Dominic Bess rattles Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka have been bundled out for 135 in the first innings of the first Test against England in Galle. Batting first, the home side had a terrible start to the proceedings after losing three wickets at a team score of 25. 

Angelo Mathews and captain Dinesh Chandimal tried to steady the ship for the side as the two batsmen put up 56 runs for the fourth wicket before Mathews departed for 27. Sri Lanka then saw a flurry of wickets and were reduced to 105/6 to eventually get bundled out for 135. 

Chandimal top scored with 28. 

For England it was Dominic Bess who was the star with the ball after he picked up a fifer while Stuart Broad rattled Sri Lanka’s top order to scalp a three-for. Kusal Mendis woes continued as he registered his fourth duck on the trot. 

England are missing the services of all-rounder Moeen Ali who tested positive for COVID-19 while Ben Stokes has also been rested. Dimuth Karunaratne had earlier said that the hosts do have an advantage over England. "From the last series they played against us, Stokes is not in their squad and Jennings is not in the team. And Stokes is the guy who balanced their team. The players in the current squad don't have much experience in these conditions.

"That said, we shouldn't take it easy. They've prepared well, and I've seen how well they've prepared. They've also been playing cricket and they were the first ones to start playing Tests again after Covid hit. Their fitness levels are still up there. We only started again against South Africa, and because of the injury concerns, we've lost players."

Powered by Froala Editor

Discover more
Top Stories
news

Australia captain Tim Paine urges fans to leave all abuses at Gabba's gate

Australian captain Tim Paine has advised the crowds who are looking to come into the Gabba where the fourth and the final Test of the summer is scheduled to be played, to come without their racial standpoints and leave all of them at the gate of the stadium. Paine reiterated his and the stand of the Australian team saying that spectators entering into stadiums are entitled to support neither team or even the match officials, but any sort of abuse and more so the racial abuse will not be tolerated one bit. "In terms of crowd behaviour - we don't condone the abuse of anyone; let alone from the racial standpoint. So we want people to come along to the Gabba, enjoy the game of cricket, support Australia, support India. Support the umpires if you like. But my suggestion is you leave the abuse at the gate and just respect the players, respect the game and have a good time,” Paine said in the pre-match virtual press conference. Paine too was caught in the crossfire of confrontation between the players on either side of the fence and he was the principal figure of the sledge that took place on the fifth day of the Test. He was the one who started the act of getting into the skin of the opponent, and it led to a proper verbal duel between him and Ashwin. Paine said that he will try to handle the pressure in different ways than he did in the Sydney Test and regain the focus on leading his own team, rather than paying attention to what the opposition team is up to. "I just think I'll handle it differently. I let it get under my skin, no doubt about that. I've admitted that - but for me, it's about rising above it and concentrating on what I'm doing and concentrating on leading my team, not worrying about what is going on with the other side. That's the focus for us, we've spoken a lot this game about controlling what we can control and focusing more inwardly on ourselves. If we do that, we'll be in a good position,” Pain added. "If you look throughout my whole career, I think I've done a pretty good job of staying relaxed for 99% of it. Again, it's going back to how I play my best cricket [and] that's [by] having a smile on my face, enjoying cricket for what it is - a game. And at times the other day, I certainly thought I got caught up in the moment. What I've been really good at is being able to step back - even just have a look around the crowd at times - and realise that at that very second, you're captaining your country in a Test match. "It's something I have always wanted to do, so remind yourself that way to enjoy it. Obviously, I'm going to compete very hard, that's what I do. I want to win as much as anyone and I'm a competitive player but there's a fine line. It's the same with my batting - if I'm too tense and trying too hard to fight hard, then I am a pretty ordinary batter. If I look to go out, relax, have fun and look to score then I'm normally a much better player - it's just a slight tweak in my mindset. It's nothing new to me, it's getting back to what I normally do." Paine had called Ashwin ‘...head’ and it led to former stars calling for his ouster as the leader of the Australian Test team, but Paine insisted on muting the voices around him and his team. "I have noted but I'm not going into it, getting into a back and forth with Sunny Gavaskar. I don't think I'm going to win that. Look, he's entitled to his opinion. It doesn't affect us one iota. Anything it's adding to the Test match which is great. So Sunny can keep saying what he wants to say but at the end of the day, it's absolutely got nothing to do with him,” Paine addressed the criticism he faced after a heated day five in Sydney.

