Follow us

SL vs AUS | Khawaja-Smith tons after Head blitzkrieg puts Australia in command at Galle on Day 1

no image
no image

Australia made merry on a slow Galle track to begin the Warne-Muralitharan series as they piled up 330 runs for the loss of just two wickets on Wednesday. Usman Khawaja and Steve Smith finished on 147* and 104* respectively with the partnership reading 195 after Travis Head had cracked a 40-ball 57.

Brief score: AUS 330/2 [Khawaja 147*, Smith 104*; Vandersay 1/93] at Stumps on Day 1

Opting to bat first, Travis Head declared Australia's intentions early by smoking Asitha Fernando for three boundaries in the opening over and adding a couple more in the pacer's third of the new ball spell. When Dhananjaya de Silva turned to spin for respite, it made little difference as the hard Kookaburra rode onto the bat beautifully and the refusal to go upstairs for what would have resulted in Head's scalp when he was on 23 only made matters worse. Before long, the Men from Down Under had raced to 92/0 at a run rate exceeding six and featuring a 35-ball half-century from Head. However, the opener eventually tried one shot too many and holed out to long-on against an ecstatic Prabath Jayasuriya, albeit the happiness was short lived. With the ball now beginning to grip and turn, the visitors had their work cut-out but Khawaja benefitted from a dropped catch at slip to eke out a 43-run stand with Marnus Labuschagne until some prodigous turn from Jeff Vandersay had the latter nick off with Lunch on the horizon. The wicket was met with loud cheers, not just for its potential to hand Sri Lanka the momentum but because Steve Smith walked out next with 9,999 runs to his name. The veteran reached the elusive landmark off his very first ball, only to be dropped two deliveries later by Jayasuriya off his own bowling as the first session ended on 145/2.

It was all about Smith and Khawaja for the entirety of the second session with the duo exhibiting a plethora of exquisite sweeps, pulls, and cuts on the slow deck. The former was especially gung-ho in dancing down the track at every possible opportunity, allowing him to bring up his half-century off just 57 balls, and the score already read a formidable 223/2 when Drinks was called. Khawaja soon brought up his maiden Test ton on Lankan shores with a flick for a boundary as the pair headed for Tea unbeaten at 261/2 with the partnership reading 126.

The hosts -- Jayasuriya in particular with variations of pace and the lethal arm ball at his disposal -- were much tidier with their lengths to begin the final session to put some pressure back on their rivals. Khawaja and Smith went 100 balls without a boundary but once the latter broke the drought with an innocous glance off his waist, it was all one way traffic yet again. Two more boundaries followed for Smith in Vandersay's next over and the inevitable ton came up five balls later, Smith's third against the Lions and 35th overall. With the light fading, clouds on the horizon, and a second new ball available soon, the Lankans resorted to negative bowling tactics and rain did arrive in the 82nd over to bring an end to proceedings.

Class in Action

Veteran power, timeless class

Boom Boom!

What a knock!

Play Interrupted. Rain Wins!

what a player!

Smith’s brilliance shines!

Smith On Fire!❤️‍🔥

Unstoppable in India!

Yeah!

Comments

Leave a comment

0 Comments

read previousSL vs AUS | Twitter in disbelief as sticky bails make shocked Mathew survive ball thumping into stumps
No sporting success comes without luck and in a career spanning a decade and a half, Angelo Mathews has seen a fair bit of it but proceedings in Galle on Thursday left even him shocked. The all-rounder somehow stayed on the crease even after a ball rattled into his stump without breaking them.
SL vs AUS | Twitter in splits as 'mosquito killer' catching technique of flailing Mendis ends with despairread next
Desperation often brings out the worst in a man and Kusal Mendis was no different on Wednesday. Yearning to grasp the ballooning ball and get rid of Usman Khawaja, the wicket-keeper was left looking ridiculous enough to draw laughter from his teammates even while the team struggled in Galle.
View non-AMP page