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Hales blasts Notts to last eight

ScorecardAlex Hales made swift work of the target at Trent Bridge•Getty Images

A hard-hitting innings of 62 from Alex Hales helped Nottinghamshire to both a six-wicket victory over Yorkshire at Trent Bridge and a confirmed place in this year’s Friends Life t20 quarter-finals.Hales scored his runs from just 38 deliveries faced – including four fours and five sixes – as his side raced to their target after Yorkshire, who had opted to bat first, had posted 132 for seven.The early stages of the contest were dominated by Samit Patel, who finished with 3 for 17. Standing at second slip, Patel dropped Adam Lyth from the first ball of the match, as the left-hander flashed hard at Harry Gurney.The allrounder would quickly made amends. His first delivery at the start of the second over clean-bowled Alex Lees, who was making his Twenty20 debut for the county. Patel then removed Dan Hodgson and took a well-judged catch in the deep to send back Gary Ballance off Graeme White’s bowling.Lyth played on to Jake Ball for 23 and Ballance made 30 but, once they had fallen, only Rich Pyrah took the fight to the Nottinghamshire. Pyrah scored 42 from just 25 balls, hitting six fours and one towering six from the bowling of Ian Butler.A mix-up then saw Jack Leaning run out for just four and another debutant, Will Rhodes, was bowled by Gurney for 13.Nottinghamshire lost both Michael Lumb and Patel early in their reply but Hales was in imperious form, hitting Iain Wardlaw for two sixes in the fifth over, after Lyth had also disappeared high over the ropes.David Hussey continued to rotate the strike allowing the England international to play his shots. After bringing up his 50 from just 34 deliveries Hales hit back-to-back maximums off Azeem Rafiq before holing out to Ballance while looking for a third.With the finishing line in sight, Hussey was bowled by Liam Plunkett for 28 but Riki Wessels and Chris Read saw Notts safely to victory with 23 balls to spare.Nottinghamshire head the North Group on run-rate from Lancashire, who they meet at Trent Bridge on Sunday to determine which side will have home advantage in the quarter-finals.

Northants cruise on Sales double

ScorecardDavid Sales turned his overnight century into an unbeaten 255•Getty Images

David Sales’ magnificent double-century helped Northamptonshire to a massive total on a rain-affected third day their Championship match against Gloucestershire. Sales’ sensational knock of 255 not out off 279 balls was the third-highest score of his career as Northants eventually declared on 567 for 4, giving them a first-innings lead of 209.Andrew Hall also contributed an unbeaten 55 off 106 deliveries and Gloucestershire then closed on 31 without loss, but with a flat wicket and a poor weather forecast for tomorrow, a draw now looks to be inevitable.Northants began the day on 369 for 3, 11 runs ahead of their opponents, with Sales resuming on 126 and Australia international Cameron White on 6. However, rain began to fall 10 minutes before the players were due out, which led to the entire morning session being wiped out and 33 overs being lost as play finally started at 2.15pm.White was to then add 10 runs to his overnight total before he smashed Craig Miles to Benny Howell at deep midwicket in the fifth over of the day. But Sales hung around to reach 150 for the 17th time in his first-class career off 172 balls as he and Hall piled on another 170 for Northants’ fifth wicket.The 35-year-old club stalwart was to then complete the eighth double-ton of his career off 232 deliveries by hammering a four through point off the bowling of Miles. It was the first time he had struck 200 since August 2007, when he made 219 against Glamorgan at Colwyn Bay, and it helped the hosts to 493 for 4 at tea, with their lead now 135.Gloucestershire still could not break apart the partnership in the evening as Sales reached 250 off 270 balls just before Hall completed his half-century off 102 deliveries. Northants captain Stephen Peters then waved his players off halfway through the 143rd over, leaving Gloucestershire to face 16 overs before the close of play.Only two were possible before the umpires stopped play for bad light but thankfully the players were back out 10 minutes later with two more overs lost. Within three balls of the restart, Chris Dent was given a reprieve as he was dropped on 2 by James Middlebrook at third slip off the bowling of David Willey. He was to then last until stumps alongside his captain Michael Klinger and they will resume on Monday on 10 and 21 respectively.

