Sri Lanka beat Pakistan by seven wickets to level series

Tuesday, 30 June 2015 00:42 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Reuters: Sri Lanka needed little more than 26 overs to beat Pakistan for a series-levelling seven-wicket victory in the second test on Monday.

Dimuth Karunaratne (50) got Sri Lanka off to a flying start before adding 72 runs for the third wicket with skipper Angelo Mathews (43 not out) as the hosts chased down the 153-run target with some aggressive batting.

Eager to wrap up the victory, Sri Lanka promoted Kithuruwan Vithanage (34) to the opener’s slot and the batsman’s quickfire 23-ball cameo set the tone for a successful chase.

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“We wanted to bat positively because we never know when the rain is going to come,” Mathews said at the presentation ceremony.

“So we wanted Kithuruwan to go out and express himself. We gave him the green signal to take the bowlers on.

“We approached it in a very positive way, you can’t get bogged down and let the bowlers get on top. We just wanted to play positive cricket.”20-8

After heavy rain had washed out Sunday’s entire final session and delayed the final day’s start, Vithanage signalled his team’s intention by hitting the first ball of the day for a boundary.

He then clobbered left-arm spinner Zulfiqar Babar for back-to-back sixes before Sri Lanka lost two wickets in two balls to find themselves in a spot of bother.

Vithanage perished trying to slog-sweep Babar over midwicket with Mohammad Hafeez taking the skier.

Yasir Shah then dismissed the retiring Kumar Sangakkara for a golden duck with a delivery that hit the batsman’s glove and thigh pad en route to Azhar Ali’s hands at short leg.

With the threat of rain looming large and groundsmen ready to rush in with the covers, Karunaratne and Mathews kept scoring briskly.

Karunaratne completed his sixth test 50 and was trapped leg before soon after by Shah, a decision the batsman instantly reviewed but could not get overturned.

Lahiru Thirimanne (20 not out) hit a boundary in the 28th over to seal the victory against Pakistan, who paid the price for their first innings batting capitulation at the P Sara Oval.

“The session from lunch to tea really dented us on the first day,” Pakistan skipper Misbah-ul-Haq said, referring to their collapse for 138 runs.

“We lost all our best batsmen during that period. That was I think the main difference in the test match.”

Sri Lanka paceman Dhammika Prasad was named man of the match for his seven wickets, to go with the 35 runs he scored in the first innings.

The teams now move to Pallekele for the third and final test from Friday.

Mathews praises young guns

By Madushka Balasuriya

Sri Lankan Captain Angelo Mathews showered praise on his bowling unit after his side levelled their three-match series against Pakistan 1-1 with a 7-wicket win at the P. Sara Oval on Monday.

“We’ve got a set of good fast bowlers who can change modes. They can attack and they can stick to a particular line and length. They’ve been working extremely hard with [bowling coach] Champaka Ramanayake, who’s been doing a great job and they’re 20-7slowly showing their maturity,” said Mathews at the post-match media briefing.

Mathews however reserved special mention for the two youngest members of his bowling unit: Dushmantha Chameera, 23, and Tharindu Kaushal, 22.

“[Kaushal and Chameera] are players who can do a lot for Sri Lanka Cricket. I think we have to manage them very carefully, especially Chameera. I haven’t seen as fast a spell as he showed in the test match. He can bowl very quick. He clocked 149.9kmph, which is extraordinary for a Sri Lankan seamer but also, around the world, it’s very quick.

“Tharindu Kaushal also turns the ball quite a lot. So we have to very patient with them but also give them opportunities whenever possible,” said Mathews.

Kaushal had match figures of 5/118, with all of his scalps coming in a first innings burst, while Chameera ended with match figures of 4/86 (1/33 and 3/53). Along with Dhammika Prasad’s Man-of-the-match winning seven-wicket haul, the fact that bowling 20-6lynchpin Rangana Herath’s tally of only one wicket was barely felt pleased their captain.

“Along with the fast bowlers, the entire bowling unit chipped in as well. I think as far as Rangana Herath’s workload goes, we always play four bowlers, therefore we don’t just rely on one bowler. Sometimes Rangana does well, other times it’s someone else who picks up the slack. It’s always a team effort,” the skipper stated.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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