Friday, May 27, 2011

Mfarhanonline:England fight back against Sri Lanka

Fav Tag:


Mfarhanonline Sports News CARDIFF, United Kingdom: England took two wickets late on a rain-marred opening day against Sri Lanka after the tourists threatened to make an ideal start to the first Test at Sophia Gardens here on Thursday.

Sri Lanka, who closed on 133 for two, were 93 for none before they lost captain Tillakaratne Dilshan (50) and former skipper Kumar Sangakkara (11) to be 114 for two.

Tharanga Paranavitana was 58 not out and Mahela Jayawardene unbeaten on four after rain meant only 48 out of a scheduled 90 overs were possible on the first day of this three-Test series.

“Tharanga batted really well at one end and I put the loose ball away,” Dilshan told reporters after helping compile Sri Lanka”s best opening partnership in a Test in England.

“We”re really happy to finish at 133 for two but personally I”m really disappointed to get in and then play a bad shot.”

Left-handed opener Paranavitana, who cut Chris Tremlett for four to bring up his fifty, has so far batted for more than three-and-a-half hours, facing 154 balls including six boundaries.

Dilshan reined himself in after winning the toss but still made fifty off 92 balls, with seven fours, and during his innings he became the ninth Sri Lanka batsman to score 4,000 Test runs.

But two balls after reaching his half-century he tried to cut a ball from off-spinner Swann that was too close to him and played on.

Swann, who often takes a wicket early in his spell, finished the day with impressive figures of one for 12 in eight overs.

Anderson meanwhile had a return of one for 42 off 15, including a miserly opening spell of seven overs for seven runs.

Dilshan”s departure ended an opening stand of 93 that gave Sri Lanka a solid foundation in what was their first Test outside the subcontinent since they toured the West Indies in 2008.

Former captain Sangakkara then got off the mark with a typically elegant cover-driven four off James Anderson.

But not long afterwards the Lancashire seamer had his man when England appealed for caught behind against Sangakkara.

Pakistan”s Aleem Dar, widely regarded as one of the world”s best umpires, ruled in the batsman”s favour and that led England, who were convinced Sangakkara had edged through to wicket-keeper Matt Prior, to call for a review.

Rod Tucker took his time and the Australian third umpire eventually gave Sangakkara out.

International Cricket Council chief executive Haroon Lorgat has repeatedly insisted the purpose of the review system is to eliminate the “obvious howler” rather than alter a marginal decision, such as Sangakkara”s dismissal.

But Dilshan insisted he”d no problems with the verdict.

“I think technology helped with the Sangakkara decision. After coming back to the dressing-room, he saw the edge shown on HotSpot.”

Share and Enjoy: Print Digg Sphinn del.icio.us Facebook Mixx Blogplay Add to favorites BarraPunto Bitacoras.com BlinkList blogmarks Blogosphere News blogtercimlap connotea Current Design Float Diggita Diigo DotNetKicks DZone eKudos email Fark Faves Fleck FriendFeed FSDaily Global Grind Gwar HackerNews Haohao HealthRanker HelloTxt Hemidemi Hyves Identi.ca IndianPad Internetmedia Kirtsy laaik.it LaTafanera LinkaGoGo LinkArena LinkedIn Linkter Live Meneame MisterWong MisterWong.DE MOB muti MyShare MySpace N4G Netvibes Netvouz NewsVine NuJIJ PDF Ping.fm Posterous Propeller QQ书签 Ratimarks Rec6 Reddit RSS Scoopeo Segnalo SheToldMe Simpy Slashdot Socialogs SphereIt StumbleUpon Suggest to Techmeme via Twitter Technorati ThisNext Tipd Tumblr Twitter Upnews viadeo FR Webnews.de Webride Wikio Wikio FR Wikio IT Wists Wykop Xerpi Yahoo! Buzz Yigg 豆瓣 豆瓣九点

http://www.mfarhanonline.com/2011052726052/england-fight-back-against-sri-lanka/

0 comments :

Popular Posts