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Saturday, June 21, 2014

2014 England Vs Sri Lanka Second Investec Test at Headingley,Leeds June 20-24,2014


 England won the toss and decided to field


Ian Bell was presented with his silver cap for his 100th Test, England v Sri Lanka, 2nd Investec Test, Headingley, 1st day, June 20, 2014
 

Squads

England

Alastair Cook (C)
Sam Robson
Gary Ballance
Ian Bell
Joe Root
Moeen Ali
Matt Prior (W)
Chris Jordan
Stuart Broad
Liam Plunkett
James Anderson 

 Sri Lanka
Kaushal Silva
Dimuth Karunaratne
Kumar Sangakkara
Mahela Jayawardene
Lahiru Thirimanne
Angelo Mathews (C)
Dinesh Chandimal (W)
Dhammika Prasad
Rangana Herath
Nuwan Pradeep
Shaminda Eranga


Stuart Broad took a hat-trick and Liam Plunkett claimed Test-best figures as England bowled Sri Lanka out for 257 on the first day of the second Test against Sri Lanka at Headingley.

Liam Plunkett 5/64 - maiden 5-wicket haul

Stuart Broad 3/46
Stuart Broad became the first England bowler to take two Test hat-tricks and just the fourth in all

Stuart Broad who`d previously performed the feat against India at Trent Bridge in 2011, struck with the final ball of his 12th over to have Kumar Sangakkara well caught for 79 by Ian Bell in the gully.
And the first two balls of his next over saw Broad have Dinesh Chadimal caught at first slip by England captain Alastair Cook for 45.
Next ball saw Shaminda Eranga caught behind by wicketkeeper Matt Prior to leave Sri Lanka struggling at 229 for nine.

Players to take two Test hat-tricks

Stuart Broad (England) 2011 v India & 2014 v Sri Lanka
Wasim Akram (Pakistan) 1999 v Sri Lanka & 1999 v Sri Lanka
Jimmy Matthews (Australia) 1912 v South Africa (in the same match)
Hugh Trumble (Australia) 1902 v England & 1904 v England

Vindicating Alastair Cook's decision to field first on winning the toss, England's bowlers swung the ball prodigiously, even in the sunshine.
The hosts could have bowled Sri Lanka out even more cheaply had they taken their chances, with top-order batsman Kumar Sangakkara escaping four times on his way to a score of 79.
At close of play,England were 36/0 with Alastair Cook 14*and opening partner Sam Robson 21* at the stumps

Scorecard at the close of play on Day 1

Sri Lanka 1st Innings Score - 257 all out (69.5 overs)




Runs Minutes Balls 4s 6s
Karunaratne b Plunkett 28 90 65 4 0
K Silva c Prior b Anderson 13 62 38 2 0
Sangakkara c Bell b Broad 79 213 147 13 0
M Jayawardene c Jordan b Plunkett 22 67 47 3 0
Thirimanne c Robson b Plunkett 0 1 0 0
Mathews c Ballance b Anderson 26 48 28 2 1
Chandimal c Cook b Broad 45 70 55 6 0
Prasad c Prior b Plunkett 0 2 2 0 0
Herath not out 14 30 16 1 0
Eranga c Prior b Broad 0 1 0 0
Pradeep c Prior b Plunkett 13 24 19 1 0
Extras 0nb 2w 8b 7lb 17
Total all out (69.5 ovs) 257
Bowler Overs Maidens Runs Wickets
Anderson 19.0 5 49 2
Broad 15.0 3 46 3
Jordan 16.0 4 58 0
Plunkett 15.5 2 64 5
Moeen 3.0 0 16 0
Root 1.0 0 9 0

 

England 1st Innings Score - 49 for 1 (18.5 overs)




Runs Minutes Balls 4s 6s
Cook c Sangakkara b Prasad 17 78 59 2 0
Robson not out 31 82 51 4 0
Ballance not out 0 2 4 0 0
Extras 1nb 0w 0b 0lb 1
Total for 1 (18.5 ovs) 49
Bowler Overs Maidens Runs Wickets
Pradeep 5.0 1 16 0
Eranga 8.0 4 12 0
Herath 3.0 1 7 0
Prasad 2.5 0 14 1




Day Two





Sam Robson hit his first Test century on his second appearance for England



Sam Robson  born in New South Wales to an Australian father and an English mother from Nottinghamshire, the 24-year-old plays for Middlesex.
Australia batsman Chris Rogers took Robson ‘for a few pints’ in a bid to persuade him to play for the Aussies rather than England.
Played at Under-19 level for Australia before becoming eligible to play for England in 2013.
In 2009, he hit a maiden first-class century in his debut season against Essex at Lord’s.
In 2012, he became the first batsman in history to score a first-class hundred in England in the month of March with a ton against Durham MCC University.
Was the leading run-scorer in the 2013 County Championship (933 runs at an average of 62.06).
Made his England Test debut against Sri Lanka on June 12, scoring 1 and 19.



Sam Robson’s 127 in an England reply of 320 for six to Sri Lanka’s 257, a lead of 63 after two days, was greeted with rich, appreciative applause.









