The players didn’t get the opportunity to go for a referral, not asking the third umpire from making any historic intervention. Ajantha Mendis sat in the dressing room all day. And only one over was bowled by a spinner. That, in a nutshell, was the story of a first day that missed all of its promised ingredients.
It was a slow death for fans as rains delayed the long-awaited sighting of the men in whites after several recent doses of the game’s two shorter versions. Later, with Sri Lanka opting to bat, the big suspense about whether the high-profile Indian batting would solve the Mendis mystery, too, got postponed. The only thing that was unveiled was the ground (a little late in the day), and the only mystery was how the outfield was ready for play despite rudimentary covers glued to the surface by truck tyres.
With just 22 overs of play possible, Day One was not even like a teaser to a much-hyped movie. The players we saw at the SSC were the second-string stars who generally have ‘and’ or ‘also’ prefixed to their names when the credits roll out. A wicket each for India’s new-ball bowlers Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma, plus an unbeaten century by Lankan opener Malinda Warnapura, had the home team finish at 85-2 after they won the toss. One of the stars — Kumar Sangakkara — did make a brief appearance but disappeared after a few punch-lines.
Overcast conditions
When the game started in the late afternoon, Zaheer and Sharma got the setting they would have hoped for when they sweated it out in the nets on the eve of the Test. Hydration wasn’t an issue and the pitch was lively because of the overcast conditions. Ishant made the first breakthrough, getting one to really take-off and force the edge from opener Michael Vandort. Wicket-keeper Dinesh Karthik took a fine catch above his head on the left.
... contd.