Cape Argus

Sri Lanka staring at massive defeat

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INDIA’S bowlers left Sri Lanka staring at a big defeat and a series whitewash after another shambolic batting performanc­e saw the hosts being bundled out for 135 in their first innings in the third and final Test in Pallekele yesterday.

The hosts, who also suffered heavy defeats in Galle and Colombo inside four days, were made to follow on and reached 19/1 at close of the second day’s play, still trailing India by 333 with nine second innings wickets in hand.

Opening batsman Upul Tharanga made seven before he chopped Umesh Yadav onto his stumps for his second dismissal in the day. Dimuth Karunaratn­e was unbeaten on 12 with nightwatch­man Malinda Pushpakuma­ra yet to score.

It was all-rounder Hardik Pandya’s 108, his maiden hundred, that set the ball rolling in the morning for the whitewash-chasing India, who posted 487 before being all out in the first over after the lunch break.

Pandya smashed his hundred off just 86 deliveries before he was the last batsman out, giving Sri Lanka left-arm spinner Lakshan Sandakan his maiden five-wicket haul in Tests.

Pandya’s century was also a maiden first-class ton for the 23-year-old righthande­r, who hit eight boundaries and seven sixes in his knock.

India fast bowler Mohammed Shami did the early damage to Sri Lanka’s first innings by dismissing both openers cheaply before left-arm wrist-spinner Kuldeep Yadav ran through the middle and lower order with 4/40.

Sri Lanka got off to a terrible start in their first innings when Tharanga edged Shami to wicket-keeper Wriddhiman Saha for five and inexplicab­ly called for a review after consultati­on with opening partner Karunaratn­e.

Replays showed a clear edge and Karunaratn­e soon joined his departed colleague back in the dressing-room after falling in similar fashion for four.

Kusal Mendis (18) was then run out after a mix-up with captain Dinesh Chandimal before former skipper Angelo Mathews fell leg before to medium-pace bowling all-rounder Pandya without scoring.

Chandimal was the only batsman to provide some resistance with a dogged 48, but became one of spinner Ravichandr­an Ashwin’s two wickets. – Reuters

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