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Spinners put India on backfoot after Dhawan century

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PALLEKELE, Sri Lanka: Sri Lanka’s spinners fought back to share five wickets Saturday as India reached 329-6 at stumps on the opening day of the third and final cricket test.

Chasing a series sweep, India looked set for an even better Day 1 after a 188-run opening partnershi­p. Shikhar Dhawan made his sixth test century and shared the first-wicket stand with Lokesh Rahul (85).

Sri Lanka then took six wickets for 141 runs to limit the damage.

Rahul hit eight boundaries but was the first Indian batsman out when he tried to clear mid-on against leftarm spinner Malinda Pushpakuma­ra and was caught by Dimuth Karunaratn­e.

Sri Lanka captain Dinesh Chandimal brilliantl­y caught Dhawan (119) by diving to his left at square-leg when the batsman swept Pushpakuma­ra. Dhawan faced 123 deliveries and hit 17 boundaries.

Pushpakuma­ra later bowled Ajinkya Rahane for 17 to finish the day on 3-40 off 18 overs.

Left-arm wrist spinner Lakshan Sandakan took the key wickets of in-form Cheteshwar Pujara (8) and captain Virat Kohli (42) with both caught at slip.

Pujara had scored centuries in the last two test matches.

Earlier, Kohli won the toss for a third time in the series and elected to bat first, a strategy that has proved successful for him. His team has posted 600 or more in the first innings of the series so far.

India has already secured the series 2-0 with two big wins and is looking for a series whitewash.

The opening pair of Dhawan and Rahul gave India a brisk start and reached 134 without loss at lunch. India scored a further 101 runs in the middle session despite three wickets falling. The third session yielded 94 runs.

The visitors brought in left-arm wrist spinner Kuldeep Yadav in place of the suspended Ravindra Jadeja.

Sri Lanka’s top spin bowler Rangana Herath has been rested but the hosts have a triple spin attack in offspinner Dilruwan Perera, left-arm wrist spinner Sandakan and Pushpakuma­ra.

The 29-year-old Irishman insists nothing has changed in his training, other than the fact he cannot use his legs or take his opponent to the ground, and he is the same hardworkin­g fighter that won two UFC titles.

“I show up to the gym, I work hard, and through my hard work I gain my confidence — that’s been the same since day one,” said McGregor, the reigning UFC Lightweigh­t Champion and former UFC Featherwei­ght Champion. “The fundamenta­ls are still there, I show up, I work hard.”

 ??  ?? Conor McGregor trains during a media workout in Las Vegas on Friday. (AP)
Conor McGregor trains during a media workout in Las Vegas on Friday. (AP)
 ??  ?? Lanka’s Vishwa Fernando celebrates after taking the wicket of Ravichandr­an Ashwin during a Test match between Sri Lanka and India in Pallekele,
Sri Lanka, on Saturday. (Reuters)
Lanka’s Vishwa Fernando celebrates after taking the wicket of Ravichandr­an Ashwin during a Test match between Sri Lanka and India in Pallekele, Sri Lanka, on Saturday. (Reuters)

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