After grinding out 412 in the better part of two days, New Zealand
tightened their control of the second Test with an incisive spell by
their seamers to nip out three wickets - the fulcrum of the top order -
before stumps on the second day. A combination of poor shots and a
probing line by Tim Southee and Trent Boult left Sri Lanka at 12 for 3
by the sixth over. New Zealand were just as penetrative in Galle, but
the difference here was that bowlers had the cushion of runs to work
with. Earlier, Rangana Herath picked up another five-wicket haul - his
sixth in 2012 - to give Sri Lanka something to shout about after a tough
opening day.
The New Zealand seamers managed more swing with the new ball than the
hosts, but it was the straighter one that consumed Tillakaratne Dilshan.
After crashing his first ball past cover, he played down the wrong line
to Southee and was bowled through the gate. Two balls later, Kumar
Sangakkara was surprised by a short one but went through with the hook,
only to find fine leg. Mahela Jayawardene played and missed at Trent
Boult, and after edging a boundary past the slips, fished at one that
moved away and drove straight to Kane Williamson at gully. With the
three big guns going cheaply, New Zealand couldn't have asked for a more
ideal start.
After a one-sided opening day, Sri Lanka redressed the balance just when
New Zealand would have entertained thoughts of posting a total in
excess of 500, given the solid foundation provided by the overnight pair
of Ross Taylor and Kane Williamson, who had batted nearly 97 overs
across four sessions. Williamson has been praised for his temperament
and ability to play spin better than his more experienced colleagues in
the batting line-up. His century on the second morning was his third in
his two-year career and second in the subcontinent, including a debut
ton against India.
Sri Lanka's seamers did pose some questions with the new ball, getting
marginally more swing than on the first morning. What Sri Lanka lacked
was variety. They needed a seamer to hit the deck hard and extract
bounce with the new ball.
Williamson, overnight on 95, remained watchful. He brought up his
century with an outside edge that went for four to third man, the first
boundary of the morning. The pair, in the process passed the New Zealand
record for the highest third-wicket stand away from home, beating the
224 between John F Reid and Martin Crowe in Brisbane.
With the pitch not taking turn, only a mistake from the batsman could
have yielded a wicket. Taylor moved across his stumps to sweep Herath
but was caught in front of the leg stump, ending the 262-run stand.
Williamson too perished in similar manner to the same bowler and Sri
Lanka removed the centurions in quick succession. There was room for
another breakthrough when Kruger van Wyk missed a straight one from
Tillakaratne Dilshan, with the score on 291 for 5. A score of 400 seemed
a long way off, but Daniel Flynn put them on that path.
After lunch, Herath struck again when he trapped the debutant Todd Astle
lbw padding up to an arm ball. There was turn and bounce on the
second-day pitch, but Flynn and Doug Bracewell ensured New Zealand
didn't get rolled over quickly. Flynn was solid in defense, played the
ball late and pushed the singles.
Jayawardene tried creating chances by placing several close fielders.
Herath bowled round the wicket to Flynn with a short leg, backward short
leg, short midwicket and short mid-on waiting for the chipped shot on
the on side. Flynn was careful with the sweep and focused on blocking
out the spin with his defense.
Bracewell was positive using his feet against the spinners but perished
after holing out to deep midwicket for 24. Flynn was happy to push the
singles and give the strike to the lower order, who hung around to annoy
the hosts as they looked to keep New Zealand under 400. Flynn brought
up his half-century by paddling a full toss shortly before the tea
break. Herath wrapped up the innings shortly after tea, trapping Flynn
on the backfoot and then bowling Boult, taking him one short of equaling
Graeme Swann, who leads the wicket charts for 2012 with 53.
With the early burst of wickets, Sri Lanka's thoughts had turned to
passing the follow on target, which is still 170 away. The other worry
for Sri Lanka was that Thilan Samaraweera had injured his finger while
attempting a catch at slip and didn't come out to bat.
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