Showing posts with label Karunaratne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Karunaratne. Show all posts

Sunday, March 26, 2023

Williamson and Nicholls Shine at the Basin

 New Zealand v Sri Lanka, Second Test, Basin Reserve, 17-20 March 2023

Scorecard

This was the 2,500th test match since it all began in Melbourne 146 years ago, and in New Zealand, at least, the format has never been so vibrant or appealing.

The most remarkable match that any of us have seen was followed just two weeks later in Christchurch by only the second occasion on which test-match victory was obtained off the last possible ball, as Kane Williamson hurled himself ahead of the throw to record the most valuable bye in cricket history.

When Ian Smith tailored his bespoke “by the barest of margins” description of the end of the Game of Which We Do Not Care to Speak in 2019, he could not have imagined that it would become an off-the-peg expression for use at home in the following few years.

Domestic cricket has been infected by the tension trend; Wellington’s games with Northern Districts this season have been won by one wicket and lost by two runs. Has any other ground staged games with one-wicket and one-run margins in the same season?

This test match was not a classic, but it contained much good cricket, almost all of it played by the home team. It was, even more than most cricket matches, full of statistical oddities. One of these was that it was first time since 1996 that New Zealand had selected a team with no left-armer as part of the attack. Dan Vettori, Trent Boult and Neil Wagner are the three main reasons for the sustained period of ambidextrousness and it was the latter's absence that ended it. Just as he was at the Basin against England, Wagner was crucially involved at the end of the Christchurch game, where he ignored injuries that would have put most of us in a wheelchair to complete the winning bye. He says that his test career is not over, and we all hope that he is right.

Doug Bracewell, cousin of Michael, son of Brendon, nephew of John, replaced Wagner, his first test appearance since 2016. There are a number of reasons for the long sabbatical, one being the unprecedented strength of New Zealand’s pace bowling in this period, another a run of injuries, some sustained in the early hours. A deceased cockatoo was also complicit.

Bracewell D also became the sixth player in the team with a double L in his name, but this may be mining the seam of statistical obscurity a little too deep.

The Basin Reserve pitch has sometimes been described in these columns as an early celebration of St Patrick’s Day, so, with the test match starting on that day, it was no surprise that something with the hue of an algae-covered pond was revealed when the covers were removed. We should all have learned by now that green pitches in New Zealand are fierce-looking dogs that roll over to have their tummies rubbed at the first opportunity. Sri Lanka learned this the hard way. An attack that had looked capable in Christchurch appeared to take the view that winning the toss had handed them a fistful of chips that could be cashed in simply by turning their arms over; in fact, great precision was required to extract any help that the pitch held within it.

Rajitha and Fernando were erratic in length; Kumara was more consistent, but only inasmuch as he was always far too short. There was also the wind, which Devon Conway described as the strongest he had experienced in his six years at the Basin. The quicker bowlers from the southern end will have felt as if they were marking time as they ran in, while for the spinners controlling flight was akin to taming an eagle. Later in the match Michael Bracewell tossed one up only for the gale to take it from its line on the stumps past the return crease for a wide.

Neither of New Zealand’s openers could blame the pitch for their fall. Tom Latham, on 21, pulled a catch straight to the only deep fielder.

Conway was in top form, his driving through the offside a thing of beauty, accounting for a good proportion of the 13 fours that contributed to his 78. Just when he looked booked in for a big score, Conway came down the pitch to off spinner Dhananjaya de Silva, but didn’t quite get there. The bowler took an athletic return catch.

Kane Williamson and Henry Nicholls were now together. At the start of the test season there was criticism of Williamson with foolish phrases such as “if he can be bothered to turn up” bandied about. Now free of the elbow injury that weighed him down for a while, he has produced scores of 132, 121 and, here, 215 in successive test matches, each of which were the foundation of a New Zealand victory. His average in winning test matches is higher than any except Bradman’s (which is almost 50 higher, of course). Already New Zealand’s leading test runscorer, Williamson passed 8,000 runs at the Basin.

Conversation turned to whether he, or Martin Crowe, is our greatest batsman (acknowledging that Bert Sutcliffe and Martin Donnelly both have their advocates). Crowe, for all his technical correctness, was part nature and part art, while Williamson is more science and engineering. Let us not forget that engineers also produce things of beauty, as Williamson did here, playing with the ease and smoothness of Sinatra crooning a classic. 

Henry Nicholls is not the Last Chance Saloon’s best customer. That must be Zak Crawley. But he has been there so often that they know his tipple  and have it waiting for him as he walks through the door. With Young and Phillips both challenging his place, Nicholls joined Williamson aware that he had to produce something notable to ensure that this was not his last test match.