news

Ashwin was crawling on floor reveals wife Prithi

India’s R Ashwin played one of the finest innings during the third Test against Australia in Sydney after leading the way to a draw alongside Hanuma Vihari. Ashwin scored an unbeaten 39 off 128 in the second innings at SCG. In a column for the Indian Express, Ashwin's wife Prithi Narayan has explained the kind of pain Ashwin was going through. "It had been a tense morning. Over the years, I have seen him handle pain and know he has a high threshold for it, but I had never seen him like this. He was crawling on the floor. He couldn’t get up or bend down. I couldn’t imagine how he was going to play and the snack-break comment was said only in half-jest. As he was about to leave, he said, 'I have to play. I have to get this done'," Prithi wrote. Are you fine, physically?' I asked him and he shot back, 'Didn’t you see me bowl?!' and said he felt he had a tweak in the back that was beginning to hurt. He felt during warm-ups that morning that he stepped awkwardly and did something to his back,” she added. India rode on some fine batting performances from Cheteshwar Pujara, Rishabh Pant, Hanuma Vihari and Ashwin to end the game as a draw while they were handed a target of 407. Pujara scored 77 while Pant and Vihari struck 97 and 23* respectively as India ended the second innings at 334/5 in 131 overs. The Indian team has been facing a some injury concerns on this tour. Vihari and Jadeja have been ruled out after the third Test. Mohammed Shami, Umesh Yadav and KL Rahul had sustained injuries earlier. The two team now take on each in the deciding Test in Brisbane scheduled to begin on Friday.

news

4th Test Preview: Depleted India to challenge under pressure Australia at their fortress

