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Sri Lanka refuse to make excuses as Delhi pollution remains severe

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Delhi’s notorious smog did not halt play as it did on Sunday but Sri Lanka batsman Angelo Mathews said the air remained as bad as his team battled for survival against India in the final Test yesterday.

The second day’s play was stopped twice on Sunday as Sri Lanka fast bowlers Suranga Lakmal and Lahiru Gamage walked off the field after the seasonal haze blanketed the Feroz Shah Kotla Stadium.

Several players wore facemasks and coach Nic Pothas said two of them vomited in the dressing-room. Nothing of that sort, however, was reported yesterday as centuries by Mathews and captain Dinesh Chandimal helped Sri Lanka to 356-9, their highest score in the series, when play stopped early.

Sri Lanka begin today 180 runs behind India.

“It was pretty much the same as yesterday, I’d say. Or even a bit worse, I’m not really sure,” said Mathews, who ended his two-year century drought with a knock of 111. “But look, we got to deal with what we have for the next two days,”

Delhi’s government last month ordered schools to shut temporaril­y after pollution readings in some places peaked at 500, the most severe level on the government’s air quality measuring index.

Asked if the Internatio­nal Cricket Council should come out with clear guidelines for such cases, Mathews said: “It’s up to the match referee to talk to the ICC. This was one of those unique occasions, we never had this kind of issues.

“There is a match referee, there are two umpires and I’m sure they’d sit and talk to ICC.”

Mathews dismissed suggestion­s that the episode has created bad blood between the sides. “Not at all.

“As I said, it was one of those unique occasions, where no one knew what to do. It didn’t hamper the relation of the players at all. We play hard on the field, and off the field we are great friends,” he said.

India bowling coach Bharat Arun said on Sunday that the match was “unnecessar­ily” halted, pointing to Virat Kohli’s seven-and-half-hour innings of 243 during which the India captain did not feel uncomforta­ble. The visitors need to win this Test to equal the threematch series.

 ?? AP ?? Captain Dinesh Chandimal, right, led Sri Lanka’s fightback in challengin­g smog-filled conditions on Day 3 in Delhi
AP Captain Dinesh Chandimal, right, led Sri Lanka’s fightback in challengin­g smog-filled conditions on Day 3 in Delhi

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