Sri Lanka vs England - Only Test at Colombo
Sri Lanka XI
Roshan Mahanama
Chandika Hathurusingha
Asanka Gurusinha
Aravinda de Silva
Arjuna Ranatunga
Hashan Tillakaratne
Sanath Jayasuriya
Ashley de Silva
Champaka Ramanayake
Muttiah Muralitharan
Jayananda Warnaweera
England XI
Graham Gooch
Alec Stewart
Michael Atherton
Robin Smith
Graeme Hick
Mark Ramprakash
Jack Russell
Angus Fraser
Phil Tufnell
Peter Such
Devon Malcolm
- - -
England win the toss and choose to bat
- - -
The "Gooch at three" experiment was a failure, so he shall return to the top of the order with Atherton moving to three. Ramprakash keeps his place in the side to prove himself ahead of a home Ashes series; his extra opportunity comes at the expense of Chris Lewis, who has been rested after playing a lot of consecutive Test matches. As for Sri Lanka, pretty much what you'd expect - bats fairly deep, lots of spinners. The pitch looked flat but dry, so Gooch will have been mightily relieved to win the toss.
If there's one thing that this Test proved for sure, it's that Alec Stewart really likes batting against Sri Lanka. In his second Test against this opposition, he recorded another century, this one a part of a 192-run partnership with Atherton. Atherton made 72 of them, his second-best Test score. After that huge stand, everything else rather paled by comparison, although Hick did muster a sparkling 56. Ramprakash missed out though, and Russell was left with an even tougher tail to bat with than usual; ultimately, Sri Lanka will be very relieved to have only been up against 340 English runs.
Chandika Hathurusingha probably isn't the toughest wicket that Angus Fraser has ever had to take, but one imagines that he will still be relieved to take it on his return to the team. It was the only wicket to fall to a seamer as Tufnell and Such again combined to great effect: this time, Tufnell took six impressive wickets, making this his ninth five-wicket haul out of the last ten by England bowlers. For ten consecutive five-fors for England to be by spinners must surely also be a record, and speaks highly of Tufnell's quality as a Test bowler. Only one Sri Lankan made a 50, the excellent Aravinda de Silva whose dashing 53 was brought to a premature end by Tufnell.
A second innings meant a second chance for some of England's batsmen to seal their spots for the upcoming Ashes. Five batsmen would make good contributions; four - Stewart (33), Atherton (45), Hick (43) and Ramprakash (42) would fall before converting them into big scores, but Robin Smith made good of the opportunity to register his tenth Test century. It set up an aggressive English declaration, setting Sri Lanka a target of 391 and plenty of time to get those runs.
Plenty of time, but perhaps a slight lack of quality: this time, nobody would even threaten 50 as Tufnell added six more wickets to a stellar winter. In seven innings' bowling, he has taken six five-wicket hauls; his excellence has put Peter Such decidedly in the shade, but he added another two wickets for only 39 in the second innings - figures that any English spinner could be reasonably happy with.
A second career Barrington Medal for the excellent Phil Tufnell is just reward for a winter that propels him into the conversation as one of England's truly great Test spinners.
Sri Lanka XI
Roshan Mahanama
Chandika Hathurusingha
Asanka Gurusinha
Aravinda de Silva
Arjuna Ranatunga
Hashan Tillakaratne
Sanath Jayasuriya
Ashley de Silva
Champaka Ramanayake
Muttiah Muralitharan
Jayananda Warnaweera
England XI
Graham Gooch
Alec Stewart
Michael Atherton
Robin Smith
Graeme Hick
Mark Ramprakash
Jack Russell
Angus Fraser
Phil Tufnell
Peter Such
Devon Malcolm
- - -
England win the toss and choose to bat
- - -
The "Gooch at three" experiment was a failure, so he shall return to the top of the order with Atherton moving to three. Ramprakash keeps his place in the side to prove himself ahead of a home Ashes series; his extra opportunity comes at the expense of Chris Lewis, who has been rested after playing a lot of consecutive Test matches. As for Sri Lanka, pretty much what you'd expect - bats fairly deep, lots of spinners. The pitch looked flat but dry, so Gooch will have been mightily relieved to win the toss.
If there's one thing that this Test proved for sure, it's that Alec Stewart really likes batting against Sri Lanka. In his second Test against this opposition, he recorded another century, this one a part of a 192-run partnership with Atherton. Atherton made 72 of them, his second-best Test score. After that huge stand, everything else rather paled by comparison, although Hick did muster a sparkling 56. Ramprakash missed out though, and Russell was left with an even tougher tail to bat with than usual; ultimately, Sri Lanka will be very relieved to have only been up against 340 English runs.
Chandika Hathurusingha probably isn't the toughest wicket that Angus Fraser has ever had to take, but one imagines that he will still be relieved to take it on his return to the team. It was the only wicket to fall to a seamer as Tufnell and Such again combined to great effect: this time, Tufnell took six impressive wickets, making this his ninth five-wicket haul out of the last ten by England bowlers. For ten consecutive five-fors for England to be by spinners must surely also be a record, and speaks highly of Tufnell's quality as a Test bowler. Only one Sri Lankan made a 50, the excellent Aravinda de Silva whose dashing 53 was brought to a premature end by Tufnell.
A second innings meant a second chance for some of England's batsmen to seal their spots for the upcoming Ashes. Five batsmen would make good contributions; four - Stewart (33), Atherton (45), Hick (43) and Ramprakash (42) would fall before converting them into big scores, but Robin Smith made good of the opportunity to register his tenth Test century. It set up an aggressive English declaration, setting Sri Lanka a target of 391 and plenty of time to get those runs.
Plenty of time, but perhaps a slight lack of quality: this time, nobody would even threaten 50 as Tufnell added six more wickets to a stellar winter. In seven innings' bowling, he has taken six five-wicket hauls; his excellence has put Peter Such decidedly in the shade, but he added another two wickets for only 39 in the second innings - figures that any English spinner could be reasonably happy with.
I'm also adding a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Standings
1. Phil Tufnell - 15 points (+5)
=2. Robin Smith - 7 points (+2)
=2. Peter Such - 7 points (+1)
4. Alec Stewart - 4 points (+3)
5. Michael Atherton - 3 points
6. Graham Gooch - 2 points
7. Mark Ramprakash - 1 point
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Phil Tufnell - 15 points (+5)
=2. Robin Smith - 7 points (+2)
=2. Peter Such - 7 points (+1)
4. Alec Stewart - 4 points (+3)
5. Michael Atherton - 3 points
6. Graham Gooch - 2 points
7. Mark Ramprakash - 1 point
A second career Barrington Medal for the excellent Phil Tufnell is just reward for a winter that propels him into the conversation as one of England's truly great Test spinners.