He was dropped by debutant keeper Madushka on six, a chance similar to the critical miss of Williamson in Christchurch that brought about Dickwella’s exclusion here. Nicholls was also dropped on 92, a return catch to Jayasuriya, but had already restored his reputation by then. Dropped chances are outside a batter’s control, but they are a test of resilience under the sort of pressure that Nicholls found himself, and he passed emphatically. He was harsh on the short bowling that Sri Lanka persisted with, and accelerated as New Zealand pushed towards a declaration. He reached 200 from 240 balls, the first time that two New Zealanders had made double hundreds in the same innings. 

The third-wicket partnership was worth 363, two fewer than Williamson’s world-record sixth wicket stand with BJ Watling against the same opponents at the Basin in 2015, and 11 more than the one they beat: Watling and McCullum’s against India here the previous year. The New Zealand record for the third wicket remains 467 by Martin Crowe and Andrew Jones, again against Sri Lanka at the Basin, in 1991. 

That was the world record until surpassed by Sangakkara and Jayawardene’ 624 against South Africa in 2006. How Sri Lanka could have done with those two great players now. Even so, with Karunaratne, Mathews and Chandimal all with test averages around or above 40, we expected getting them out for under the follow on of 381 would be tricky.

Two wickets were lost in the 17 overs left on the second day after the declaration. Matt Henry showed how the new ball was best used on this pitch with a probing line and length to induce an edge from Fernando, then Conway took a spectacular catch at point to dismiss Mendis, Doug Bracewell’s first test wicket for six years.

The first session of the third day saw two quick wickets rewarding proficient opening spells from Southee and Henry, though Mathews could have left the one that he edged to Blundell. For the rest of the morning Karunaratne and de Silva demonstrated that serenity could arise from the application of a little technique and patience, and there seemed no reason why Sri Lanka should not work steadily towards at least batting for long enough to make the enforcement of the follow on out of the question.

But the common sense that had characterised the morning was swept away with the lunchtime leftovers, starting with Chandimal giving Michael Bracewell the charge, and Blundell an easy stumping, In Bracewell’s next over, de Silva also ventured down the pitch only to chip an easy catch to Southee close in at mid wicket. The inevitable foolish run out was added to the mix, a desperate Karunaratne holed out at long on as he ran out of partners and soon enough Sri Lanka had lost their last six wickets for 65 since lunch. 

Michael Bracewell became, somewhat improbably for one who was only an occasional bowler three years ago, the first New Zealand spinner to take three wickets in the first innings of a home test since Bruce Martin took four in successive games against England in 2013.

With a six-man attack, the first innings done in 67 overs and rain predicted for the fifth day, Tim Southee enforced the follow on. Had Sri Lanka’s second innings been their first, they might well have come out with a draw. The control and discipline, which had been largely absent apart from the Karunaratne/Chandimal partnership,now spread across the order.

It was too late for there to be tension, however, particularly after the forecast improved and a fifth day was guaranteed. For the spectators the rest of the game was like watching one of the Lord of the Rings movies that are put together just over the hill from the Basin. We knew how it would end, but it took an interminable time to do so. 

Again, two wickets fell before the close. Fernando flicked a loose catch to square leg. Karunaratne reached his second half century of the day before becoming the first of five successive Sri Lankans to fall for the fatal allure of the short-pitched delivery, Conway taking a very good catch on the square legside boundary as it came to him out of the sun. 

Mendis and Mathews both went tamely in the first quarter of an hour of day four, and we started making plans for an afternoon at leisure. However, Chandimal (again) and de Silva batted with excellent judgement and considerable flair before the former top edged to fine leg just before lunch. 

Madushka was resolute in a sixth-wicket partnership of 76, and appeared to have shepherded his partner to a deserved century, but de Silva, two short of a tenth test hundred, toe-ended a lap-sweep to give short leg an easy catch. He was bereft, but got a standing ovation anyway. Crowds are generous when they know that a win is in the bag. 

The last three wickets resisted for an admirable yet irritating 35 overs, showing grit and technique. The short ball had worked well for New Zealand, but a few more at the stumps in this period might have hastened the end as the Sri Lankan tail was better at the leave than their brethren higher up the order. 

If Tim Southee is to remain New Zealand’s captain, the ICC will have to consider including Google Earth into the DRS system to ensure that the ball is in the same picture as the bat. He blew his reviews on some notable non-events, the worst of which was for a caught behind that the unsighted leg slip appealed for, supported by neither the bowler nor the keeper. He is one for 23 in terms of successful appeals. 

There was also the wind, which freshened to the extent of the camera operators having to abandon their positions on the scaffolding at the southern end of the ground, returning us to 1970s one-end coverage. I half-expected Jim Laker’s voice on the highlights, telling us what a thrillin’ innin’s we were watching. 

Two slip catches completed the game as we went into the extra eight overs. New Zealand have now gone six years without losing a home series, and recent performances against Pakistan, England and Sri Lanka have restored our faith to some extent.

