Stabroek News

Bonner, Da Silva unable to prevent heavy Windies loss

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(CMC) – Nkrumah Bonner and Joshua Da Silva both struck half-centuries but managed only to delay the inevitable as West Indies slumped to a heavy 187-run defeat to Sri Lanka in the opening Test yesterday.

Resuming the final day at Galle Internatio­nal Stadium on 52 for six, in pursuit of 348 and requiring a miracle to save the contest, West Indies found themselves without divine interventi­on and were dismissed for 160 in their second innings, nearly an hour after lunch.

Bonner, beginning the morning on 18, finished unbeaten on 68 while wicketkeep­er Joshua Da Silva converted his overnight 15 into 54, defiant efforts which frustrated Sri Lanka for most of the first session.

However, once Da Silva perished in the fifth over before lunch, Sri Lanka got the opening they desperatel­y needed and finished off the tail after the interval.

Left-arm spinner Lasith Embuldeniy­a added another three wickets to his tally to finish with five for 46 while Ramesh Mendis ended with four for 64 after going wicket-less on the final day.

The defeat extended West Indies’ wretched run of never having won a Test on Sri Lankan soil, and put them in danger of another series defeat in the South Asian nation.

“I thought today, Joshua and Bonner, the fight they showed – even from yesterday evening being [18 for six] – I think that was commendabl­e for us,” said a dejected West Indies captain Kraigg Brathwaite.

“I think as batsmen we just have to learn from it. “I believe the first innings total is always important and if you don’t do well there you’re going to be under pressure and that’s where we fell down.

“Obviously for Sri Lanka the skipper played well in the first innings and it was important we got close to their score or even past, and obviously we let ourselves down there.”

With hope stacked against West Indies at the start, Bonner and Da Silva slowly increased confidence in the

camp as they rode their luck to extend their seventh wicket partnershi­p to exactly 100.

Bonner, dropped at silly point on 36 off Embuldeniy­a and then given out lbw on 41 to Mendis before being reprieved by DRS, faced 220 deliveries in just over 4-½ hours and counted seven fours to post his third Test halfcentur­y. Da Silva, meanwhile, nearly run out on 19 by Captain Dimuth Karunaratn­e’s direct hit from cover and also dropped at leg slip on 23 off Mendis, survived to also carve out his third fifty, the knock spanning 129 balls, 2¾ hours and including five fours.

Growing in confidence with every delivery as the Sri Lankans became increasing­ly frustrated, West Indies looked a safe bet to reach lunch without losing a wicket until Embuldeniy­a struck in the sixth over his second spell of the session.

He got one to spin sharply across Da Silva from a

good length and the right-hander could only edge to slip where Dhananjaya pouched the catch.

Bonner, on 42 at the break, reached his fifty in the fourth over following the resumption by sweeping Embuldeniy­a to the backward square boundary, as he forged a 31-run, eighth wicket partnershi­p with Rahkeem Cornwall who made 13.

However, Cornwall’s demise, hitting out recklessly at left-arm spinner Praveen Jayawickra­ma and holing out to long off, signalled the end of West Indies’ resistance as the last three wickets went down for 11 runs in the space of 51 deliveries. The second and final Test bowls off here next Monday.

 ?? ?? Nkrumah Bonner pulls during his unbeaten half-century on the final day of the first Test
Nkrumah Bonner pulls during his unbeaten half-century on the final day of the first Test

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