Showing posts with label Jonathan_Trott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jonathan_Trott. Show all posts

Thursday, 29 March 2012

Trott Unable to Stop England Defeat


England's miserable start to 2012 continued as they lost the first Test to Sri Lanka by 75 runs in Galle. They have now lost all four Tests since the turn of the year, with Sri Lanka's spinners picking up where their Pakistani counterparts left off in the United Arab Emirates.

Rangana Herath, who took 12 wickets in the match, and Suraj Randiv accounted for all 10 of England's batsmen in the second innings, which fell well short of an imposing target of 340 despite the best efforts of Jonathan Trott.

He scored a gutsy 112, his seventh Test ton, but only Matt Prior, with 41, offered significant support as they were bowled out for 264.

In total 18 of England's 20 wickets in this match fell to Herath and Randiv and their technique against the slow bowlers is sure to come under fierce scrutiny.

Trott, 40 not out overnight, sent the third ball of the morning through the off-side for four but Kevin Pietersen looked troubled from the off. He gave Suranga Lakmal the sniff of a caught and bowled chance and had added only a single to his overnight score of 29 when he fell to Randiv in the third over.

His shot was a grim reprise of Andrew Strauss's dismissal on Wednesday, down the track and hitting a turning ball straight to midwicket, where Mahela Jayawardene held on. It was a hammer blow for England and Pietersen, who took an age to set off for the pavilion.

Trott, meanwhile, produced a neat reverse sweep to bring up his fifty and Ian Bell got going with a lofted four off Randiv.

After 12 overs, Jayawardene sent for Herath, who took six first-innings wickets and dismissed both openers on Wednesday night.

Trott and Bell were doing a decent job of neutralising the nervous energy created by Pietersen's dismissal, only for Trott to send a leading edge straight back to Herath on 62. It was a catchable height but the bowler grassed it.

England's luck did not hold, with Herath winning an lbw verdict against Bell with the score at 152. The batsman immediately reviewed the decision, with the suspicion of an edge, but replays were not conclusive enough to reprieve him.

Prior settled quickly and England reached 177 for four at lunch. The fifth-wicket pair then looked to work the singles after returning for the afternoon's play and Sri Lanka's in-out field allowed them to do so.

The England 200 was quickly followed by the fifty partnership, which took 127 balls. After 10 trouble-free overs after lunch, Jayawardene took the new ball. The returning Lakmal leaked eight from his second over with it, including a rare boundary as Prior crashed one through cover.

Chanaka Welegedara was also taken for eight as he returned to the attack, with England's scoring rate spiking and their opponents beginning to flag.

Trott brought up his century by sweeping Herath for four, ending a sequence of 18 singles and celebrating lavishly in front of the Barmy Army stronghold on the Galle Fort. Four balls later it was home fans in raptures, though, as Prior swept Herath hard towards short-leg, where Lahiru Thirimanne clung on after absorbing the impact with his body. Prior having contributed 41 in 88 balls, his scalp was a key one.

That brought the debutant Samit Patel to the crease for his second Test innings. With 107 still to get and only two to his name in his first attempt, the tension was stifling.

The large English contingent, largely hushed in the morning session, began to count off the landmarks with cheers – such as a roar as the target dipped into double figures and another for the 250th run. Once again, though, a wicket derailed their fun.

Patel was the man to go, for nine, clearing his front foot and picking out Tillakaratne Dilshan at short extra-cover. He juggled the chance initially, only to snare the ball one-handed at the second attempt and give Herath his second five-wicket haul of the match.

England's prospects were firmly on Trott's shoulders now but he was gone in the next over, turning Randiv to Dilshan at leg-slip. His five-and-a-half-hour knock was a superb effort in trying circumstances but it appeared certain to be in a losing cause.

Graeme Swann lasted only nine balls before the now inevitable Herath lbw arrived, then Randiv saw off James Anderson and Monty Panesar with successive deliveries after tea to seal the victory.


Wednesday, 28 March 2012

England Retain Hope for Record Chase


England recovered from two crucial blows to stay afloat in their tough run chase on day three of the first Test against Sri Lanka in Galle on Wednesday.

The tourists, set a history-defying target of 340, reached 2-111 by stumps on a dry pitch that has made batting progressively difficult.

The world's top-ranked Test side lost openers Andrew Strauss and Alastair Cook cheaply before Jonathan Trott and Kevin Pietersen repaired the damage by adding 63 for the unbroken third wicket.

Trott was unbeaten on 40 and Pietersen was on 29, with England still needing 229 runs with eight wickets in hand to win the Test and take the lead in the two-match series.

England, who will slip to No.2 behind South Africa if they lose the series, have never chased down such a big fourth-innings target before in their Test history.

Their highest successful chase is 7-332 against Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground way back in 1928.

In Asia, it is 1-209 against Bangladesh in Dhaka in March, 2010.

England's task has been made tougher since 253 is the highest fourth-innings total made at the Galle International Stadium.

Earlier, Sri Lanka were bowled out for 214 in their second innings in the post-lunch session with England off-spinner Graeme Swann finishing with 6-82.

The hosts had been reduced to 8-127 just before lunch, a lead of 252 runs, when wicketkeeper Prasanna Jayawardene stepped in to hit an unbeaten 61 in the company of tailenders.


Wednesday, 21 March 2012

Strauss Trotting Tons In Sri Lanka


England openers Andrew Strauss and Jonathan Trott prepared for the opening test on 26 March by hitting tons against the Sri Lankan Development XI.

The duo retired on 100 and 101 respectively but Ian Bell's poor form continued as he fell for 14.

England ended the day 203 behind with the Sri Lankans still at the crease.

Trott backed his Warwickshire team-mate to recover. "It's swings and roundabouts, Ian Bell's had a fantastic 12 months," he told the BBC.

"I've played many years with Ian and seen him play many fine innings and seen him have one or two bad scores and then score big runs so he's capable of it and I'm certainly in his camp thinking he'll be scoring a lot of runs this series."

Bell has endured a difficult few months at the crease and followed his travails against Pakistan with a two-ball duck against the Sri Lankan Board XI in the opening match of the current tour.

His highest score this year is 39 in all competitions and his last half-century was in the one-day international against India at Lord's in September.

England missed the influence of rested bowlers James Anderson and Monty Panesar as the hosts reached 431-6 for the loss of one wicket on a flat pitch in Colombo before they were put into bat.

The Sri Lankan bowlers were attacked with similar gusto by Andy Flower's side after the mid-morning declaration as Strauss and Trott shared a stand worth 197.

Kevin Pietersen followed Bell back into the pavilion before Strauss called time on the innings with his team 159 runs in arrears.

After spraining an ankle tripping over a boundary rope before the opening tour date, Stuart Broad continued his recovery as he trapped Malinga Warnapura lbw for his fourth wicket of the match.

TEST SERIES DATES
26-30 March: First Test, Galle
3-7 April: Second Test, Colombo