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[VIDEOS] Australia tour of Sri Lanka (2022)

A decent session for Australia. Opting to bat, they lost Warner early, but the Queensland pair of Khawaja and Labuschagne steadied the ship with 55-run stand for the second wicket.

AUS 99/2 (30) CRR: 3.3
 
Cruise control now for Australia with ML (century) and SS (fifty) in their element.

AUS 201/2 (57.5) CRR: 3.48
 
Last Wkt: Marnus Labuschagne st Dickwella b P Jayasuriya 104(156)

AUS 217/3 (63) CRR: 3.44

maiden Test wicket for Jayasuriya
 
Australia have nearly scored 100 per session and that should give you an idea of their approach throughout the day. After opting to bat, both openers succumbed inside the first session but the ever-reliable pair of Labuschagne and Steve Smith didn't disappoint. While Labuschagne notched up his first ton away from home, Smith compiled his first hundred since January 2021.

AUS 298/5 (90) CRR: 3.31
Day 1: Stumps
 
Steve Smith ended a 546-day drought without a Test century as he joined his protégé Marnus Labuschagne in saluting on the opening day of Australia's tour-concluding clash with Sri Lanka in Galle.

Labuschagne brought up a hundred inside the first two sessions, but it was Smith's chanceless century, his 28th in Tests, that stole the day with an unbeaten 109 to take the visitors to 5-298 at stumps.

Smith battled what appeared to be a back concern, receiving occasional treatment from medical staff during his 212-ball stay, celebrating in understated fashion during the final session upon reaching his first ton in 16 innings.

Run out in the first Test last week, the former captain was in supreme touch against a depleted Sri Lankan attack, rarely allowing their spinners to err as he reached stumps not out with Alex Carey (16no) at the other end.

Labuschagne had raced to his first Test century abroad (and his seventh overall) before tea, as he made Sri Lanka pay for a costly missed stumping by Niroshan Dickwella when he was on 28.

The twin tons came against a stop-gap Sri attack decimated by COVID-19 cases and confidence issues, with the hosts forced into fielding three debutants (Prabath Jayasuriya, Maheesh Theekshana and Kamindu Mendis), while they also included Angelo Mathews who only recovered from a bout of the virus earlier this week.

Jayasuriya, one of those three debutants, had an unlikely star turn as Sri Lanka's go-to bowler after bouncing back from a tough initiation through the early part of the day to snare 3-22 to finish it, including the key scalp of Labuschagne.

The 30-year-old, who begun the series as Sri Lanka's fourth choice left-arm spinner having failed to win a spot in the initial squad behind Lasith Embuldeniya (axed after a poor first Test), Praveen Jayawickrama (COVID-19) and Dunith Wellalage, finished the day with 3-90 from 28 overs.

Having reached his ton off just 147 balls, Labuschagne appeared to have few obstacles to making the kind of big daddy hundred he hasn't scored in two-and-a-half years.

But Jayasuriya delivered a big blow against the run of play.

Labuschagne danced down the track only for the left-armer to rip and bounce one far more prodigiously than any of his previous 75 deliveries had to have the star batter stumped.

It was well watched by Dickwella and some relief for the gloveman with his wicketkeeping again under the microscope in the final session when he missed another stumping opportunity with Cameron Green on one.

Jayasuriya needed no assistance for his next two dismissals, clean bowling a bewildered Travis Head (12) before having Cameron Green (4) given lbw after a long deliberation by umpire Kumar Dharmasena.

Australia had left it to the last moment to make a call on the make-up of their XI, eventually deeming Glenn Maxwell's lower-order batting and off-spin less valuable than Mitchell Starc's left-arm pace given the more traditional subcontinental pitch prepared for this Test.

Pat Cummins' decision to win the toss and bat was therefore a no-brainer and the prevailing conditions would appear to have justified Starc's inclusion.

Yet while the kind of extravagant turn seen during the first Test is not yet consistently on display in the second, both of the tourists' openers could fairly say there was little they could have done to avoid their first session exits.

