Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Mendis claims three to put Sri Lanka in control

- Agence France-Presse sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

Ramesh Mendis led an inspired Sri Lanka spin attack to leave Pakistan in trouble at 191/7 in reply to the hosts’ 378 on Day 2 of the second Test on Monday.

The tourists, who lead the two-match series 1-0, ended the day still trailing Sri Lanka by 187 runs in their first innings at Galle.

Agha Salman resisted the bowling attack with his maiden Test fifty but fell to Prabath Jayasuriya’s left-arm spin for 62 in the final moments of play before stumps was called.

Jayasuriya got Salman caught at slip with a drifter coming into the right-handed batsman.

Salman, who made his debut in the previous match, put on 46 runs with Yasir Shah, batting on 13, to lift Pakistan from 145/6.

Ramesh rattled Pakistan’s middle-order with his off-spin bowling on a pitch expected to turn more from day three onwards.

Pakistan suffered from a lack of partnershi­ps after losing first-match hero Abdullah Shafique for a duck and skipper

Babar Azam for 16 on either side of the lunch break.

Jayasuriya, who took 21 wickets in his first two Tests, bowled Azam off a turning delivery that got the edge of his bat to crash onto the stumps.

Imam-ul-Haq attempted to rebuild the innings with Mohammad Rizwan but Dhananjaya de Silva broke through with his off-spin to send back Imam on 32.

De Silva is standing in as captain in place of Dimuth Karunaratn­e, who did not take the field in the Pakistan innings because of back pain.

Rizwan hit a few boundaries to counteratt­ack but Ramesh trapped him lbw for 24 and a review did not help the wicketkeep­er-batsman, with replays showing the ball would have hit leg stump. Pakistan had lost opener Shafique, who hit a match-winning 260 in the first Test, when he inside-edged a delivery from Asitha Fernando onto his stumps.

 ?? AFP ?? Ramesh Mendis celebrates the wicket of Fawad Alam.
AFP Ramesh Mendis celebrates the wicket of Fawad Alam.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India