New Zealand's troubles against spin refused to leave them. They had few
answers against R Ashwin and Pragyan Ojha during the tour of India, and
ran into Rangana Herath in Galle in conditions less lethal. Under sunny
skies on a track good for batting, New Zealand failed to take advantage
after winning the toss, allowing a disciplined Sri Lanka attack to first
make inroads through pace before capitulating to Herath's left-arm
spin. The assistance to the bowlers was limited, but a lack of patience
from the batsmen combined with some probing bowling to produce enough
mistakes that won Sri Lanka wickets and first-day honours.
The highlights for New Zealand on a disappointing day were
half-centuries to Brendon McCullum and Daniel Flynn, who put together a
90-run stand after three wickets went down in the first hour. But just
as the innings was gaining in momentum after lunch, Herath struck to
trigger a collapse that was to fetch him his fourth haul of five or more
wickets in Galle.
McCullum hasn't scored a Test century in two years, and the previous
time Flynn scored a Test fifty was in August 2009. Today, the pair, for
the bulk of their stay, batted with determination after having watched
Martin Guptill caught driving inside the line, Ross Taylor bowled trying
to defend outside the line and Kane Williamson snapped up behind to a
needless poke. Shaminda Eranga, who replaced Chanaka Welegedera, picked
up two of those wickets, the extra yard of pace, consistency on a good
length and a bit of away movement all contributing to his success.
As they were trying to rebuild the innings, McCullum and Flynn had some
moments of discomfort but were more watchful than their top order
team-mates had been, leaving tricky deliveries outside off, covering the
line well and defending solidly. And despite the attacking fields set -
Flynn had three slips and two gullies at one stage - they were harsh on
a steady dose of bad balls. Flynn cashed in on width by collecting
boundaries through cover and point, improvised against spin by using the
sweep, and pulled the slower of the seamers, Angelo Mathews, through
midwicket.
The pull was the preferred attacking shot against spin for McCullum, who
smashed four boundaries through square leg, one that took him past 4000
runs in Tests and another that sailed over the ropes. He welcomed
Eranga in his new spell by cracking him through extra cover and then
behind square for fours, and grew confident against Herath by stepping
out and launching him for a straight six. But the bowler wasn't
flustered. If the previous ball was tossed up and bowled on a length, he
held back the next from round the wicket, and got it to turn away after
it angled in, beating McCullum's bat to crash into off stump.
The turn on offer wasn't alarming but still significant for a first-day
pitch, and McCullum's dismissal together with spin from both ends
brought about a stagnation in New Zealand's innings that had been moving
fluently until then. The next 13 overs yielded just 12 runs as well as
the wicket of James Franklin, who was trapped in front by Herath. Flynn
had occupied one end safely but his patience deserted him at the stroke
of tea, when he chased a wide one from Herath to nick a catch to the
wicketkeeper.
New Zealand have a long, inexperienced lower order whose ability to
resist has not inspired much hope in recent times, but the last four
wickets did put together 66 runs today. Doug Bracwell was caught at slip
off a Herath delivery that kicked from a good length, and Kruger van
Wyk, after working hard to get to 28, misjudged the length while trying
to sweep and gave Herath his fifth wicket.
New Zealand got some encouragement with the early dismissal of the
nervous debutant, Dimuth Karunaratne, who was lbw to an inswinger from
Southee. The new ball swung around, came perilously close to the outside
edge and promised more anxious moments for the Sri Lanka batsmen in the
early part of the second innings. But that was a small victory for New
Zealand on a day they won a good toss, only to finish with a below-par
total.
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