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regular-article-logo Tuesday, 24 September 2024

Sri Lanka move up to 3rd spot in World Test Championship table

Overnight batsman Rachin Ravindra, who had kept New Zealand’s hopes alive with a valiant 91 on Sunday, could only add one more run to his total before being trapped leg before wicket by Jayasuriya

Our Bureau, AP/PTI Galle Published 24.09.24, 11:25 AM
Prabath Jayasuriya with the ball after taking a five-wicket haul in the second innings after Sri Lanka won the first Test against New Zealand in Galle on Monday.

Prabath Jayasuriya with the ball after taking a five-wicket haul in the second innings after Sri Lanka won the first Test against New Zealand in Galle on Monday. AP/PTI

Left-arm spinner Prabath Jayasuriya delivered a stellar five-wicket haul in the second innings and nine wickets overall, to lead Sri Lanka to a 63-run victory over New Zealand in the first Test on Monday.

New Zealand resumed play on the final day needing 68 more runs to reach a victory target of 275. However, they managed to add just four before Sri Lanka wrapped up the game in only 3.4 overs.

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Overnight batsman Rachin Ravindra, who had kept New Zealand’s hopes alive with a valiant 91 on Sunday, could only add one more run to his total before being trapped leg before wicket by Jayasuriya. The promising left-hander’s resistance ended as he misjudged a delivery trying to defend on the back foot.

In Jayasuriya’s next over, he bowled last man William O’Rourke for a duck, sealing Sri Lanka’s victory in a tightly contested match. This was the 32-year-old spinner’s eighth five-wicket haul in Tests.

Although Ravindra narrowly missed out on a well-deserved century, his score of 92 is now the highest by a New Zealand batter in Galle, surpassing Ross Taylor’s 86.

Notably, no New Zealander has scored a century in Galle, where they have now lost all five matches played.

Sri Lanka’s win moved them up to third place in the World Test Championship standings, behind India and Australia. Meanwhile, New Zealand dropped to fourth after starting the series in third position.

Playing their first Test since March, several Black Caps players put in strong performances, especiallypacer O’Rourke who took eight wickets in his first Test in Asia and just his third match overall.

On the back of O’Rourke’s 5/55 the Kiwis managed to secure a first-innings lead, a significant thing on a Galle pitch that becomes increasingly difficult to bat on as the game progresses.

However, New Zealand’s failure to break the crucial 147-run third-wicket partnership between Dinesh Chandimal and Dimuth Karunaratne in Sri Lanka’s second innings proved decisive.

Brief scores: SL 305 & 309. NZ 340 & 211 (Rachin Ravindra 92, Prabath Jayasuriya 5/68, Ramesh Mendis 3/83). SL won by 63 runs.

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