BrightCricket :: Post a reply
HOME
|
PROFILE
|
TELL A FRIEND
|
TOUCH US
|
LINK TO US
|
BOOKMARK US
|
LOGIN
| REGISTER
User:
Pass:
Auto Login?
SEARCH
|
CHAT
|
LIVE CHANNELS
|
HIGHLIGHTS
|
VIDEOS
|
PHOTOS
Post a reply
Name
Title
Message body
Emoticons
View more Emoticons
Font type
Default font
Arial
Arial Black
Century Gothic
Comic Sans MS
Courier New
Georgia
Lucida Console
Microsoft Sans Serif
Symbol
Tahoma
Trebuchet
Times New Roman
Verdana
Font Size
Tiny
Small
Normal
Large
Huge
Font Color
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Indigo
Violet
White
Black
[quote="Cricky"][img]http://www.vcricket.com/afp/CPS.NBT34.240708095059.photo00.quicklook.default-245x171.jpg[/img] Malinda Warnapura completed an impressive century to help Sri Lanka reach 205-2 in their first innings at lunch on the second day of the opening Test against India here on Thursday. The left-handed opener reached his second Test hundred in five matches when he cut fast bowler Ishant Sharma for his 13th four. Skipper Mahela Jayawardene (66 not out) and Warnapura denied India success in the morning session with an unfinished 148-run stand for the third wicket after the hosts had resumed at 85-2. Warnapura survived a leg-before appeal off spinner Harbhajan Singh when on 86 after India skipper Anil Kumble asked umpire Mark Benson of England to review the initial not-out decision under a new experimental rule. Benson consulted TV umpire Rudi Koertzen of South Africa and was proved right. The rule, on trial in the current three-Test series, allows players to seek a second opinion on umpiring decisions. A batsman or fielding captain can request a review of any decision by referring it to the third official monitoring television replays. Each team is allowed three unsuccessful review requests per innings and if one is successful it will get an additional appeal. It was a frustrating session for India as neither their seamers nor spinners could trouble Warnapura and Jayawardene, who continued to gather runs with ease on a placid track. Leg-spinner Kumble came closest to getting a wicket when wicket-keeper Dinesh Karthik dropped Jayawardene on 55. The Sri Lanka captain, 16 overnight, played some attractive shots during his 31st Test half-century, cutting Sharma for two successive fours early in the day. Jayawardene reached his 50 in style, lofting Harbhajan over long-on for the first six of the match. He also struck seven fours in his 138-ball knock. Warnapura, who was on 50 overnight, also waited patiently to punish loose deliveries, having so far struck 14 fours in his 194-ball knock. He was on 55 when paceman Zaheer Khan held a return catch, but it was ruled a no-ball. India introduced a double-spin attack in the second hour, but neither Kumble nor Harbhajan looked effective on a batsmen-friendly track. Kumble was economical, conceding just 26 off 15 overs.[/quote]
Options
HTML is
OFF
BBCode
is
ON
Smilies are
ON
Disable BBCode in this post
Disable Smilies in this post
All times are GMT + 8 Hours
Topic review
Author
Message
Cricky
Posted: Sun Jul 27, 2008 1:28 pm
Post subject: Ton-up Warnapura, Jayawardene boost Sri Lanka
Malinda Warnapura completed an impressive century to help Sri Lanka reach 205-2 in their first innings at lunch on the second day of the opening Test against India here on Thursday.
The left-handed opener reached his second Test hundred in five matches when he cut fast bowler Ishant Sharma for his 13th four.
Skipper Mahela Jayawardene (66 not out) and Warnapura denied India success in the morning session with an unfinished 148-run stand for the third wicket after the hosts had resumed at 85-2.
Warnapura survived a leg-before appeal off spinner Harbhajan Singh when on 86 after India skipper Anil Kumble asked umpire Mark Benson of England to review the initial not-out decision under a new experimental rule.
Benson consulted TV umpire Rudi Koertzen of South Africa and was proved right.
The rule, on trial in the current three-Test series, allows players to seek a second opinion on umpiring decisions.
A batsman or fielding captain can request a review of any decision by referring it to the third official monitoring television replays.
Each team is allowed three unsuccessful review requests per innings and if one is successful it will get an additional appeal.
It was a frustrating session for India as neither their seamers nor spinners could trouble Warnapura and Jayawardene, who continued to gather runs with ease on a placid track.
Leg-spinner Kumble came closest to getting a wicket when wicket-keeper Dinesh Karthik dropped Jayawardene on 55.
The Sri Lanka captain, 16 overnight, played some attractive shots during his 31st Test half-century, cutting Sharma for two successive fours early in the day.
Jayawardene reached his 50 in style, lofting Harbhajan over long-on for the first six of the match. He also struck seven fours in his 138-ball knock.
Warnapura, who was on 50 overnight, also waited patiently to punish loose deliveries, having so far struck 14 fours in his 194-ball knock. He was on 55 when paceman Zaheer Khan held a return catch, but it was ruled a no-ball.
India introduced a double-spin attack in the second hour, but neither Kumble nor Harbhajan looked effective on a batsmen-friendly track. Kumble was economical, conceding just 26 off 15 overs.
Googlepage:
GooglePullerPage
SiteMap Main
|
SiteMap Topics
|
SiteMap Full
Powered by
BrightCricket
© 2007 - Bright Group
This page has been viewed 65,521 times, last viewed: Thu Jan 08, 2009 10:23 pm.
WaiKey Web Directory
|
Internet Web directory
|
UK Web Directory
|
Video Directory
|
QMEO Link Exchange - Free Link directory
|
Linkok - Free Link Exchange Submit
linkok - Free link exchange.
|
FreeLinkSubmit
|
Evlilik Sarayi Directory
|
Top Listings Directory
|
Free SEO Backlinks