Supreme Court issues notice to BCCI, Srinivasan and Royals

The Supreme Court of India has issued notices to the BCCI, N Srinivasan, his company India Cements – which owns IPL team Chennai Super Kings – and Rajasthan Royals on an appeal challenging the Bombay High Court order from a month ago for not appointing a fresh committee to probe the alleged corruption in the IPL.The Bombay High Court had ruled that the BCCI’s probe panel which investigated allegations of corruption in the IPL was constituted illegally. The appeal against that ruling, lodged by the Cricket Association of Bihar (CAB), was on the grounds that the high court did not appoint a new committee to investigate the matter afresh.A bench, headed by Justice AK Patnaik, agreed to hear the CAB appeal, and clubbed it with the appeal filed by the BCCI that had challenged the high-court judgement on different grounds – the Indian board maintained that the two-member probe panel was legal. The BCCI was represented by C Aryama Sundaram, while the CAB case was argued by eminent lawyer Harish Salve.The parties issued notices have until September 11 to reply to the Supreme Court, when the cross appeals are scheduled to be heard by the apex court.The Supreme Court had earlier refused to grant an interim stay on the high-court verdict, denting the efforts of Srinivasan to return as BCCI chief.Srinivasan had stepped aside from discharging his duties as BCCI president in the light of the spot-fixing and betting scandal which allegedly involved his son-in-law and Chennai Super Kings top official Gurunath Meiyappan.The high-court order had come on July 30, just two days after the panel, comprising two former judges of the Madras High Court Justices T Jayarama Chouta and R Balasubramanian, submitted its report that gave a clean chit Meiyappan, India Cements, Royals’ holding company Jaipur IPL Pvt Ltd and their co-owner Raj Kundra.

Unopposed Akram becomes BCB director

Akram Khan, the former Bangladesh captain, and six others have been elected unopposed a week before the BCB elections will take place on October 10. Their early victory was for not having any rival candidates in their respective categories on the final day of nomination papers submission on Thursday.Akram has been elected from his position as councillor of Chittagong divisional sports association. The six others are AZM Nasiruddin of (Chittagong district), Sheikh Sohel (Khulna division), Kazi Inam Ahmed (Jessore district), MA Awal Chowdhury (Barisal district), Shafiul Alam Chowdhury (Sylhet division) and Anwarul Islam (Rangpur division).The directors are seven out of the ten to be elected from the divisional and district sports associations for category 1. Among them, Dhaka, Chittagong and Khulna will have two directors each while Barisal, Rajshahi, Khulna and Sylhet will have one director each.Twelve directors will be elected for category 2, which is from the 58 Dhaka clubs’ councillors. One director will be elected from 45 councillors of category 3 which consists of the educational boards, armed forces and others. Three directors will be nominated by the government through the National Sports Council.A total of 38 candidates had submitted their nomination papers in three categories. The last date of withdrawing nominations is on October 7.