For David Warner (5 off 13), that came courtesy of a searing delivery from recalled paceman Kasun Rajitha that nipped away and clipped his off-stump, while Usman Khawaja (37 off 77) also had his woodwork disturbed by a textbook off-break from Ramesh Mendis.

Labuschagne and Smith looked destined for a far bigger haul than the 134-run stand they eventually had to settle for when Jayasuriya struck on the stroke of tea.

That came on the back of some dry bowling from the disciplined Rajitha, who had contained the quirky duo's free-scoring by operating with a 7-2 off-side field and bowling well wide of the stumps.

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/mat...one-galle-scores-higlights-replays/2022-07-08
 
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Well done, Smith.

He is still unbeaten.

Australia should score 100-150 more runs minimum.
 
Smith back on top of a bowling attack.

Class is permanent.
 
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The Sri Lanka openers survive and make it through to lunch after Australia were bowled out for 364. It's a big total on this pitch but it could've been bigger if not for Prabhat Jayasuriya's six-for. Australia were 298/5 overnight, and a good session here would've seen them bat Sri Lanka out of this Test. Jayasuriya bowled brilliantly though.

AUS 364
SL 8/0 (3) CRR: 2.67
Day 2: Lunch Break - Sri Lanka trail by 356 runs
 
That's tea. Sri Lanka go to the short break at 65/1

Steady progress for Sri Lanka but some distance to go to make things safe.
 
Strong position SL

AUS 364
SL 116/1 (42.2) CRR: 2.74
Day 2: 3rd Session - Sri Lanka trail by 248 runs
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">The protest has come to the Galle International Stadium. While there is a Test match underway, what’s happening elsewhere and all around Sri Lanka today is way more significant. It’s the people’s call for change <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/SLvAus?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#SLvAus</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/LoveForLanka?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#LoveForLanka</a> <a href="https://t.co/9nYOlNz7Ar">pic.twitter.com/9nYOlNz7Ar</a></p>— Bharat Sundaresan (@beastieboy07) <a href="https://twitter.com/beastieboy07/status/1545626707024941062?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 9, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

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Karunaratne strangled down leg? Australia think so and they have gone up for the review. Flat line on the Ultra Edge. Not out.

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Solid comeback by SL. Thought Karunaratne played really well.
 
<I>World Test Championship

09 Jul 22</I>

<b>Karunaratne, Kusal lead Sri Lanka's fightback after Jayasuriya's brilliant spell

SL v AUS, second Test, day two talking points</b>

Sri Lanka fought back hard on day two – bowling out Australia for 364 – before brilliant knocks from Dimuth Karunaratne and Kusal Mendis helped them to 184/2.

Resuming day two at 298/5, Australia were in a commanding position, with the aim of batting Sri Lanka out of the contest. But the Sri Lankan bowlers, especially debutant Prabath Jayasuriya had other plans. Wicketkeeper-batter Alex Carey would be the first one to be dismissed on Day 2, falling for 28, trying to attempt an audacious reverse-sweep against Jayasuriya.

Jayasuriya would clinch his five-wicket haul, with Mitchell Starc edging one to first slip for 1. Skipper Pat Cummins too couldn't last long, with Kasun Rajitha trapping him lbw for 5. Jayasuriya's debut Test would become all the memorable, as he got his sixth by scalping Lyon for 5.

Sri Lanka's valiant fightback would be complete when Mitchell Swepson fell for 3 against Maheesh Theekshana, with Australia being bowled out for 364. Steve Smith would be left stranded at the other end, remaining unbeaten on 145.

Pathum Nissanka's struggles against pace continued as he was dismissed by Mitchell Starc on 6, going for a flashy poke. That would be the only joy that the Australian bowlers would enjoy for a substantial period of time.

Skipper Dimuth Karunaratne and Kusal Mendis embarked on a brilliant stand, with the Australian bowlers looking largely hapless against the patient approach of the pair. Both the players would bring up their half-centuries, as the Australians grew desperate to break the stand.

With the day approaching its final phase and the total crossing 160, the visitors were now in desperate need of a breakthrough.

