After 130 overs had been lost to rain in the first Test of a
three-match series, England bowled the tourists out for just 82 in a fraction
over two hours in their second innings.
The result was a stunning turnaround after only 15 wickets
had fallen on the first four days and provided yet more evidence that England's
ambition to become the number one Test team in the world is a realistic goal.
The final day started four hours late and England batted for
only two overs to allow Ian Bell to reach his hundred, declaring at 496 for
five.
Sri Lanka then began their second innings trailing by 96
runs at 1521 local time. By 1732 the game was over.
Fast bowler Chris Tremlett sparked the win with the first
three wickets and finished with four for 40. Off-spinner Graeme Swann claimed
four for 16 and Stuart Broad wrapped up the win with the final two wickets.
England's performance was all the more praiseworthy as they
had been reduced to three specialist bowlers when their leading paceman James
Anderson suffered a side strain in the Sri Lanka first innings.
Sri Lanka struggled immediately when Tharanga Piranavitana
was caught at first slip off Tremlett for a duck and skipper Tillakaratne
Dilshan was caught and bowled for 10 before tea.
After the interval, Sri Lanka were immediately under
pressure once more when Mahela Jayawardene (15) became England and Tremlett's
third wicket. After playing and missing the previous ball, the batsman edged
the next delivery to captain Andrew Strauss at first slip.
It was then 36 for four when Thilan Samaraweera (0), batting
with an injured elbow, chopped a bottom edge on to his stumps from a ball that
turned and kept low from Swann.
The procession of wickets continued as Sri Lanka slipped
from 43 for four to 43 for seven, starting with the loss of former captain
Kumar Sangakkara for 14. The left-hander came forward and prodded at Swann only
to edge low down to Strauss at slip for his third catch of the innings.
By this time the 922 spectators, who had either braved the
rain or arrived late to watch just under half a day's play, would have sensed
that one of Test cricket's most freakish results was about to unfold before
their eyes.
The sixth man to depart was all-rounder and number seven
batsman Farveez Maharoof (0), caught off a faint edge by wicketkeeper Matt
Prior off Swann. He failed in his bid to have the decision reversed on review.
The next victim in the crazy session was first innings
centurion Prasanna Jayawardene (3), who was caught down the leg side by Matt
Prior off Tremlett. Initially umpire Billy Doctrove rejected England's appeal
but it was overturned on review.
The Sri Lankans looked to be plummeting towards their lowest
Test total of 71 when they slumped to 52 for eight with Rangana Herath (3)
departing lbw to Swann after missing a sweep.
Ajantha Mendis drove Swann through the covers for a boundary
but a rally in which Thisara Perera counter-attacked briefly for 20, including
four fours was soon over.
Perera jabbed a ball heading for his ribcage from Stuart
Broad to Ian Bell at shirt leg, an impressive one-handed diving effort.
Last man Suranga Lakmal was the 10th victim two balls later
when he edged Broad to third slip Alastair Cook to spark jubilant scenes among
the England team.
England seize dramatic win over Sri Lanka
Publication Date:
Tue, 2011-05-31 01:22
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