Hindustan Times (Delhi)

SANJJEEV K SAMYAL

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Dhawan produced an exhibition of strokeplay to celebrate his return to Test cricket with a 190 on the opening day of the first Test against Sri Lanka at the Galle stadium on Wednesday.

On the way to his career-best knock, Dhawan completed a hundred in a session for the second time, the knock rekindling memories of his blazing 187 on debut against Australia in 2013.

He faced 168 balls and hit 31 fours. Dhawan found a solid partner in Cheteshwar Pujara (144 batting, 246 balls, 12 fours). The two shared a 253-run partnershi­p for the second wicket as India completely dominated the opening skirmish of the three-Test series, finishing on 399-3.

The two have fond memories of their previous tour to this island nation. Dhawan’s last century in Test cricket had also come at this picturesqu­e venue, in 2015, and Pujara had turned around his career with an unbeaten 145 in the final Test win in that series.

Pujara continued to build on Dhawan’s heroics by adding 113 runs with Ajinkya Rahane (39 batting) for the unbroken fourth wicket after skipper Virat Kohli was out for three.

Out of the Indian team since October 2016, the stars seemed to realign favourably for Dhawan. After missing 11 Tests, he made the squad as a last minute replacemen­t for the injured Murali Vijay, and only got the opportunit­y to play because the other regular opener, KL Rahul, reported ill on the eve of the game.

The left-handed opener pounced on the opportunit­y, lighting up the stadium by scoring 126 off 90 balls between lunch and his dismissal before tea.

In all, he smashed 31 fours, scoring at a strike rate of 113.09 as he bettered his highest score.

It was a bad toss to lose. The surface was beautiful to bat on and Sri Lanka’s inexperien­ced attack lacked imaginatio­n and

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