The 152-run stand between Karunaratne and Kusal was finally broken by Mitchell Swepson. The Sri Lankan captain was beaten for pace and trapped plumb in front of the stump by the leg-spinner. Karunaratne reviewed the call but to no avail, walking back for a well-made 86.

The wicket gave Australia some relief before the close of play. Kusal (84*) and Angelo Mathews (6*) ensured that the hosts did not lose any more wickets, closing day two at 184/2, trailing Australia by 180 runs. But with the Sri Lankan anchor back in the hut, Australia will back themselves to get some early wickets on day three.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/2672284
 
I don't mind if SL do well here. They need a bit of good news.

Good contest so far. Green is really coming into his own as a player now.
 
Day 3 - Lunch: Sri Lanka trail by 102 runs
Aus 364
SL (89 ov) 262/3
 
AUS 364
SL 328/4 (108.3) CRR: 3.02
Day 3: 3rd Session - Sri Lanka trail by 36 runs

==

Sri Lanka in strong position now - any lead above 100 will be interesting
 
AUS 364
SL 381/4 (126.2) CRR: 3.02
Day 3: 3rd Session - Sri Lanka lead by 17 runs

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Kamindu Mendis reaches his half-century on debut. <br><br>This is now the first time that Sri Lanka have had five 50+ scores in a Test innings against Australia <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/SLvAUS?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#SLvAUS</a> <a href="https://t.co/3lTSjgfIQb">pic.twitter.com/3lTSjgfIQb</a></p>— cricket.com.au (@cricketcomau) <a href="https://twitter.com/cricketcomau/status/1546077522622033920?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 10, 2022</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
What an opportunity this is for Sri Lanka to level the series. They’ve batted patiently and very competently against a solid Aussie bowling attack. Doesn’t seem like Nathan Lyon’s most incisive spell for 1-150. Perhaps Steven Smith should be given a bit of a bowl.
 
What an opportunity this is for Sri Lanka to level the series. They’ve batted patiently and very competently against a solid Aussie bowling attack. Doesn’t seem like Nathan Lyon’s most incisive spell for 1-150. Perhaps Steven Smith should be given a bit of a bowl.

Big test for Aus batters coming up -

AUS 364
SL 409/6 (136.4) CRR: 2.99
Day 3: 3rd Session - Sri Lanka lead by 45 runs
 
AUS 364
SL 431/6 (149) CRR: 2.89
Day 3: Stumps - Sri Lanka lead by 67 runs
 
AUS 364
SL 431/6 (149) CRR: 2.89
Day 3: Stumps - Sri Lanka lead by 67 runs

A solid effort from the Sri Lankan middle-order, led by Dinesh Chandimal's ton, has put Sri Lanka in a commanding position against Australia at stumps on day three.

Sri Lanka may have lost Kusal Mendis early on Day 3 but that did not deter them from chipping at Australia's lead. Drawing from their considerable experience, the veteran duo of Angelo Mathews and Dinesh Chandimal frustrated the visiting bowlers and confidently notched up a half-century partnership.

Australia took the new ball five overs before the lunch break but were not able to make any inroads. The hosts went to lunch at 262/3 with Mathews on 49* and Chandimal on 29*.

Dinesh Chandimal piles on misery

Chandimal should have been out caught behind on 30 a few overs after the lunch break off Mitchell Starc. There was a huge appeal from Australia but unfortunately, they had no reviews left. Ultra Edge showed a big inside edge. Welcoming the big reprieve that he got, Chandimal slammed the next delivery for a four through mid-off and there was no looking back.

He brought up his 22nd Test fifty sweeping through fine leg and despite a brief interlude with tea being forced early due to rain, Sri Lanka continued in much the same fashion.

Chandimal converted that fifty into his 13th Test hundred, also helping Sri Lanka go into the lead.

Australia spinners strike late

If not for the late wickets from Australia, Sri Lanka would have been fully in charge of the game. However, a couple of rash shots saw them lose two wickets in the final session.

After getting to his fifty on Test debut, a big score was there for the taking before a rare wild slog became Kamindu Mendis' undoing. Mitchell Swepson got the ball to spin off the rough and castled him.


