One minute they were busy reading Mendis’s hand to see if this was the ball pushed by the middle finger that would accelerate after pitching and move to the right. The next minute they faced someone who they had grown up reading, but still hadn’t totally interpreted. They might have even succeeded in reading Murali from the hand but there was still prodigious spin to deal with. Despite their extensive homework, it was a tough ‘spin class’ today that was beyond the understanding of even the best students of the game.
The moment of the Test so far was the Rahul Dravid dismissal. The first ball of Mendis’s fourth over saw the highly avoidable nostalgia of the Asia Cup final as the ‘man with many turns’ jumped in the air with delight.
In Mendis’s previous over, Dravid had been beaten while attempting to cut as the ball kept low. This time, Dravid got a delivery that the bowler, and perhaps Dravid too, will remember forever. Mendis pushed the ball with his middle finger like a carrom striker — it hastened after pitching and there was a bit of movement, just enough, from middle to off. Dravid, on the backfoot, had too much to deal with in a fraction of a second and his off-stump was knocked back, giving Mendis his maiden Test wicket and his first international dismissal.
Perfect foil
Sachin Tendulkar was the only batsman who had a workable risk-free plan against Mendis. He met the bowler on the front-foot most of the time and once even swatted a slog-sleep to the fence. Sourav Ganguly had a close call, proven by the fact that skipper Mahela Jayawardene asked for a referral — beaten on the front-foot as the ball moved from middle to leg. Laxman was beaten more than once outside the off-stump to the ball that straightened or slightly moved away. And while Mendis continued to impress, the world’s leading Test wicket-taker Murali was busy pecking away with wickets from the other end.
... contd.