it didn't
do as much as we thought it would do and it was a real battle with
Indian batsmen playing pretty well.
"In the end though I thought we came back pretty well and apart from
the 20 minutes after lunch it was a good bowling effort," he said. "We
kept the lid on the innings and we can still do really well tomorrow
if we have a good morning."
The Indian openers had started circumspectly in the morning, but
displayed great discipline and left the ball well, as they scored just
16 runs in the rain reduced 20-over morning session.
The run rate was miserly, but the home side expected wickets. Sri
Lanka's new-ball bowlers Chaminda Vaas and Dilhara Fernando did not
bowl poorly, but neither did they make best use of sultry conditions,
generally bowling too short for the ball to swing
After lunch, however, the Indian batsmen realised that, contrary to
their own pre-match suspicions, the wicket was far from treacherous
and runs started to flow more freely. The pair put on 79 runs for the
first wicket.
Ironically, after all the pre-match gossip, it was the spin of
Muralitharan that ended the partnership, Ramesh mistimed a drive and
was caught at short extra cover for 42 from 127 balls. India though
still went into the final session well placed on 95 for one.
Sri Lanka clawed themselves back in the final session, taking four
wickets for 56 runs.
Das was the first to go, caught at second slip having been dropped in
the previous over. He had scored 40 in four hours.
Rahul Dravid, promoted to number four, became Muralitharan's second
victim when he used his feet and tried to work the ball through the
leg side. The ball ballooned in the air off inside edge and pad and
was caught at silly point for 12.
Indian captain Sourav Ganguly and Mohammad Kaif, batting solidly at
number three in his second Test match, added 31 runs. Then, just as
the sun started to dip behind the horizon, Jayasuriya took the second
new ball.
The results was immediate. Dilhara Fernando clean bowled Kaif with an
inswinger and then had Hemang Badani caught behind, as the left hander
flashed frenetically in the last over of the day, to the leave the
game evenly poised.
© CricInfo
Teams
|
India,
Sri Lanka.
|
Players/Umpires
|
Chaminda Vaas,
Dilhara Fernando,
Sadagoppan Ramesh,
Shiv Sunder Das,
Muttiah Muralitharan,
Rahul Dravid,
Sourav Ganguly,
Hemang Badani,
Mohammad Kaif.
|
Tours
|
India in Sri Lanka
|
Scorecard
|
1st Test: Sri Lanka v India, 14-18 Aug 2001 |
Grounds
|
Galle International Stadium
|