Three overs later, Nathan Lyon lured Niroshan Dickwella into a big shot. The southpaw took the bait and was out caught by Pat Cummins at mid-on.

Ramesh Mendis and Chadimal took Sri Lanka into stumps with a healthy lead of 67.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/2673008
 
Sri Lanka are on top. I think they shouldn't lose this Test now. So, either a Sri Lanka win or a draw.
 
AUS 364
SL 473/6 (163) CRR: 2.9
Day 4: 1st Session - Sri Lanka lead by 109 runs

==

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AUS 364
SL 496/7 (170) CRR: 2.92
Day 4: 1st Session - Sri Lanka lead by 132 runs

Chandimal 150 - Big test for Australia coming up
 
2nd Test • Australia tour of Sri Lanka, 2022

SL 499/8 (173)

AUS 364 (110)

Day 4: Lunch Break - Sri Lanka lead by 135 runs

==

Sri Lanka have extended the lead to 135 with Chandimal still unbeaten. He's gone past 150, but it was hard to keep the runs flowing towards the end of the session with Australia keeping the field back to him and attacking the batter at the other end after getting a couple of wickets with the third new ball. Seems only a matter of time that this innings is wrapped up now. In any case, Sri Lanka are going to end up with a healthy lead here. What remains to be seen is the rate at which the pitch now deteriorates. It still doesn't seem too bad against the spinners.
 
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Australiawill do well to salvage a draw from here, all set for an exciting last day tomorrow.

SL 554

AUS 364 & 99/4 (26.5) CRR: 3.69

Day 4: 3rd Session - Australia trail by 91 runs
 
Well done SL on leveling series and that after missing players due to covid. 12 wickets for Jayasuriya well bowled.
 
That’s a huge result. Well done to SL

Jayasuriya 12 wickets and Chandimal double ton. Fantastic performances
 
Dinesh Chandimal's double century and Prabath Jayasuriya's six-wicket haul helped Sri Lanka beat Australia by an innings and 39 runs in Galle and level the two-match series 1-1.

Resuming day four with an overnight lead of 67, Dinesh Chandimal and Ramesh Mendis went about their business in the first hour, again frustrating the Australians. Chandimal was looking solid as ever and Mendis was chipping in with some valuable runs to extend the lead.

They shared a partnership of 68 before Mitchell Starc finally got Mendis trapped lbw. Maheesh Theekshana would also perish for 10 before lunch but the hosts' lead had now grown to 135.

Chandimal went on the attack in the afternoon session, smashing the Australian bowlers around and edging closer to a landmark double century.

He brought up the milestone by hitting Starc for back-to-back maximums, as the Sri Lankan dressing room erupted in applause. With this feat, he became the first Sri Lankan to score a double century against Australia in Test cricket.

Australia's misery would finally end when Mitchell Swepson trapped Kasun Rajitha, but the hosts had grown their lead to 190.

The visitors struggled against the spin of debutant Prabath Jayasuriya in the first innings and struggled again in the second.

He was well-supported by the rest of the spinners as Ramesh Mendis and Theekshana also chipped in with two wickets apiece. But it was Jayasuriya who walked away with the glory, registering figures of 6/59. His scalps included Usman Khawaja, Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith, Cameron Green, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Swepson as the Australians looked clueless against his magic.

For Australia, it was a tepid batting display which will again raise question marks about their ability against the turning ball. Only Marnus Labuschagne could cross the 30-run mark, as they succumbed to a defeat by an innings and 39 runs. For Sri Lanka, it was a well-deserved win as they levelled the two-match series.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/2673784
 
Today's win by Sri Lanka was just their 5th win out of 33 Tests against Australia. However 4 out of those 5 wins have come in the last 7 Tests.

Recent times Sri Lanka has done well against the Aussies.
 
Today's win by Sri Lanka was just their 5th win out of 33 Tests against Australia. However 4 out of those 5 wins have come in the last 7 Tests.

Recent times Sri Lanka has done well against the Aussies.

More like Australia has completely forgotten how to play spin.
 
