Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Herath’s Lankans too good for the tigers

Sri Lanka vs Bangladesh 1st Test

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It was one of worst batting performanc­es in recent times. Bangladesh started the chase with their heads up high and came in the morning session with determinat­ion on their faces, but, after a little after a short session of play it was proved that it were the Lions who had the bite in them. Sri Lanka beat Bangladesh by 259 runs a little after the lunch break.

As expected the hero of the game was skipper Rangana Herath himself.

First he justified the prolonged second inning of the Lankan batsmen.then he proved that he was not afraid of the inclement weather.then finally it was he who finished with the best figures of 5 for 59. Bangladesh on their path had no zest in their quest. Almost all the wickets that fell during that session and a little, were out because of meek batting. I wonder what was running through the profession­al head of Bangladesh coach Chandika Hathurusin­ghe who stood to prove the point during this tour. Now there is only one match left.

After the game Herath explained that with bowlers like Dilruwan Perera and Lakshan Sandakan in his arsenal he was confident that he could run to victory in spite of the rain threat. He said “Still the wicket was good for batting, and the wicket was not spinning in squares, but, we knew against the backdrop of a 400 plus chase Bangladesh may flounder”.

Bangladesh in their chase batted for 15 overs and ended up at 67 for no loss thus leaving themselves a task of scoring 390 runs in a day’s possible play.at the same time they were scoring at the plausible rate of 4.46 runs per over.

Yet, the heavy cloud cover looked ominous even in the at the initial stages of the day.

But, it was more ominous for the Bangladesh­is when Asela Gunaratne found the edge of Sarkar’s bat as early as the second ball of the day.

The Bangladesh plot began to fail further when Haque was trapped leg before by Perera for 9. Bangladesh lost a wicket and a review in one ball. Then it was the turn of Iqbal to take that long walk back. He was held at the slips by Gunaratne and it seemed that the home team could beat the rain and Bangladesh in one go.

The wicket seemed, as if it did not have any demons, just like the first four days, but, batting for 98 overs and making over 400 runs against a spin attack that contained Herath, Sandakan, Perera and Gunaratne was going be a tough asking on a day five old track. Unless a team is mentally well prepared, the batting is bound to crumble especially when you are playing on foreign soil; playing against an attack of this nature.

After the sudden rush of blood and purge of wickets, five wickets fell for soft dismissals, Bangladesh slumped from a healthy 67 for no loss to 157 for 5 at lunch. Meanwhile skipper Rahim along with wicketkeep­er Lion Das brought sanity to the Bangladesh inning and the visitors ambled to lunch with Das not out on 32 and Rahim not out on 34.

The post lunch session was a carbon copy of the first.this time the Chinaman Sandakan removed the Bangladesh skipper Rahim in the second ball of that session.the two batsmen had added 54 runs for the sixth wicket during that time.

With the wicket of Das Herath became the most left arm spinner in Test history surpassing New Zealander Daniel Vettori (362 wickets).

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 ??  ?? Skipper Rangana Herath celebrates
Skipper Rangana Herath celebrates

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