New Zealand struggled to 159 for five on the second day of the second and final Test yesterday, trailing Sri Lanka by 257 runs after Thilan Samaraweera’s century had put the hosts in command.
Ross Taylor was providing lone resistance for the Kiwis at the close, having compiled 70 not out from 118 balls. Wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum was also unbeaten on five.
Left-armer Thilan Thushara continued his fine form by taking two for 37 for Sri Lanka.
PHOTO: AP
Earlier, Samaraweera thumped 143 as Sri Lanka totaled 416 in their first innings despite losing their last five wickets for 27 runs.
Samaraweera shared a 180-run partnership for the fourth wicket with Mahela Jayawardene (92).
The centurion batted for more than six hours, facing 240 deliveries and hitting 17 fours and a six as he made his second hundred of the series.
New Zealand fought back in the afternoon, off-spinner Jeetan Patel recovering from an expensive start to finish with four for 78.
Sri Lanka, 1-0 up in the series, had started the day on 262 for three.
Jayawardene scored 92 in 234 balls before being caught behind off seamer Iain O’Brien.
Chamara Kapugedera, replacing injured all-rounder Angelo Mathews, then stroked 35 before lofting a catch off Patel.
When New Zealand went in to bat, captain Kumar Sangakkara briefly experimented with Tillakaratne Dilshan opening the bowling with his off breaks.
However, Sangakkara quickly reverted to the pace of Dammika Prasad, who trapped Tim McIntosh lbw for five. Thushara then had Daniel Flynn caught behind for 13, Prasanna Jayawardene taking a good diving catch.
Martin Guptill (35) top-edged a pull to deep backward square before Jesse Ryder (23) helped steady the innings with Taylor, adding 85 for the fourth wicket.
Ryder, though, was snapped up at bat-pad off Rangana Herath and Muttiah Muralitharan removed nightwatchman Patel for one.
■HOSTING ROW SETTLED
REUTERS, DUBAI
The International Cricket Council (ICC) has resolved its dispute with Pakistan after the country was removed as joint host of the 2011 World Cup over security concerns.
The agreement was reached at a meeting between ICC president David Morgan and Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ijaz Butt yesterday, ensuring the PCB drops its legal challenge after 14 games it had been allocated were shifted to co-hosts India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.
The two parties have agreed the PCB will retain its host fees and also receive an additional payment as compensation, an ICC statement said.
Manchester City have reached do-or-die territory in the UEFA Champions League earlier than expected ahead of what Pep Guardiola has described as a “final” against Club Brugge today. City have disproved the suggestion a new format to Europe’s top club competition would remove any jeopardy for the top clubs as Guardiola stares down the barrel of failing to make the Champions League knockout stages for the first time in his career. The English champions have endured a torrid season both in their English Premier League title defense and on the continent. A run of one win in 13 games, which included Champions League
BACK-TO-BACK: The League One club, which is owned by stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, is sparing no expense to clinch promotion to the Championship Hollywood endings are pricey, even in England’s third division. In pursuit of their third straight promotion, Wrexham AFC splashed some cash at League One rival Reading to secure the services of striker Sam Smith. The Welsh club owned by actors Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney confirmed the signing of the 26-year-old Smith on Friday. He is one of the top scorers in the third division. The transfer fee was not disclosed, but British media widely reported it to be about £2 million (US$2.48 million) — not extravagant, but a hefty price at this level and it would be about the same figure that
Oklahoma City star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander on Sunday poured in 35 points as the Thunder grabbed a bounce-back 118-108 victory in Portland to push their NBA-best record to 37-8. The Thunder, surprised by the short-handed Dallas Mavericks on Thursday, fended off a late surge from the Trail Blazers to snap their four-game winning streak. Jalen Williams scored 24 points and Isaiah Joe added 16 off the bench. Center Isaiah Hartenstein, back after a five-game absence with a calf injury, added 14 points, 11 rebounds, six assists and a big block. The Western Conference leaders were under pressure late as Portland, trailing by 15 heading
The Golden State Warriors on Wednesday withstood Oklahoma City star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s 52-point outburst to beat the Western Conference leading Thunder 116-109. Andrew Wiggins scored 27 points and Warriors superstar Stephen Curry scored 17 of his 21 points in the second half as Golden State erased a double-digit deficit and pulled away late for the victory. “We just stayed solid,” said Curry, who entered the contest mired in a shooting slump and had just four points on one basket in the first half. “Just all-around effort.” The Thunder, fueled by 31 first-half points from Gilgeous-Alexander, led by as many as 14 in the