Most who attended an unforgettable Galle Test for reasons both cricket and non-cricket related would not likely be able to recall, off the tops of their heads, precisely what had happened on the morning of day two.

In fact, the on-field contest on Saturday morning had been wholly overshadowed by the seaside ground being encircled by peaceful protesters who had been stopped from travelling to Colombo where demonstrations forced the resignation of the country's president and prime minster.

They were significant events acknowledged by Australia’s captain Pat Cummins, who is the face of a UNICEF appeal aimed at increasing Sri Lankan children's access to basic services amid the country's economic crisis.

But from a cricket perspective, what proved significant from that day to an Australian team still finding their feet on the subcontinent was the surrender of their final five first-innings wickets for only 35 runs.

It was a gift of unquantifiable value given Steve Smith was unbeaten on 145no at the other end and had not offered a chance through more than six hours of batting.

Even after their rapid submission 48 hours later that is sure to raise familiar questions of how the Aussies play spin, Cummins looked back at the initial collapse that saw his side fold for a sub-par 364 as a turning point in their first Test defeat under his captaincy.

"That was probably an opportunity missed," Cummins said on Monday after sharing the series trophy with his counterpart Dimuth Karunaratne.

"The way we set up the game day one, hoping to get 400-plus, which history suggests here puts you in a really good position.

"Unfortunately none of us hung around with Smithy long enough to get up to the 400-plus, which would have meant even if we were out there for 180 overs you were kind of level (after both team had batted)."

The value of tail-end runs – or just tail-end staying power – was magnified further as Dinesh Chandimal added 145 runs with only the side's bowlers for company at the other end on Monday.

It saw Sri Lanka's tally swell to 554, 39 more runs in one innings than what Australia could manage in two.

The whole experience also holds big-picture lessons for an Australian side that still sees their four-Test trip to India next year as a subcontinental holy grail.

The sight of Smith chatting to Niroshan Dickwella and impressive debutant Kamindu Mendis, and veterans Usman Khawaja and Angelo Mathews also picking each other's brains, before the post-series presentation, suggested Australia remain eager to learn from their subcontinental foes.

"We'll review this series, try to put away lots of notes and ideas, then bank that, put that to one side and work towards the home summer," said Cummins, whose next Test assignment will come against South Africa and West Indies at home.

"In Australia most likely you only play one spinner, so in the background you're trying to prepare a couple of other guys so they get the chance over in India.

"The last two tours we've learned a heap, we've come a long way in how we've played and try to park that to one side and try to re-remember it in six months."

For Cummins, he feels he now better understands the rhythms of cricket in Asia after his side notched a 1-0 win over Pakistan earlier this year, and is adamant one loss has not undone their improvements.

"It's a good reality check for people touring over here that it's really hard," said Cummins, who also oversaw the 10-wicket win over Sri Lanka in the first Test. "So many positives out of last week that we did find methods that work, and one small hiccup doesn't mean you have to change everything."

In his mind, having Nathan Lyon in his side is his major drawcard from a bowling perspective, with Australia of the belief he was unfortunate to not have taken more than the two wickets he finished with in the second Test from a marathon 64-over spell.

Only three Australians have sent down more deliveries in a Test innings since the introduction of six-ball overs.

Cummins may also draw on his previous experience in India five years ago, when the prospect of him playing regular Test cricket was no guarantee, let alone the thought of him captaining the side.

In fact his first Test back after his six-year injury-laden break could have been something of a blueprint for a team that was on the ropes after their Chandimal-induced beating on day four.

That 2017 Test against India in Ranchi had, until the start of the third innings, followed a similar path to this latest one in Galle.

In that match, Smith had also been left stranded without any further batting partners after a stellar ton (178no). The Aussies had also failed to make enough first-innings runs (451), their opponents had piled on a massive reply led by a double-century maker (Cheteshwar Pujara scoring 202 out of India's 9-603 dec.), while their spinner also sent down a record number of overs (Stephen O'Keefe, with 77).

That Australia had added 120 runs for the final five wickets after the loss of Glenn Maxwell (for his only Test ton) proved a significant advantage for their batters when it came to successfully hanging on for a draw in that instance.