India were always behind the curve and facing an uphill task Down Under with Virat Kohli returning for his paternity leave after Rohit Sharma and Ishant Sharma were declared to be unavailable at the start of the series. As if things were not bad enough for the Indian side, ace attacker Mohammed Shami got injured in the Adelaide Test which ended in a disaster for them. As the series carried on, the team travelled from Adelaide to Sydney via Melbourne, with a squad that resembled more of a combat battalion coming off adverse conditions than a cricket team. Going into Brisbane, India are struggling to put a well-fit playing XI for the final Test that has drained them physically, emotionally and mentally. Given all the problems they were starting with and the outcome of the First test, the tourists would have gleefully accepted the current standings in the series where they have batted with immense grit and determination to win one Test at the MCG, followed by an unlikely draw at the SCG that was earned on the back of exemplary resistance shown by their lower middle order on the fifth day of the Test. They were deemed down and out in the aftermath of the Adelaide Test but defied all the critics and pundits who refused to give them any chance of coming back in the series. Come the final Test, the challenge gets steeper for the Indian team who will have to field their fifth, sixth and seventh pacer on the preferred list in an all-important decider of the series, at a ground that is deemed fortress for the home side as they have not lost a single Test match since 1988 at the Gabba. They have a lot of worries in even fielding a XI that can pose a set of challenges to the Australians on paper. Their spearhead in the pace department is a veteran of two Tests, while there are rings of uncertainties about the other two pacers who can bowl alongside him. The overall experience of their pacers in contention to play the Gabba Test is four and to make the matters worse, only their ace spinner is struggling with a bad back and is running against time to play, while another is in a hospital after sustaining a thumb dislocation. There are issues in the batting department as well with the ruling out of Hanuma Vihari who led India’s riposte at the SCG and the absence of Jadeja who provided match-winning stability to the side. Now they will have to pick one among two batsmen who started the series as openers against the likes of Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood. In short, the Indian side is facing an unprecedented challenge where the captain is not sure of the best playing XI he needs to win the game but instead has to play with players who are just fit enough to walk on and off the field on their own. On the other hand, the Australians are not under any less pressure. They put everything on the line including the behaviour of their captain to salvage a win against Ashwin and Vihari, but to no avail, as they face a must-win game at the Gabba. Captain Tim Paine knows the surface at the Gabba will suit his bowlers more and especially with the Indian batsmen having faced a lot of blows on their body. They played a 60-70 per cent fit David Warner at the top of the order in a sign of absolute desperation but the left-hander could not quite make life easier for his teammates down the order. His opening partner Will Pucovski showed promise on his Test debut but faced yet another disappointing injury that curtails his journey at the top of the order. The game of revolving chair in openers’ slot has not stopped as Marcus Harris has been named his replacement to walk with Warner to face the new ball against Siraj and co. Their mainstays in the batting department—Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschange have looked threatening and at their absolute best but a big and match-turning innings has still eluded both of them. Although Smith scored a Test century in the first innings of the Sydney Test and Labuschagne missed just by a small margin, Australia could manage only 338 runs and it reveals the chinks in the Australian armour. Thankfully for them, India lacked penetration at the SCG for a long period of time, and they got away with a dominating position. Tim Paine knows the pressure is more on his team and himself than the Indian team and its stand-in captain Ajinkya Rahane and it was telling on the fifth day of the Sydney Test. If India go on to win the Brisbane Test, it will set the phenomenal standard for the Indian team that will glorify their bench strength while a defeat for Australia would be disastrous as they don’t have the excuse of missing Warner and Smith in the series. To make matters worse, it could well be the last series as captain and also as a player for Tim Paine in case Ajinkya Rahane and co. pull out one more stellar performance defying all odds stacked against them. Australia vs India: Match Details Venue: Gabba, Brisbane Date and Time: January 15-19, 05:00 AM IST, 11:30 GMT Broadcaster: Sony Sports Network and Sony LIV Pitch Report Other than Perth, the pitches at the Gabba have been conducive to pace and bounce over the years and these are the reasons that Australia have not lost a Test match for a very long time at this ground. No wonder, Paine was warning Ashwin about the prospect of batting against the trio of Cummins, Starc and Hazlewood on a Gabba surface that the Australians hoped would offer spice to them after a flat pitch that almost sucked the life out of them on the final day in Sydney. Opposition teams, especially the subcontinent teams have been guilty of getting carried away with the pace and bounce on the pitch but it’s the hardness of the surface that is responsible for extra carry and pace and it also makes the abetting not so tough on the pitch. It does not support a lot of lateral movement and if batsmen can get the top of the bounce, batting can be easier and run-scoring can be fluent at the Gabba. Team News Australia Australia have had injury concerns to manage as well and Pucovski has been ruled out of the fourth Test and Marcus Harris has been added in the squad to partner Warner at the top of the order. By adding Harris, the team management has opted out of shifting back Matthew Wade at the top of the order and have relied on a specialist to do the job against the new ball. The team management had preferred Wade over Travis Head who was once the vice-captain of the side but Wade did nothing substantial to prove he