Haryana not overawed by Tendulkar factor – Jadeja

Ajay Jadeja, the former India allrounder, finds himself playing a part in what is likely to be Sachin Tendulkar’s final domestic match and, while relishing the prospect of an unexpected encounter, says his team won’t be overawed by the occasion.Jadeja, who came out of retirement to lead Haryana in the Buchi Babu tournament, and will now do the same against Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy, says he isn’t quite sure of the role he’ll be able to play on the field at his age – bordering 43 – apart from mentoring the side.He denied there was any pressure on his players to push themselves more because of the hype surrounding the game. Instead he felt it was a rare chance for them to test themselves against someone like Tendulkar. “The match is going to be played on the ground. Whether there is hype or no hype there is no player who turns up not wanting to do his best. This is a player’s career, his life.”It’s wonderful to have people watching because if there’s interest in the game and people talking about it, it can only inspire you. That encourages our team to go out there and do what needs to be done. It’s not as though you can do something extra just because of the hype.”The coach needs to tell people not to get overawed all the time. We are looking at this as an opportunity to play against the best in the world. You always have a shot when you walk on to the park. This is not an under-15 team. Sachin Tendulkar will have an effect, but the squad is full of professional first-class cricketers, so they’ll be looking at it as a chance to play against the greatest ever.”He paid tribute to Tendulkar’s longevity. “I’ve been watching him for 30 years,” Jadeja said. “He is enjoying the game today as he did when he started off. For a player any match, whether it is his first or last, is about enjoying the game. I have never seen him do anything different in any match. he always gives it everything.”Some of us were fortunate to spend time with him. He is considered the god of cricket, so to have been able to spend that time with him, on the field and travelling, I consider myself lucky, at least I can tell my kids about the times I spent with him. The last memory is of beating them in Mumbai. That’s the last memory I carry of a Ranji encounter against Sachin.”Jadeja remarked that there was no need for people to go to France – a reference to Zaheer Khan’s trip to meet with fitness expert Tim Exeter – when they had facilities in the country such as the ground in Lahli. “It’s wonderful for us at Haryana. We’ve been here a few weeks, we live at the ground. There are nets available all day. The facilities at the ground are terrific. We have indoor nets. If someone wants to be away from the crowd, play cricket and get fit, you don’t necessarily have to go all the way to France.”The playing square had a a liberal covering of grass and Jadeja said it would help the quick bowlers. “This is my first game here. The pitch has been helpful to seamers but there have been occasions of 500-plus scores. Walking in, my first thought was wondering where they were going to mark the crease, because it all looks green at the moment on the square. So that probably gives you a little hint. Let me put it this way, I think it will help Zaheer for sure.”

The other big match in Mumbai

While Sachin Tendulkar was at the Wankhede Stadium for his final fling in competitive cricket, three of his team-mates who have been with him for almost a decade were training rigorously in suburban Mumbai – at the Mumbai Cricket Association’s Bandra Kurla Complex facility. Though Zaheer Khan, Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir – the first two being Tendulkar’s dear friends – will be missing the action during Tendulkar’s farewell Test, they will be more focused on making the most of an opportunity to impress the selectors in a high-profile Ranji Trophy group game between defending champions Mumbai and Delhi.The sidelined trio has been gunning to return to the India whites ever since they were dropped earlier in the year. While Sehwag and Delhi captain Gambhir seem to be running out of time to make a case to be on the plane to South Africa – since their exclusion, both failed to put on big runs in their limited opportunities on the domestic circuit – Mumbai captain Zaheer will be keen to continue pressing for a return when the selectors name India’s squad for two Tests in South Africa.

Battles within the battle

  • Zaheer-Kulkarni vs Gambhir-Sehwag: If the Mumbai new-ball duo can strike early against Gambhir, the opener, and Sehwag in the middle order, not only will Mumbai win half the battle, but also reduce the Delhi duo’s chances of a Test comeback in South Africa next month

  • Jaffer vs Nehra: Despite being the clear leader in the list of most run-getters in Ranji Trophy, Jaffer has traditionally been susceptible to movement early on in his innings. If Nehra can exploit his weakness, he will do a lot of good to improving Delhi’s position on the points table.

  • Nayar vs Bhatia: The duo has been fighting tooth and nail to emerge as the best allrounder in domestic circuit for almost half a decade now. Obviously, both the sides will be banking on their respective allrounders to outdo the other and lend a great advantage to his team

And none of them would have asked for a better opportunity than facing each other in what is set to be a high-intensity affair. As stressed by Delhi coach Sanjeev Sharma, Mumbai-Delhi matches have traditionally been “like India-Pakistan or England-Australia matches”, which brings the best out of both the teams.This time around, it’s not just the intensity that will be on display over the next four days. The match is also set to feature the highest quality cricket on the domestic circuit. Besides Sehwag and Gambhir, Delhi batting boasts of young talent in Unmukt Chand, the run-machine Mithun Manhas, and Rajat Bhatia, one of prime contenders for the best allrounder’s award on the domestic circuit. When it comes to bowling, Delhi have received a fillip with the return of fit-again former India pacer Ashish Nehra, who will form a formidable new-ball partnership with Sumit Narwal and Parvinder Awana.No wonder then that Mumbai coach Sulakshan Kulkarni wasn’t willing to take Delhi “lightly” despite his team entering the match on the back of successive outright victories away from home. Though Kulkarni stressed that Mumbai will enjoy the home advantage, he would realise that even a slightest slip-up against the formidable Delhi outfit could cost them dearly, especially considering Mumbai didn’t play at the BKC facility for the entirety of the last season.Mumbai’s batting – sans Tendulkar, Rohit Sharma and Ajinkya Rahane – will have to depend on the ever-reliable Wasim Jaffer, who struck his 33rd Ranji ton against Punjab last week. Zaheer, on the other hand, will be hoping that Dhawal Kulkarni celebrates his selection in India’s ODI squad with a match-winning haul.

