Windies 88-5 at dinner on day one of day-night Test

Windies 88-5 at dinner on day one of day-night Test
AFP

Bridgetown (Barbados) (AFP) – Persistent rainfall restricted play to less than 12 overs in the session as the West Indies reached the dinner break at 88 for five on the opening day of the day/night third and final Test match at Kensington Oval in Barbados on Saturday.

Having resumed at 46 for four after a first session dominated by the visitors, the hosts lost the wicket of Shai Hope to Kasun Rajitha shortly after the restart, giving the relatively inexperienced seamer his second wicket.

However Shane Dowrich and captain Jason Holder batted comfortably through the time available in the session, adding 35 runs before the showers drove the players off the field.

This is the first day/night Test to be played in the West Indies and the tenth overall since the first such fixture between Australia and New Zealand in Adelaide in 2015.

Earlier, stand-in captain Suranga Lakmal claimed two early wickets to give Sri Lanka the upper hand after Holder chose to bat first.

Appointed to lead the tourists with regular captain Dinesh Chandimal suspended for the match after being found guilty of ball tampering during the second Test in St Lucia, Lakmal swiftly dispensed with West Indies openers Devon Smith and Kraigg Brathwaite on a grassy pitch.

Lahiru Kumara, Sri Lanka’s top bowler of the series, then removed Kieran Powell cheaply as well to have the home side reeling at eight for three. A one-hour break for rain offered some respite to the home batsmen but when play resumed Kasun Rajitha followed up on an encouraging debut in the second Test by dismissing Roston Chase immediately upon coming into the attack.

Lakmal, the first seamer ever to lead Sri Lanka in a Test, wasted no time in making the most of the sporting track.

Smith stabbed at the last delivery of the first over of the match and Dhananjaya de Silva showed a safe pair of hands to come up with the catch at third slip. 

Danushka Gunathilaka, brought in effectively as Chandimal’s replacement in the middle-order, then showed good athleticism in sprinting in from cover-point and diving forward to take the catch millimetres from the turf as Brathwaite could not control a delivery from Lakmal which lifted sharply at the batsman.

Kumara was also grateful for the support from his fielders when Kusal Mendis held a good low catch at second slip when Powell pushed at a full-length delivery without covering the ball properly. 

Then after impressing with an expansive cover-driven boundary before the rain-break, Chase was bowled in Rajitha’s first over, dragging a delivery onto his middle stump.

Off-spinning all-rounder Dilruwan Perea, who has replaced Akila Dananjaya in Sri Lanka’s other change from the drawn second Test, bowled the final over of the first session but, as expected, the visitors are relying heavily on their three seamers as they seek to lay the foundations for a series-levelling victory.

Any thoughts of recalling Rangana Herath for this final match of the tour ended on Friday when the experienced left-arm spinner split the webbing in his bowling hand during catching practice.

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