A crucial double breakthrough before lunch set New
Zealand on course to a 122-run win over Sri Lanka in the first test at
the University Oval on Monday, and a 1-0 lead in the two—match series.
Sri
Lanka resumed on an extended final day at 109-3, needing 296 to win
with seven wickets in hand at an achievable run rate of only three runs
per over.
For much of the morning session, the
visitors appeared capable of pulling off the fourth-highest successful
fourth-inning run chase in test history, but the dismissal of Angelo
Mathews and Dinesh Chandimal in quick succession tipped the match
decisively in New Zealand’s favor.
The Black Caps
were then able to run through the tail-enders quickly in the afternoon
session. The second test begins at Hamilton on Thursday.
“Overall
a very professional performance and one we’re really pleased with,”
said New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum, who made a bold declaration
of the second innings which gave Sri Lanka a glimmer of hope.
“Sometimes you’ve got to risk losing to win and we felt we needed enough time to bowl Sri Lanka out.
“If
the weather had come into play a little bit more today we would have
desperately needed that extra time. We had a bit of an eye to that and
in the end the bowlers did the job as well, and the way they went about
it was outstanding.”
Chandimal made 58 and Mathews 25 in a 56-run partnership for the fourth wicket.
While
they were together there seemed hope for Sri Lanka. The batsmen were
comfortable through a morning session on a pitch rapidly losing pace and
bounce but not yet offering assistance to the spinners.
Mathews
was undone by some clever tactics from Neil Wagner. New Zealand’s
fourth seamer delivered two short-pitched balls outside leg stump which
Sri Lanka’s captain left alone, followed by a yorker, angled in from
around the wicket.
Mathews appeared to try to block
the ball with his pad, but stepped over the delivery which struck the
inside of his front pad and cannoned onto middle stump.
Chandimal
padded away a delivery from left—arm spinner Mitchell Santner which
pitched on off stump and seemed to be going straight through. The umpire
gave him out lbw and while Chandimal referred the decision to the third
umpire, it was confirmed because he was not offering a shot and the
ball would have hit the stumps.
From that moment, it
appeared only a matter of time before New Zealand wrapped up the victory
against a rebuilding Sri Lanka which paid for its lack of experience.
New
Zealand bowled out Sri Lanka for 294 to take a 137—run first innings
lead, then swiftly built on that by reaching 267—3 in its second innings
before McCullum declared before lunch on the fourth day. Tom Latham
made an unbeaten 109, his third test century and his first on home
soil.AP
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