White century keeps Victoria afloat

ScorecardFile photo – Cameron White made up for a first-ball duck in the first innings with an unbeaten century•Getty Images

Cameron White’s unbeaten 110 in Victoria’s second innings helped them stay afloat, after Western Australia enforced the follow-on on the third day. Victoria are not out of the woods, however, as they trail Western Australia by 111 runs with five wickets in hand.Victoria, who began the third day at 7 for 158, lost overnight batsmen Clint McKay and David Hussey in quick succession. Hussey was out for 85 off 122 balls, the top-scorer in an innings where only three batsmen scored in double figures. The Victoria innings folded shortly after their dismissals and Western Australia, with a first-innings lead of 383, chose to make Victoria bat again. Nathan Coulter-Nile was the most successful bowler for Western Australia, taking 4 for 57 in 16 overs.In their second innings, Victoria lost opener Aaron Finch early but the side put up a better performance. Rob Quiney, the Victoria captain, added 49 with Peter Handscomb for the second wicket and then shared a 55-run, third-wicket partnership with Cameron White.After Quiney’s dismissal, White led the charge, making up for his first-innings duck with his 18th first-class hundred. He received good support from Glenn Maxwell and the pair steadily chipped away at the deficit. The pair added 72 runs for the fourth wicket but the quick wickets of Maxwell and Hussey meant that Victoria had slipped further by the end of the day.White finished the day unbeaten on 110 off 123 ball with 16 fours and a six, and along with Dan Christian (10 not out) will look to fight for a draw on the fourth day.

Himachal collapse after strong start

ScorecardFile photo – Sachin Baby contributed 54 for Kerala•ESPNcricinfo Ltd

Himachal Pradesh collapsed after a strong start to be dismissed for 228 against Maharashtra in Pune. Prashant Chopra and Varun Sharma put on 76 upfront after the visitors were asked to bat but the latter’s dismissal for 27 by Shrikant Mundhe kickstarted the meltdown. Chopra went soon after, edging Dominic Joseph behind for 47. Paras Dogra made 40 at No. 3, but he had little support and became Samad Fallah’s third victim. Fallah had nipped out two more before that, including captain Rishi Dhawan for 6, and Himachal were struggling at 157 for 7 at one stage. Some resistance from the lower order, led by Karanveer Singh’s 33, took them to 228. Maharashtra motored to 35 without loss in seven overs till stumps.
ScorecardHalf-centuries from V Manoharan, N Surendran and Sachin Baby helped Kerala post 273 against Goa in Porvorim. Kerala lost a couple of early wickets to Buddhadev Mangaldas before Surendran and Rohan Prem took the score to 86. Prem departed but Surendran hung around to make 84, after which Baby and Manoharan put on 94 for the sixth wicket. Baby fell for 54 but Manoharan stretched the innings to 273 in the company of the tail and was last man out for 87. Goa reached 11 for 0 in five overs.
ScorecardAndhra’s DP Vijaykumar and K Harish ripped through Tripura in Agartala, leaving the hosts reeling on 165 for 9. Vijaykumar took 4 for 34 and Harish picked up 3 for 38 after Andhra chose to bowl. Tripura’s batsmen were never able to get going, and the hosts were 74 for 7 before a rearguard from Abhijit Dey and Tushar Saha. Dey made 32 before falling to Harish and No. 9 Saha was unbeaten on 53, the last pair having added 25.
ScorecardNo play was possible in Jammu due to a combination of overnight rain and bad light. The former delayed the toss till 2.40 pm, when Jammu & Kashmir chose to bowl against Hyderabad. But bad light had its say and prevented the start.

