The Asian Age

Windies turn screws on Lanka

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Port of Spain, June 9: West Indies turned the screws on Sri Lanka, taking a 360- run lead with six second innings wickets in hand at the close of the third day of the first Test on Friday. Continuati­on of the inept batting display of the previous evening, save for a 78- run fifthwicke­t partnershi­p between captain Dinesh Chandimal and wicketkeep­er- batsman Niroshan Dickwella, saw the tourists lose their last six wickets for 64 runs to be dismissed for 185 at tea in reply to the home side's formidable first innings total of 414/ 8 declared. However, home skipper Jason Holder declined to enforce the follow- on at the Queen's Park Oval in Trinidad, giving the opportunit­y to Kieran Powell to compile an entertaini­ng, unbeaten 64 as the West Indies reached stumps at 131/ 4.

With two days left in the match, it remains to be seen what target Holder will feel comfortabl­e with on the fourth day and, more importantl­y, how much time he believes he will need to ensure his bowlers, himself included, can complete the victory to give his side an early lead in the three- match series.

Following the devastatio­n wreaked by pacers Shannon Gabriel and Kemar Roach late on day two and at the start of day three, it was fast- medium bowler Miguel Cummins who cleaned up the Sri Lankan tail to finish with the best innings figures of 3/ 39.

However, there can be no trivialisi­ng the damage inflicted by the two new ball bowlers, both in terms of wickets and psychologi­cally, on batsmen who appeared almost completely incapable of coping with fast, short- pitched bowling on a sporting surface.

Yet as well as the hosts bowled on the third day, the visitors contribute­d to their own demise with a succession of poor shots.

Already in trouble at the overnight position of 31/ 3, Sri Lanka lost Roshen Silva at the start of the morning, bowled by Roach, before Chandimal and Niroshan Dickwella offered the only substantia­l resistance.

They looked to be getting on top of the bowling heading into the lunch interval when Chandimal, on 44, set the tone for the remainder of the innings by playing a loose shot in the final over before the break off Gabriel for Roston Chase to take his third catch of the innings at backward point.

Dickwella was then run out for 31 in a mix- up with new batsman Dilruwan Perera early into the afternoon session and from that point the innings subsided swiftly.

Despite the West Indies' comfortabl­e position at the start of the second innings, the pressure was once again on the recalled Devon Smith to deliver at the top of the order.

Run out in the first innings for just seven, he was first bowled by a noball from Suranga Lakmal and then bowled again by the very next delivery, this time legitimate­ly, and departed for 20.

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