deserves a shot more than Head does and committed the same mistake of throwing his wicket away at crucial junctures of the game. Australians bowlers toiled hard and all three of them have played three Tests in the series leading up to the series decider and hence they might feel the pitch of it at the Gabba. However, all of them are looking fit and raring to go against the batting line up which has shown signs of crumbling in the lower order apart from the last innings in the Sydney Test. Australia need Warner to come good at the top of the order and set the tone for the middle-order batsmen. The Indian bowling line up will be thin on experience and if Warner puts them on sword successfully, it sets up nicely for the likes of Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschange to bat India out of the Test match. Strongest XI David Warner, Marcus Harris, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith, Matthew Wade, Cameron Green, Tim Paine (C & Wk), Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon, Josh Hazlewood India India were reluctant to travel to Brisbane in the wake of a hard quarantine imposed by the health officials but the discussion between Cricket Australia and BCCI paved way for the end of the stalemate and the tourists boarded a chartered flight to play the final test of the series. In their team hotel, they were surprised to see no housekeeping; they had to manage everything on their own before yet another discussion between BCCI and CA took place. All in all, Indian team is facing an unprecedented time where a majority of their first-choice players are injured and are back in India or with them in condition, they can’t even walk or hold a bat. Keeping all the off-field struggles in context, If India can put up a playing XI that can pose some sort of challenge will be a big test for the team management. Mayank Agarwal was hit on his arm in a net session at the MCG and there is a lack of clarity on the status of his injury. If he recovers in time to play, he will most likely bat in the middle order but in case of his injury being serious, Prithvi Shaw will make his way back into the team. The team management will have their task cut out in selecting the three pacers with Siraj certain to lead the pace attack. On the other hand, Ashwin’s bad back makes him a doubtful starter for the final Test and with Jadeja out of the game due to a dislocated thumb, Kuldeep Yadav stands at the forefront of making his way back into the playing XI. There are also media reports claiming that Washington Sundar who was held back in Australia to aid Indian batsmen in the net session can be handed a debut as a like for like replacement of Ravindra Jadeja. Strongest XI Shubman Gill, Rohit Sharma, Cheteshwar Pujara, Ajinkya Rahane (c), Rishabh Pant, Mayank Agarwal/Prithvi Shaw, Wriddhiman Saha (wk), Kuldeep Yadav/R Ashwin, Navdeep Saini, Mohammed Siraj, Shardul Thakur Australia vs India: Dream11 team and suggestion Rishabh Pant(wk), Ajinkya Rahane, Marnus Labuschange, Steve Smith, Rohit Sharma, Cheteshwar Pujara, Cameron Green, Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Mohammed Siraj Captain: Marnus Labuschagne Vice-captain: Ajinkya Rahane Powered by Froala Editor India were always behind the curve and facing an uphill task Down Under with Virat Kohli returning for his paternity leave after Rohit Sharma and Ishant Sharma were declared to be unavailable at the start of the series. As if things were not bad enough for the Indian side, ace attacker Mohammed Shami got injured in the Adelaide Test which ended in a disaster for them. As the series carried on, the team travelled from Adelaide to Sydney via Melbourne, with a squad that resembled more of a combat battalion coming off adverse conditions than a cricket team. Going into Brisbane, India are struggling to put a well-fit playing XI for the final Test that has drained them physically, emotionally and mentally. Given all the problems they were starting with and the outcome of the First test, the tourists would have gleefully accepted the current standings in the series where they have batted with immense grit and determination to win one Test at the MCG, followed by an unlikely draw at the SCG that was earned on the back of exemplary resistance shown by their lower middle order on the fifth day of the Test. They were deemed down and out in the aftermath of the Adelaide Test but defied all the critics and pundits who refused to give them any chance of coming back in the series. Come the final Test, the challenge gets steeper for the Indian team who will have to field their fifth, sixth and seventh pacer on the preferred list in an all-important decider of the series, at a ground that is deemed fortress for the home side as they have not lost a single Test match since 1988 at the Gabba. They have a lot of worries in even fielding a XI that can pose a set of challenges to the Australians on paper. Their spearhead in the pace department is a veteran of two Tests, while there are rings of uncertainties about the other two pacers who can bowl alongside him. The overall experience of their pacers in contention to play the Gabba Test is four and to make the matters worse, only their ace spinner is struggling with a bad back and is running against time to play, while another is in a hospital after sustaining a thumb dislocation. There are issues in the batting department as well with the ruling out of Hanuma Vihari who led India’s riposte at the SCG and the absence of Jadeja who provided match-winning stability to the side. Now they will have to pick one among two batsmen who started the series as openers against the likes of Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood. In short, the Indian side is facing an unprecedented challenge where the captain is not sure of the best playing XI he needs to win the game but instead has to play with players who are just fit enough to walk on and off the field on their own. On the other hand, the Australians are not under any less pressure. They put everything on the line including the behaviour of their captain to salvage a win against Ashwin and Vihari, but to no avail, as they face a must-win game at the Gabba. Captain Tim Paine knows the surface at the Gabba will suit his bowlers more and especially with the Indian batsmen having faced a lot of blows on their body. They played a 60-70 per cent fit David Warner at the top of the order in a sign of absolute