VRV Singh bowls Punjab into semis


ScorecardVRV Singh took his second five-for of the season•AFP

A menacing spell by VRV Singh on the fourth morning that helped Punjab rip through the Jammu & Kashmir middle order ended up being the final word in a closely contested quarter-final in Baroda. The 100-run win ensured a home semi-final for Punjab against Karnataka; it also marked the end of J&K’s closely followed campaign.On the coldest of the four days, J&K ended the crucial first hour with just the one wicket lost but they had no answers to VRV’s pace in the second hour, when they lost four big wickets in quick succession. VRV’s morning spell read 9-2-17-4 and it gave him his second five-wicket haul of the season.J&K attempted to counter the seamer-friendly morning conditions by sending in lower-order batsman Ram Dayal at the fall of Ian Dev Singh in the second over of the day, ahead of the recognised batsmen. And the ploy worked perfectly as Dayal held fort for 97 minutes before being bowled by Sandeep Sharma. J&K needed 196 at that stage and with plenty of batting to come, more fight from the smaller team was not out of the question.VRV, though, nipped their hopes in the bud. Rasool and Obaid Haroon were trapped lbw off consecutive deliveries – both catching the batsmen in the crease – effectively ending J&K’s dream of causing an upset. Manzoor Dar fell to the age-old trap of a fuller one following the short ball. He was late to bring his bat down on a searing yorker and was hit on the boot. Samiullah Beigh then edged to third slip and the game was as good as over.The turning point, though, was VRV’s first couple of overs to Hardeep Singh. The batsman had braved the morning session with a firm resolve and had managed to keep the runs flowing. He took a blow on the body off the bowling of MS Gony once, but it was VRV’s lift that left him bruised. Twice in two overs, he was hit on his right hand, the second one forcing him to walk off. J&K were 113 for 3 then and Hardeep was on 43, but his departure exposed the incoming batsmen.Hardeep came back to bat at the fall of the seventh wicket, but by then the damage had been done. With the sun warming the air in the second session, the last two wickets added 74 before J&K eventually folded for 223. Hardeep remained unbeaten on 76.”We needed some partnerships today, but VRV Singh bowled well today and unfortunately, we couldn’t put up a stand,” Rasool said. “Once our set batsmen, Hardeep Singh, got injured, we didn’t play well against VRV. One batsmen should have stood with paaji. Three hundred plus targets are not easy to chase, but we fought well. “Harbhajan Singh, who took two wickets in the match, praised VRV and said it was a hard-fought win, and the team is now looking forward to the home semi-final against Karnataka. “VRV is a match-winner for us,” he said. “The way he bowled against Haryana and here, he proved how useful he is for Punjab. I hope to see him get back in the India team one day.”We know our conditions better than Karnataka, but they are a strong team and have been the team to beat. Still, we will need to play our best cricket against them. We will try not to repeat the mistakes we made against them in the league stage and will have our plans ready.”

Late wickets give Sri Lanka advantage

Scorecard and ball-by-ball detailsShamsur Rahman celebrated his hundred vigourously•AFP

Smart Stats

  • Both Shamsur Rahman and Imrul Kayes hit their maiden hundreds in Tests, in this innings. This was Shamsur’s second Test, while Kayes is playing his 17th Test. This is only the fourth instance of two or more Bangladesh batsmen hitting hundreds in the same innings. The last occurrence was against New Zealand at the same venue in October last year. Like the two batsmen in this innings, Mominul Haque and Sohag Gazi also got their maiden hundreds against New Zealand.

  • The 232-run partnership between Shamsur and Kayes is Bangladesh’s second-highest in Tests. Their highest partnership also came against Sri Lanka, at Galle last year, when Mohammad Ashraful and Mushfiqur Rahim added 267 runs for the fifth wicket.

  • This partnership is the second-highest in Tests where the second wicket stand has started with the team yet to score a run. Rahman fell when their partnership was just three runs short of the highest such partnership – between Bill Woodfull and Charles Macartney at Headingley in 1926.

  • Shakib Al Hasan followed up his five-for in Sri Lanka’s innings with a fifty in this innings: the eighth instance of a Bangladesh allrounder taking a five-for and hitting a fifty-plus score in the same Test. Including the current Test, Shakib has achieved this six times.