That concludes my cricket season 2022-23. A great test match and a good one will be treasured in the memory. I hope that the fixture list offers more opportunities to watch for domestic first-class and 50-over matches next season, when we have Australia and South Africa visiting for test matches.  


Wednesday, January 2, 2019

New Zealand v Sri Lanka, First Test, Basin Reserve, 15 ­­– 19 December 2018


New Zealand v Sri Lanka, First Test, Basin Reserve, 15 ­­– 19 December 2018


Sri Lanka are here for a two-test “series” (two tests do not a series make) followed by three ODIs and a T20. I was at the Basin for the first two days of the first test.

The two teams start this tour having recently been on different ends of the pleasing recent trend of away teams winning test series. Sri Lanka received a 3­–0 drubbing at England’s hands, while New Zealand beat Pakistan 2­–1 in the UAE.

Play in the latter series began at 7pm New Zealand time, so I was able to watch quite a bit of it. The climax of the first test measured Headingley ’81 on the nerve-wrackingometer. It is common these days to measure the progress of tests in terms of which side has “won” each session. Pakistan had dominated on this count. Not many tests have been won by a side that has appeared doomed to defeat for so much of the game. Needing 175 for victory, Pakistan appeared to be sailing home at 130 for three, then 154 for five when a collective failure of nerve occurred against some fine bowling by slow left-armer Ajaz Patel, on debut after taking plenty of wickets over several seasons in domestic cricket. He was well-supported by Neil Wagner’s usual huff-puff-and-blow-your-house-down bowling.

As well as being unbearably tense, the final overs were also very strange. No 3 batsman Azhar Ali turned down considerably more easy singles than Pakistan lost by, even though Mohammad Abbas is a long way off the worst No 11 around. New Zealand continued to offer these up even as the target got into single figures, each team apparently trying to keep the other in the contest. The absurdity of this approach was underlined by the fact that it was Azhar Ali who finally fell, lbw to Patel, the wait for the DRS decision a child’s on Christmas Eve.

Pakistan won the second test by an innings and took a first-innings lead of 74 in the third match. With New Zealand 60 for four in the second innings, it seemed that home-team suzerainty would inevitably impose itself. A magnificent innings from a great player, Kane Williamson, changed the game and the series, with admirable support from Henry Nicholls. Before their fifth-wicket partnership of 212, the previous ten wickets had gone for 120; Pakistan were bowled out for 156 next day, so these were not easy runs. Williamson’s declaration, setting Pakistan 280 in five hours, was out of Brendon McCullum’s Attacking Captaincy textbook. A couple of early wickets shook Pakistan’s confidence: five down by lunchtime, all out by tea.

It was only the second series defeat Pakistan had suffered in the UAE since it became their home base in 2010. A 2­–0 win in the home series here would send New Zealand to an unprecedented second place in the test rankings.

Those of us present the last time Sri Lanka played a test at the Basin hoped for a contest to equal that one, a magnificent match with double centuries from two of the greats, Sangakkara and Williamson, a world-record partnership (Williamson and Watling) and a fifth-afternoon finish. Of the teams four years ago, Latham, Williamson, Taylor, Watling, Southee and Boult survive for New Zealand, Karunaratne, Mathews, Chandimal and Lakmal for Sri Lanka.

The Basin pitch usually behaves like a small child on Christmas morning, opening all its presents early, to become bored by mid-afternoon, so it is customary to put the opposition in on winning the toss, as Kane Williamson did here.

Sure enough, within four overs the gift wrapping had been torn off three wickets, all to Tim Southee. However, it was movement through the air rather than off the pitch that was responsible. First, Gunathilaka played around one that swung in late to be leg-before. DM de Silva got a thin edge to a ball that swung away, then Mendis hit lazily to give Patel, the only fielder in front of square on the legside, an easy catch.

At this point it seemed likely that Sri Lanka, morale low after their home defeat, would fold, but throughout the series they showed resilience. Karunaratne and Mathews put on 133 for the fourth wicket, their survival improbable at times, notably when Karunaratne clipped De Grandhomme to mid-wicket, only for the replay to reveal a no-ball. The edge of the bat either avoided the ball or directed it wide, short or high of fielders. Karunaratne started to play some attractive straight drives and both batsmen took on the short ball.

Inevitably, it was Wagner who led the bouncer barrage. As usual, he was not introduced into the attack until De Grandhomme had had a few overs. The theory is that he doesn’t get anything from the new ball, which, like most things about Wagner’s bowling, defies common sense. It may be more about keeping a hungry dog angry by denying it red meat for longer. The batsmen won the early skirmishes, but Wagner broke the partnership when Karunaratne gloved an attempted hook to Watling.