desperation but the left-hander could not quite make life easier for his teammates down the order. His opening partner Will Pucovski showed promise on his Test debut but faced yet another disappointing injury that curtails his journey at the top of the order. The game of revolving chair in openers’ slot has not stopped as Marcus Harris has been named his replacement to walk with Warner to face the new ball against Siraj and co. Their mainstays in the batting department—Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschange have looked threatening and at their absolute best but a big and match-turning innings has still eluded both of them. Although Smith scored a Test century in the first innings of the Sydney Test and Labuschagne missed just by a small margin, Australia could manage only 338 runs and it reveals the chinks in the Australian armour. Thankfully for them, India lacked penetration at the SCG for a long period of time, and they got away with a dominating position. Tim Paine knows the pressure is more on his team and himself than the Indian team and its stand-in captain Ajinkya Rahane and it was telling on the fifth day of the Sydney Test. If India go on to win the Brisbane Test, it will set the phenomenal standard for the Indian team that will glorify their bench strength while a defeat for Australia would be disastrous as they don’t have the excuse of missing Warner and Smith in the series. To make matters worse, it could well be the last series as captain and also as a player for Tim Paine in case Ajinkya Rahane and co. pull out one more stellar performance defying all odds stacked against them. Australia vs India: Match Details Venue: Gabba, Brisbane Date and Time: January 15-19, 05:00 AM IST, 11:30 GMT Broadcaster: Sony Sports Network and Sony LIV Pitch Report Other than Perth, the pitches at the Gabba have been conducive to pace and bounce over the years and these are the reasons that Australia have not lost a Test match for a very long time at this ground. No wonder, Paine was warning Ashwin about the prospect of batting against the trio of Cummins, Starc and Hazlewood on a Gabba surface that the Australians hoped would offer spice to them after a flat pitch that almost sucked the life out of them on the final day in Sydney. Opposition teams, especially the subcontinent teams have been guilty of getting carried away with the pace and bounce on the pitch but it’s the hardness of the surface that is responsible for extra carry and pace and it also makes the abetting not so tough on the pitch. It does not support a lot of lateral movement and if batsmen can get the top of the bounce, batting can be easier and run-scoring can be fluent at the Gabba. Team News Australia Australia have had injury concerns to manage as well and Pucovski has been ruled out of the fourth Test and Marcus Harris has been added in the squad to partner Warner at the top of the order. By adding Harris, the team management has opted out of shifting back Matthew Wade at the top of the order and have relied on a specialist to do the job against the new ball. The team management had preferred Wade over Travis Head who was once the vice-captain of the side but Wade did nothing substantial to prove he deserves a shot more than Head does and committed the same mistake of throwing his wicket away at crucial junctures of the game. Australians bowlers toiled hard and all three of them have played three Tests in the series leading up to the series decider and hence they might feel the pitch of it at the Gabba. However, all of them are looking fit and raring to go against the batting line up which has shown signs of crumbling in the lower order apart from the last innings in the Sydney Test. Australia need Warner to come good at the top of the order and set the tone for the middle-order batsmen. The Indian bowling line up will be thin on experience and if Warner puts them on sword successfully, it sets up nicely for the likes of Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschange to bat India out of the Test match. Strongest XI David Warner, Marcus Harris, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith, Matthew Wade, Cameron Green, Tim Paine (C & Wk), Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Nathan Lyon, Josh Hazlewood India India were reluctant to travel to Brisbane in the wake of a hard quarantine imposed by the health officials but the discussion between Cricket Australia and BCCI paved way for the end of the stalemate and the tourists boarded a chartered flight to play the final test of the series. In their team hotel, they were surprised to see no housekeeping; they had to manage everything on their own before yet another discussion between BCCI and CA took place. All in all, Indian team is facing an unprecedented time where a majority of their first-choice players are injured and are back in India or with them in condition, they can’t even walk or hold a bat. Keeping all the off-field struggles in context, If India can put up a playing XI that can pose some sort of challenge will be a big test for the team management. Mayank Agarwal was hit on his arm in a net session at the MCG and there is a lack of clarity on the status of his injury. If he recovers in time to play, he will most likely bat in the middle order but in case of his injury being serious, Prithvi Shaw will make his way back into the team. The team management will have their task cut out in selecting the three pacers with Siraj certain to lead the pace attack. On the other hand, Ashwin’s bad back makes him a doubtful starter for the final Test and with Jadeja out of the game due to a dislocated thumb, Kuldeep Yadav stands at the forefront of making his way back into the playing XI. There are also media reports claiming that Washington Sundar who was held back in Australia to aid Indian batsmen in the net session can be handed a debut as a like for like replacement of Ravindra Jadeja. Strongest XI Shubman Gill, Rohit Sharma, Cheteshwar Pujara, Ajinkya Rahane (c), Rishabh Pant, Mayank Agarwal/Prithvi Shaw, Wriddhiman Saha (wk), Kuldeep Yadav/R Ashwin, Navdeep Saini, Mohammed Siraj, Shardul Thakur Australia vs India: Dream11 team and suggestion Rishabh Pant(wk), Ajinkya Rahane, Marnus Labuschange, Steve Smith, Rohit Sharma, Cheteshwar Pujara, Cameron Green, Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Mohammed Siraj Captain: Marnus Labuschagne Vice-captain: Ajinkya Rahane Powered by Froala Editor