The Star Malaysia

Sri Lanka beat West Indies to draw Test series

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BRIDGETOWN (Barbados): Kusal Perera battled through the considerab­le discomfort of a painful chest injury in partnershi­p with namesake Dilruwan Perera to guide Sri Lanka to an historic series-levelling four-wicket victory over the West Indies in the third and final Test at Kensington Oval in Barbados.

Set a target of 144 and resuming on the fourth day at the overnight position of 81 for five, Sri Lanka reached their goal for the loss of one additional wicket to become the first Asian team ever to win a Test match at Caribbean cricket’s most iconic venue on Tuesday.

That wicket, which fell in the very first over of the afternoon to West Indies captain Jason Holder, ushered in Kusal, whose further participat­ion in the match was in serious doubt when he injured himself crashing into the advertisin­g boards the previous night.

Both Kusal and Dilruwan had made only minimal contributi­ons previously in the three-match series with the allrounder Dilruwan having been dropped for the second Test while there was speculatio­n that Kusal, the experience­d but out-of-form opening batsman, would have been omitted from this final Test were it not for the suspension of regular captain Dinesh Chandimal for ball tampering in the previous match in St Lucia.

However they both played with great determinat­ion, weathering the storm from the West Indies fast bowlers in an unbroken seventh-wicket partnershi­p of 63.

Kusal finished unbeaten on 28 with Dilruwan on 23. It was Dilruwan who made the winning hit, hoisting Holder over mid-off for the boundary that sealed only Sri Lanka’s second Test victory in the West Indies.

For Holder it was a cruel final twist of fate in a match in which he excelled all-around. His dismissal of Kusal Mendis, leg-before without adding to his overnight score of 25, was his fifth wicket of the innings and he finished with innings figures of five for 41 and a match analysis of nine for 59.

Holder also contribute­d a topscore of 74 in the West Indies first innings of 204 and was just one of four batsmen to get into double-figures when they crashed to 93 – their lowest-ever total in a Test innings in Barbados – on the third evening.

He was the obvious choice as “Man of the Match,” small consolatio­n for his team failing to finish the job.

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