"(Bowling) 180 overs out here, it happens quite a bit overseas," Cummins noted when asked about what he has learned about captaincy abroad.

"Field placements and using the spin bowlers, I hadn't had a lot of experience with that. And just managing the tempo and even the bowlers spells, managing different bowlers, trying to keep a relative control on the scoreboard and scoring rate.

"I felt like I learned (a lot) … just trying to get that little bit better at everything you're trying to do.

"We'll sit down and review it and look at different areas and maybe tactics, but I think it's those methods which might be quite different to back home, and trying to be good enough overseas."

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/pat...gs-defeat-galle-lapse-series-drawn/2022-07-11
 
1 In his 11th Test match away from home, Marnus Labuschagne finally broke through for his first century on foreign soil in the second Test in Galle. It was the seventh of his career and his first against Sri Lanka.

6 Years since Australia's last innings defeat. That came against South Africa in Hobart, when they were bowled out for 85 on a green top in 2016.

10 Nathan Lyon's nine-wicket haul in the first Test catapulted the off-spinner into the top 10 Test wicket-takers of all time, passing Kapil Dev on 434 wickets. Lyon began the series in 13th spot overall on 427 Test wickets, but nine scalps in the first match and another two in the second has him now sitting in 10th spot with 438 scalps.

12 Wickets on debut for Prabath Jayasuriya, becoming one of just five men in Test history to take at least 12 wickets in their first match. Nerves were evident as Jayasuriya started slowly, taking 0-54 from his first 12 overs. But once he found his groove he proved almost unplayable for the Aussies. He finished the first innings with 6-118 from 36 overs and exceeded that in the second innings, taking 6-59 from 16 and fittingly snaring the final wicket of the match.

17 Balls. That's all it took for Travis Head to spin through Sri Lanka's middle order in the first Test to finish with career-best figures of 4-10. While they were Head's first four Test wickets, the off-spinner had 54 first-class scalps to his name heading into the series. However he is far from a regular wicket taker with the red ball, averaging a wicket once every 100 balls.

22.5 Overs faced by Sri Lanka in their second innings of the first Test. The dismal showing was their shortest completed innings in Test history, edging out the 24.4 overs they faced when bowled out cheaply against England in Cardiff, 2011.

28 Test centuries for Steve Smith, who reached the milestone in the first innings of the second Test. Only 17 other men in the history of the game have made that many hundreds, including five Australians (Sir Donald Bradman, Michael Clarke, Matthew Hayden, Ricky Ponting and Steve Waugh). However Smith was the third-fastest overall to reach his 28th ton, with the right-hander taking only 153 innings, bettered only by the great Bradman and Sachin Tendulkar.

64 Overs bowled by Nathan Lyon in the second Test. Australia's greatest ever off-spinner has put in some enormous shifts in his 110-Test career, but his 64 overs in Sri Lanka's only innings of the second Test is the most he's bowled in a single innings. It was the seventh occasion where Lyon was required to bowl 50+ overs, three of which have been this year.

142 Days until Australia's next Test match. After their humbling loss in Galle, the Aussies will have to wait until November 30 to right their record in the longest format, when they meet the West Indies in Perth on November 30. Sri Lanka conversely get to ride their wave of momentum as they face Pakistan this Saturday.

206 Dinesh Chandimal's highest score in Tests and his first double century was also the first 200-plus score by a Sri Lankan against Australia. The previous best was Kumar Sangakkara's 192 in the fourth innings in Hobart, 2007.

514 Balls between Mitch Swepson's second and third Test wickets. After going wicketless in the third Test in Pakistan, Swepson had sent down 85.4 overs before he finally broke through in Galle. He barely had time to soak in his third Test wicket as he took his fourth with the very next ball, caught by David Warner.

554 Sri Lanka's mammoth first innings score in the second Test was the island nation's highest score against Australia, eclipsing the record set 30 years ago when they smacked 8-547dec in Colombo.

https://www.cricket.com.au/news/sri...uschagne-lyon-jayasuriya-chandimal/2022-07-11
 
In case you missed this....

Highlights of Day 4

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