Pakistan make inroads after lunch, but Sri Lanka take lead past 250

Cricket

Tea Sri Lanka 378 and 109 for 4 (Mathews 35, Chandimal 16*, Karunaratne 4*, Salman 1-9) lead Pakistan 231 (Salman 62, Imam 32, Ramesh 5-47, Jayasuriya 3-80) by 256 runs

Pakistan removed Sri Lanka’s top four after lunch, clawing back somewhat in a match in which they are well behind, on account of having been bowled out for 231 earlier in the day. They had given up a 147-run first-innings lead, and by tea on the third day, were 256 runs behind Sri Lanka, who had six second-innings wickets in hand.

As Pakistan had chased down 342 in the last match, Sri Lanka would be intent on putting up an even more substantial target, particularly given the time that remains in this match. At tea, they had their form batter, Dinesh Chandimal, at the crease. With him was Dimuth Karunaratne, who did not open the innings as he usually does, because he had missed most of Pakistan’s batting innings with a back sprain, and as such was not allowed to bat before 2.20pm.
For Pakistan, four bowlers took a wicket apiece in the afternoon. Naseem Shah first had Niroshan Dickwella, who had opened in Karunaratne’s place, caught behind with a delivery angled across him. Yasir Shah had Oshada Fernando lbw not long after that. Kusal Mendis was soon trapped in front by Mohammad Nawaz. And then, after a partnership that brought 41, Angelo Mathews was given out on review, on slim Snicko evidence, off Agha Salman. Mathews, playing the second innings of his 100th Test, left the field shaking his head.

Mathews had seemed the most fluent of Sri Lanka’s batters in this session, bashing his 11th delivery through the covers, finding boundaries through midwicket and mid-off, and even bludgeoning Nawaz down the ground for a six. All but two of his runs came in front of square, as Pakistan bowled straight at him.

By tea, Chandimal had also hit only one of his 16 runs behind square, and had not hit a boundary off the 48 deliveries he faced. Aside from Hasan Ali, who was clearly struggling for rhythm, Pakistan’s bowlers maintained good discipline on a surface that was still good to bat on.

Mathews’ dismissal, roughly 12 minutes before tea, was perhaps the most controversial moment of the Test so far. Salman thought he had induced a thin outside edge as Mathews pushed forward, but on-field umpire Kumar Dharmasena did not agree. Pakistan reviewed the decision, and the merest tremor on Snicko was enough for third umpire Marais Erasmus to overturn the decision.

Earlier, Sri Lanka’s spinners removed Pakistan’s last three first-innings wickets for 40 runs in the first 90 minutes of day three. Yasir and Hasan batted out 14 overs together, without playing particularly aggressively at any stage, until Prabath Jayasuriya bowled Hasan off an under-edge.
Ramesh Mendis then claimed the last two wickets, and completed the third five-wicket haul of his Test career. His take was 5 for 47. Jayasuriya ended with 3 for 80.

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