Sri Lanka prospers as Herath wrecks havoc

Sri Lanka prospers as Herath wrecks havoc
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Summary Pakistan set a series-levelling target of 271 runs

COLOMBO (AFP) - Sri Lanka stepped closer to giving former captain Mahela Jayawardene a winning ‎farewell after Rangana Herath skittled Pakistan once more in the second Test in Colombo on Sunday.‎
Pakistan, set a series-leveling target of 271 runs, slumped to 50-5 before plodding to 127-7 by stumps ‎on the fourth day at the Sinhalese Sports Club.‎
Left-arm spinner Herath, who claimed nine wickets in the first innings, grabbed four for 46 to destroy ‎Pakistan s fragile batting once again in front of some 5,000 screaming home fans.‎
Herath, who came on to bowl the ninth over after seamer Dhammika Prasad had dismissed openers ‎Khurram Manzoor and Ahmed Shehzad, struck his first blow with his eighth delivery.‎
Jayawardene, who ends his 17-year Test career after this match, held two smart catches in the slips off ‎Herath to get rid of Azhar Ali and skipper Misbah-ul Haq.‎
Herath then won a leg-before decision against Younis Khan to make it 50-5 in the 19th over, before ‎Asad Shafiq and Sarfraz Ahmed stemmed the rot by batting an hour for their 55-run stand.‎
Shafiq was stumped off Herath for 32 and Abdur Rehman was leg-before to Dilruwan Perera, but ‎Sarfraz remained unbeaten on a defiant 38.‎
Sri Lanka will return on Monday to take the remaining three wickets that will enable them to sweep ‎the series after winning the first Test in Galle by seven wickets. ‎
Pakistan, who need 144 runs more to record an improbable win, chose not to speak to the media after ‎play.‎
‎ Sri Lankan veteran Kumar Sangakkara said he was surprised that Pakistan lost seven wickets in one ‎session after tea despite the difficult pitch that helped the bowlers.‎
‎"We did not expect Pakistan to collapse," he said. "But it s a challenge to bat on this wicket. It is two-‎paced, has inconsistent bounce and there is also a bit of turn.‎
‎"Dhammika gave us the early breaks and then the magical Herath was back. He has been incredible for ‎us over the past few years." ‎
The hosts were bowled out for 282 in their second knock just before tea, with seamer Wahab Riaz and ‎off-spinner Saeed Ajmal claiming three wickets each.‎
Sri Lankan skipper Angelo Mathews remained unbeaten on 43 after Jayawardene was dismissed for 54 ‎in his last Test innings.‎
The overnight pair of Jayawardene and his long-time teammate Sangakkara, batting together for the ‎last time in a Test match, took their partnership to 107 after Sri Lanka resumed the day on 177-2.‎
However, both batsmen fell to Ajmal within three runs of each other as the hosts slipped to 189-4 ‎within the first 30 minutes of play.‎
Ajmal had the left-handed Sangakkara caught at silly point by Ali for 59 and then removed ‎Jayawardene in his next over after the batsman had added five runs to his overnight 49.‎
Jayawardene mistimed a lofted shot to mid-wicket, where Shehzad took a low tumbling catch.‎
One run earlier, Jayawardene had survived an appeal for a catch off Riaz as replays showed the ball ‎touch the ground before landing in the wicket keeper’s gloves.‎
The 37-year-old Jayawardene is one of only five batsmen to score more than 11,000 runs in both Test ‎and one-day cricket -- the others being Sachin Tendulkar, Ricky Ponting, Jacques Kallis and team-mate ‎Kumar Sangakkara.‎
The 149-Test veteran finished with 11,814 runs at an average of 49.84 with 34 hundreds and 50 half-‎centuries.‎
Having retired from Twenty20 internationals after Sri Lanka s title-winning campaign in the World T20 in ‎April, Jayawardene will now play only one-day cricket heading into next year s World Cup Down Under.‎
Pakistan missed left-arm seamer Junaid Khan, who did not bowl in Sri Lanka s second innings after ‎being hit on the helmet by a rising ball from Prasad on Saturday. He was kept under observation at a ‎hospital for a few hours.‎
Team manager Moin Khan said Junaid might bat if needed.

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