Gulf Today

Ashwin and Ishant put India on top

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Ravichandr­an Ashwin and Ishant Sharma led a powerful bowling display by India to skittle out Sri Lanka for 205 on the opening day of the second Test.

The hosts were 11 for one at the close, trailing by 194 runs, after opener Lokesh Rahul fell for seven, bowled by Sri Lankan paceman Lahiru Gamage.

Murali Vijay and Cheteshwar Pujara, both on two, were batting at the close in Nagpur. The day belonged to India’s bowlers however. Ashwin took four wickets and fellow spinner Ravindra Jadeja and Sharma three each.

“I think me and Ashwin were trying to bowl in good areas. Trying to restrict them by not giving easy boundaries,” Jadeja, who took 3-56, told reporters.

Skipper Dinesh Chandimal topscored for Sri Lanka with 57 while opener Dimuth Karunaratn­e made 51 on a green pitch that helped India’s fast bowlers.

Sharma, who got Karunaratn­e after lunch, made the most of the favourable conditions to claim his three wickets for just 37 runs.

The spinners then took centre stage once the sun came out. Ashwin trapped Chandimal lbw to put the visitors in trouble.

Chandimal, who hit a six in his 122-ball knock, was given not out by the on-field umpire but skipper Virat Kohli called for a review which went in India’s favour.

“Ashwin is an intelligen­t bowler with some subtle variations. He is going to be a handful on any wicket he is going to play,” Sri Lanka coach Nic Pothas said.

Chandimal and Karunaratn­e, who registered his 14th Test fifty, put on a crucial 62-run stand for the fourth wicket before the Indian bowlers struck back.

Wicketkeep­er Niroshan Dickwella also tried to resist before falling to Jadeja’s left-arm spin.

Sri Lanka lost Sadeera Samarawick­rama early after the opener edged a seaming delivery from Sharma to Cheteshwar Pujara at first slip for 13.

Left-handers Karunaratn­e and Lahiru Thirimanne then tried to resist a persistent Indian attack during a 24-run second wicket stand that lasted 121 balls.

Karunaratn­e, who got reprieves on 17 and 21, passed 1,000 Test runs for the year, with South Africa’s Dean Elgar the only other opener to achieve the feat in 2017.

The batting duo were solid in defence before Ashwin bowled Thirimanne after his 58-ball nine.

“I think India bowled very well. I don’t think that there were many free balls going around that we missed out on,” Pothas said. NEW DELHI: An Indian women’s state Cricket team managed just two runs in an official 50-over match, one of the lowest totals ever recorded.

Opening bat Menka scored one run and the other was a wide as nine of the Nagaland under-19s were out for ducks against Kerala.

Kerala then took just one legitimate delivery to win by 10 wickets, with 299 balls to spare.

Nagaland, debutants in the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) Super Series tournament, did at least win the toss in the game on Thursday.

They chose to bat and Menka scored one run off 18 balls before she was caught in the sixth over. It triggered the mother of all collapses as Nagaland were bowled out inside 17 overs — 16 of them maidens.

A total of two didn’t give the Nagaland bowlers much room for error, and they started badly when Deepika Kaintura sent down a wide with her first ball.

Kerala’s Ansu Raju then put Nagaland out of their misery by hitting a four off the first legal ball.

 ?? Reuters ?? India’s Ravichandr­an Ashwin (left) appeals for the dismissal of Sri Lanka’s Lahiru Thirimanne (unseen) during the first day of their second Test on Friday. NAGPUR:
Reuters India’s Ravichandr­an Ashwin (left) appeals for the dismissal of Sri Lanka’s Lahiru Thirimanne (unseen) during the first day of their second Test on Friday. NAGPUR:

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