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Rangana Herath recorded the best figures by a bowler in a Test in Zimbabwe as Sri Lanka completed a 257-run victory in the second Test at Harare Sports Club yesterday to sweep the series 2-0. Sri Lanka went into the final day needing just three wickets to wrap up the match, and Herath required less than an hour to claim them as he finished with eight wickets in the second innings, bowling Zimbabwe out for 233.
The left-arm spinner’s 8 for 63 were the best figures in an innings by a player in Zimbabwe, while his 13 for 152 were the best figures in a match. “I am always trying to improve,” said the 38-year-old. “I don’t think about records and will take each series as it comes.”
Zimbabwe’s only real hope of pushing Sri Lanka on day five rested with Craig Ervine, who resumed on 65 not out with Zimbabwe on 180 for seven in pursuit of 491 for victory. But the left-hander was the first batsman to fall as Herath had him well caught by Dhananjaya de Silva at slip for 72.
Carl Mumba was next to go, trapped lbw by the left-arm spinner, and although last man Chris Mpofu provided some entertainment as he lofted two huge sixes, he fell to Herath in the same fashion to bring the game to a close.
“His control was exceptional,” Zimbabwe captain Graeme Cremer said of Herath. “He doesn’t look like he’s doing a lot, but he’s got subtle variations that as a batsman you don’t pick up. Only when you watch the replays afterwards do you realise what he was trying to do.”
Opening batsman Dimuth Karunaratne was named man of the series for his 280 runs in four innings.
Zimbabwe lost both games by large margins, but took both Tests into the final day and nearly secured a draw in the first match. “We’re happy they’ve gone five days, and there were a lot of positives for us,” said Cremer.
“But a lot of the mistakes we made at crucial times, like dropping silly catches, changed the games in a huge way. We need to improve on that.”
The two teams will play each other in a one-day international on Monday, when a triangular series also involving the West Indies gets underway at the same venue.
Stokes, Ali star as England in control
AFP
Rajkot, India
Centurion Moeen Ali said patience was the key to run-scoring as England posted the highest score by a visiting team in nearly five years in the first Test in Rajkot against
India yesterday.
England’s first innings score of 537 was built around Ali’s 117 and an impressive 128 runs by Ben Stokes, who managed to banish memories of three ducks against India in his three previous innings.
India’s openers Gautam Gambhir (28 not out) and Murali Vijay (25 not out) responded with an unbeaten stand of 63 in the final session on the second day, the hosts trailing by 474 runs with all their wickets intact.
The stylish Joe Root (124) had notched up a century on the opening day to lay a solid foundation for England’s middle-order batsmen at Rajkot’s Saurashtra Cricket Association ground. The day belonged to England’s batsmen who made India pay for their sloppiness in the field that saw them drop at least five catches.
“Patience is something Saqi (spin coach Saqlain Mushtaq) talks about a lot, we knew we needed to be patient,” said Ali, 29, after the day’s play. “It’s a very good pitch. We didn’t plod much against the spinners and tried to be attacking in our approach,” said Ali.
The spinning all-rounder also insisted he slept well despite going to bed at 99 not out on Wednesday. “I slept really well. I was pretty normal, I was fine.”
India’s bowlers struggled in the heat and grime, with top-ranked spinner Ravichandran Ashwin conceding 167 runs while taking just two wickets. But left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja was quick to spring to Ashwin’s defence, saying any bowler can have an off-day.
“It’s part of the game. We were playing five bowlers. It is the responsibility of every bowler and not just Ashwin to take wickets,” said Jadeja. “Sometimes half-chances get converted and on some days easy chances are dropped.”
Although England lost a succession of tailenders in the period immediately after lunch, Stokes stayed put to help England post their third highest total on Indian soil. Stokes hit 13 fours and two sixes en route to his fourth ton in the longest format of the game.
England were on the attack in the morning session, hammering 139 runs while losing two wickets including that of Ali who was bowled by Mohammed Shami (2-65). Jonny Bairstow, the highest Test run-scorer this year, made 46 and shared a brisk 99-run partnership for the sixth wicket with Stokes before also falling to Shami.
Stokes was dropped twice in his sixties by wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha with Umesh Yadav (2-112) being the unlucky bowler on both occasions. The Indians took the new ball in the morning after England who had won the toss resumed at 311 for 4, but failed to get an immediate breakthrough.
Ali reached his century off the third ball of the day from Shami who seemed to have recovered from the cramps he suffered on the opening day. The all-rounder singled out Yadav for special punishment, taking three fours in four balls off the paceman.
Stokes chipped in before Shami broke their 62-run stand with the wicket of Ali, who saw his off-stump cartwheel away after misjudging the line and not playing a shot. England’s total was the highest by a visiting team in India since the West Indies made 590 at Mumbai in November 2011.
And the last time three visiting batsmen scored centuries in the same innings in India was in 2008-09 when Sri Lanka toured the country. Top-ranked India have won 12 and drawn one of their last 13 Tests at home since England sealed a historic 2-1 victory in Kolkata in 2012.
England’s Ben Stokes plays a shot as India’s wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha (left) and Ajinkya Rahane (centre) look on during the first Test in Rajkot, India, yesterday. (AFP)
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