The weapon of choice continued to be the short ball for the rest of the day. The pitch provided bounce, which isn’t the same thing as pace. It worked for New Zealand, with three more batsman falling to short stuff during the evening session.

Wicketkeeper Dickwella played as well as anyone whatever the length of the delivery, intelligently mixing the orthodox and the unconventional. The sweep/glance/scoop that sent a Southee full-length ball to the fine-leg boundary was the shot of the day, as beautiful in its own way as a Gower cover drive.

Trent Boult’s first wicket came from the last ball of the first day, Rajitha caught behind. Southee had five by this stage and had pushed ahead of Boult in their contest to have taken most test wickets. By the end of the series, both were in the 230s with Southee retaining a four-wicket lead. Southee bowled superbly, but Boult’s performance might have been enough for a five-for on another day.

Dickwella resumed on the second morning on 73 and in the same vein, scooping Boult to the fine-third-man boundary, but any ambition that he might have had regarding a century was thwarted by Kumara, a No 11 possessed of the fatal combination of self-belief and concrete boots. He deftly glanced straight to leg slip to give Southee his sixth wicket and to leave Sri Lanka all out for 282.

The general feeling was that this was inadequate, but by how much? It could have been a good deal fewer had the ball found the edge more often on the first morning. Only four of the Sri Lankans had reached double figures, but three of them had gone on to 79, 80 not out and 83.

Latham and Raval looked very comfortable in the early overs of New Zealand’s innings, the Sri Lankan attack mundane, but getting little help from an increasingly sleepy pitch. Raval looked especially fluent through the offside, as confident as he was when he looked a class above everybody else in making a century for Auckland at the Basin earlier in the season. He needs a big score in a test sometime soon, having made seven 50s but no 100s from 16 tests to date, and this looked a good opportunity. But hooking at the last ball before lunch, he toe-ended a catch to Dickwella to be out for 43.

No cricket lover should miss any opportunity to watch Kane Williamson bat. It doesn’t much matter in which form of the game as his approach barely changes. His century in the ODI on a dodgy pitch at the Cake Tin was the best batting I watched in 2018. Here he resumed where he left off in the UAE a week before, as if he had paused for a drink rather than flying 14,000 km. Two rasping offside fours off the back foot off the second and third balls that he received made it clear that playing himself in was superfluous. Without showing the least sign of urgency or risk he made 91 at a run a ball, a big century looking as certain as Christmas.

For want of a better idea, Chandimal turned to Dhananjaya de Silva, whose soothing off spin had brought him seven wickets in 20 tests at an average of over 70. Possibly salivating a little, Williamson swept the second ball de Silva bowled him straight to backward square leg, where Rajitha took an easy catch. Wiliamson returned the rooms bearing the demeanour of a politician who has thrown away a 20-year career with a one-night dalliance in a seaside hotel.

Tom Latham ended the day on 121, having reached his century with overthrows, just like Alastair Cook at the Oval a few months ago. Latham looked as in control as Williamson and also had a pleasing range of shots around the field. The difference is that the intervals between them were longer.

These days Ross Taylor bats with a sort of impatient bustling, as if he knows that his time in the game is finite and he wants to make the most of it. He has a young family and it would be no surprise if after the World Cup he chooses the easy rewards of the T20 circuit, while he is still young enough to command a hefty price. He reached 50 by the close, though should have been caught at second slip. At the end of the day New Zealand were 29 ahead with seven wickets left, and the course of the match seemed clear.

I wasn’t there for the remaining three days, so missed Latham becoming only the second New Zealander to carry his bat in a test, his 264 not out being the highest score made in such circumstances for any team. He made another big hundred in the second test—his eighth century—and has risen to 14th in the test batting rankings. With Warner out of commission, the only openers in the top ten are Karunaratne and Elgar, and on form Latham would get into a World XI ahead of either.

With a deficit of 296 and three down for 13 by the end of the third day, Sri Lanka’s only hope was a forecast of rain for day five, but the chances of the last seven partnerships lasting all day appeared remote. In fact, one partnership, between Mendis and Mathews, sufficed. They batted all day, and through the 13 overs that were possible the next day. I’m not sure if I’m pleased to have missed it or not. To see your team’s hopes receding, inevitably but so slowly, is the cricketing equivalent of watching global warming. But this was only the 22nd time that a pair of batsmen had occupied the crease for a whole day, so on balance I’m sorry that I wasn’t there. Yes, the rain saved them in the end, but it would take a very mean spirit to think this undeserved.

Similar weather in Christchurch would have repeated the trick. Set 650 to win, Sri Lanka were 24 for two at the end of the third day, but were still there with 231 for six 24 hours later. This time the sun shone and New Zealand completed a 423-run victory. This is one of Sri Lanka’s weaker teams, but it is not short of spirit or fight.







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