  • Garry Ballance was out for 74, while Ian Bell in his 100th Test hit 64
  • England lost three wickets for two runs, with Bell, Joe Root and Mooen Ali falling late in the day
  • Captain Alastair Cook made just 17 with his poor run of form continuing



  • Scorecard at the close of play on Day 2

    England's 1st Innings - 320 for 6 (104.0 overs)




    Runs Minutes Balls 4s 6s
    Cook c Sangakkara b Prasad 17 78 59 2 0
    Robson b Pradeep 127 373 253 15 1
    Ballance c Chandimal b Mathews 74 208 157 8 0
    Bell c Chandimal b Eranga 64 129 90 8 0
    Root c Chandimal b Mathews 13 47 32 2 0
    Moeen c Chandimal b Eranga 2 16 11 0 0
    Prior not out 3 31 26 0 0
    Jordan not out 4 18 7 0 0
    Extras 11nb 3w 0b 2lb 16
    Total for 6 (104.0 ovs) 320
    Bowler Overs Maidens Runs Wickets
    Pradeep 22.0 3 90 1
    Eranga 27.0 10 63 2
    Herath 25.0 3 61 0
    Prasad 20.0 3 75 1
    Mathews 10.0 3 29 2
    Fall of Wicket
    49 Cook
    191 Ballance
    278 Robson
    311 Bell
    311 Root
    313 Moeen

    Day Three

    England were all out for 365 on morning of day three at Headingley
    The hosts lost 4 wickets for 45 runs and left Matt Prior stranded on 27no
    Sri Lanka lead by 106 runs and are 213-4 in their second innings









    Kumar Sangakkara scored a record-equalling seventh half-century in a row



    Sri Lanka's Kumar Sangakkara became only the 4th batsman in history to make scores of 50 or More Runs in 7 successive Test innings when he reached the landmark against England in the 2nd Test Match at Headingley,Leeds on Sunday June 22,2014

    A flick off his pads for four through square leg saw Kumar Sangakkara join West Indies greats Everton Weekes and Shivnarine Chanderpaul, together with Zimbabwe's Andy Flower, as the only batsmen to have completed the feat.

    Finally,Kumar Sangakkara got out for 55 Runs

    Batsmen to have scored seven consecutive Test fifties (score, opposition, venue, date):
    Everton Weekes (West Indies)
    141 v England, Kingston Mar 1948
    128 v India, Delhi Nov 1948
    194 v India, Mumbai (BS) Dec 1948
    162 v India, Kolkata Dec 1948
    101 v India, Kolkata Dec 1948
    90 v India, Chennai Jan 1949
    56 v India, Mumbai (BS) Feb 1949
    Andy Flower (Zimbabwe)
    65 v New Zealand, Harare Sep 2000
    183 no v India, Delhi Nov 2000
    70 v India, Delhi Nov 2000
    55 v India, Nagpur Nov 2000
    232 no v India, Nagpur Nov 2000
    79 v New Zealand, Wellington Dec 2000
    73 v Bangladesh, Bulawayo Apr 2001
    Shivnarine Chanderpaul (West Indies)
    69 v Pakistan, Karachi Nov 2006
    74 v England, Lord's May 2007
    50 v England, Manchester Jun 2007
    116 no v England, Manchester Jun 2007
    136 no v England, Chester-le-Street Jun 2007
    70 v England, Chester-le-Street Jun 2007
    104 v South Africa, Port Elizabeth Dec 2007
    Kumar Sangakkara (Sri Lanka)
    75 v Bangladesh, Dhaka Jan 2014
    319 v Bangladesh, Chittagong Feb 2014
    105 v Bangladesh, Chittagong Feb 2014
    147 v England, Lord's Jun 2014
    61 v England, Lord's Jun 2014
    79 v England, Leeds Jun 2014
    55 v England, Leeds Jun 2014


    Mahela Jayawardene is 55 not out at stumps on day three
    Moeen claimed wickets of Sangakkara and Lahiru Thirimanne in three balls



    Day Four



  • Sri Lanka started day four on 215-4 with a lead of 106
  • Captain Angelo Mathews scored 160 to help set winning target of 350
  • England lost captain Alastair Cook, Gary Ballance, Sam Robson and Ian Bell in evening
  • session
  • England finished day on 57-5 and require a further 298 runs to win


  • First Test drawn at Lord's
    A two-Test home series against Sri Lanka was meant to provide a gentle start to the new era, a chance for England to regroup and for Cook to prove that he can mould a team in his image and lead England forward positively.
    Instead, barring a miracle even beyond 1981 on this ground, it will turn into Sri Lanka’s historic first Test series win in England to complete a clean sweep after their victories in the Twenty20 international and the one-day series.


    Captain Alastair Cook failed again as he was bowled for 16 in the second innings

     


    Gary Balance was trapped LBW without scoring

    Ian Bell was quickly sent back to the pavilion

    Sri Lanka captain Angelo Mathews celebrates passing 100 on the way to scoring 160


    Sri Lanka's Rangana Herath shared an eighth-wicket stand of 149 with Mathews











    Herath's excellent knock ended when he was run out for 48


    Day Five

    Sri Lanka Record Sensational Last-Over Win vs England to Clinch Series

     

    One wicket to take and two balls left on the final day, Sri Lanka sealed the game in the penultimate ball to win by 100 runs

    Shaminda Eranga finally ended Jimmy Anderson's stubborn resistance in the last over Tuesday as Sri Lanka won the second test by 100 runs to clinch its first ever test series victory in England.
    Anderson faced 55 balls without scoring in a desperate last-wicket stand with Moeen Ali (108 not out) before he fended an Eranga bouncer to Rangana Herath at leg gully, giving Sri Lanka victory with one delivery to spare.
    Ali posted a maiden test century and batted all day for England, including a 20-over partnership with No. 11 Anderson.
    Sri Lanka needed five wickets on day five but didn't get any during the rain-shortened morning session. The momentum changed in the second session when Nuwan Pradeep removed Joe Root (31) and Dhammika Prasad dismissed Matt Prior (0)

    James Anderson leans on his bat as Sri Lanka go into raptures after his wicket wins them the series

    Moeen Ali goes over to console James Anderson who was dismissed for a duck off 55 balls

     The morning session in Leeds was curtailed by rain and forced an early lunch to be taken

     
















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