A day that began on even terms finished being one-sided. New Zealand's
fast-bowling stocks may be promising but their batting continued to be a
serious worry and it let them down again, on a day when they had the
rare chance of pressing ahead and aiming for a win. They slumped to a
fifth straight Test defeat in conditions far less lethal than their
scoreline suggested. The batsmen were largely victims of their own
approach and lack of confidence against spin on a slow and low pitch.
Rangana Herath
was again the wrecker-in-chief, continuing his incredible run in Galle,
and finished with 11 wickets in the match. Both his hauls of ten
wickets or more in a Test have come in Galle, where he's picked up 46 in
eight games at 20.30, including five of his 12 five-fors. His
achievement wasn't a surprise, certainly not against an opposition whose
performances against spin have been woeful in the recent past. In their
last five Tests, all of them defeats, they've lost 62 wickets out of
100 to spin. Only one of those games went into the fifth day.
Sri Lanka were disciplined and cut down drastically on the bad
deliveries they had delivered on the opening day when Brendon McCullum
and Daniel Flynn had managed to find some release after the loss of
early wickets. There was hardly any swing or movement for the seamers,
and the ball never carried to slip, though the spinners found a fair
amount of turn. The overall result of their tight lines and variations
in pace and length was a stagnating run-flow and an eventual collapse.
At a time when New Zealand would have been aiming to begin solidly and
lay a platform for a challenging lead, they were hit by a Nuwan
Kulasekara double-strike. Martin Guptill was dismissed in a manner
similar to the first innings, when he played down the wrong line, only
this time he was bowled. Kane Williamson was a touch unfortunate to be
caught down the leg side, when he tried to glide one down to fine leg
and New Zealand were reduced to 46 for 3.
Ross Taylor square-drove the seamers for two fours and looked
comfortable against Herath while defending, and he and Flynn appeared to
infuse a bit of urgency to an innings that badly needed a fillip. But
there remained some uncertainty against the spinners. Herath got one to
spit away and bounce past Taylor's bat, and that may have played on the
batsman's mind when, shortly after, he misread an arm ball from Herath
to be trapped in front.
James Franklin had spent some time on the pitch before the start of
play, standing on the crease and scanning the areas he could score off.
He appeared to come out with a plan, as he stepped out to Herath, often
to try working him on to the leg side. That prompted Mahela Jayawardene
to employ two midwickets for him, but Franklin was undeterred. It did
not pay, as he was beaten in flight to be stumped, albeit
unconvincingly, by Prasanna Jayawardene - he failed to collect but the
ball ricocheted off his chest and dislodged the bails.
Flynn was the most confident and enterprising of New Zealand's batsmen
today, picking out midwicket as a favoured scoring area, fetching
deliveries from outside off, piercing the field on either side of the
wicket and trying his utmost to rotate the strike. But he was taken by
surprise as Herath turned one in sharply and bowled him through the
gate. When Doug Bracewell failed to pick an arm ball next ball, the end
was nigh for New Zealand. The desperation to stretch the lead and give
themselves something to bowl at was evident when Tim Southee and Trent
Boult went over the top and struck three sixes between them, but they
too succumbed to spin, only managing to extend the advantage to 92 runs.
An early burst from the seamers was New Zealand's only hope - somewhat
dented from the outset by Tim Southee's absence due to a niggle - but a
presumably nervous Sri Lanka opening partnership, on a pair, ensured the
chase was smooth. Tharanga Paranavitana had just one half-century in
his previous 11 innings and would have been under pressure. He was
subdued to begin with but eventually got going, using his feet well
against Jeetan Patel to launch him for six, before smashing Bracewell
over point towards the close. He stayed through to the end of the chase,
but it'll be interesting to see how the combination changes should
Tillakaratne Dilshan return to the line-up in the next Test.
Paranavitana could face competition for that opening slot from the debutant Dimuth Karunaratne,
who did his own prospects no harm with an attractive half-century. He
was edgy at the start but looked strong on the back foot, punching
boundaries through midwicket and extra cover and even pulling in the
direction of square leg. He also cashed in on some freebies on leg stump
and eased to a maiden fifty.
The day was a fulfilling one for Sri Lanka, and the hope of a
closely-fought game raised by New Zealand proved deceptive in the end.
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