  • Including this innings, Bangladesh have posted a score of 400, or more, only 11 times in Tests. Eight of these instances have come at home and three of them have come in Chittagong. Bangladesh’s score in this innings, until the third day, is their ninth highest in Tests.

Maiden tons for the overnight pair of Shamsur Rahman and Imrul Kayes had energised Bangladesh and their crowd in the morning, but by stumps, Sri Lanka’s industrious spinners had extracted enough dismissals to stay on track for victory, despite the visitors’ abject fielding. A late Ajantha Mendis double-strike swung the match decisively in Sri Lanka’s favour, after the Bangladesh middle-order provided fitful resistance. The hosts are still 178 runs adrift in the first innings, with two wickets in hand.Nasir Hossain and Mahmudullah had put on 46 together as the sun began to set, but with only 21 balls remaining until the day’s quota was done, a wide ball from Mendis failed to bounce, and Dinesh Chandimal collected what the umpire believed was an under-edge. Bangladesh’s last recognised batsman Sohag Gazi was struck in front of middle and off stump next ball, forcing his prompt departure, and Mendis was only denied a hat-trick by unexpected bounce, which may have taken the ball that struck the new batsman’s front pad above the stumps.Shamsur and Imrul were ruled by caution, then adventure, in the morning before giving way to impatience when they surrendered after lunch. They had only strayed, though, after having adding 232 runs, the second-highest Test partnership for Bangladesh, which was also the best for the second wicket. The wicketless first session appeared to unlock the spirit Bangladesh had lacked in the first six days of the series, even if the batsmen who followed were occasionally guilty of taking hair-brained options.There were moments of imprudence at the top of the day, but the batsmen largely eschewed ambition and strove to reacclimatise themselves to the surface, in the first hour, dulling Sri Lanka’s earnest start in the process. The first 15 overs of the day brought only 45 runs, but after that Imrul and Shamsur took to punishing a quickly-worsening bowling effort. They would advance at 5.4 runs an over for the remainder of the session.The shift in Bangladesh’s approach from the first Test was most evident in the way they dealt with Sri Lanka’s short balls. Bouncers had been their undoing in Mirpur, but aided by a surface that did not reward short-pitched bowling, both batsmen hooked and pulled judiciously, and often. Shamsur’s restraint was as laudably as his aggression. In the 37th over, he hooked consecutive Suranga Lakmal balls with authority, but when the bowler delivered a third short ball outside off stump, the batsman did not offer the same stroke.Imrul’s advances were more on the off side, as he laid into a visibly disorganised Nuwan Pradeep. Width was punished repeatedly and emphatically, in the arc between backward-point and cover, and the balls at the body only fared slightly better, with Imrul reprising the pull shot that had been profitable for him on the previous evening.If the morning session had made clear the immense talent in Bangladesh cricket, the period after resumption laid out some of its enduring frustrations. Shamsur completed his maiden hundred, in his second Test, with a strike through the covers, but seeing his partner exult at triple figures seemed only to make Imrul more nervous.On 95, he faced an over from Mendis replete with both cringe-inducing anxiety and incredible good fortune. Perhaps hoping to bash his way to the ton, Imrul advanced to Mendis, found the ball had pitched wide, and offered a gentle top-edged lob to Kithuruwan Vithanage who promptly shelled it. Becoming even more fidgety, Imrul was beaten by one that spun away from him next ball, then when he spotted the kind of short, wide delivery that he had imperiously played along the ground all morning, the batsman slapped it in the air to Vithanage, again.At the other end, new-centurion Shamsur swung his bat in frustration at the timidity of his partner’s dismissal, when the catch was completed. Only, when Shamsur turned around, the umpire had his arm out for a no-ball. Neither the Sri Lanka fielders nor either batsman quite seemed to believe it. By Mendis’ next over, Imrul had girded himself enough to bat more intelligently. He blasted a short-wide Lakmal ball to collect his own hundred.Just as the two should have consolidated their gains however, Shamsur offered an untimely slog to Mendis on 106 and was bowled. He left to a standing ovation, which he had deserved after his morning’s work. But his attitude after both he and Kayes reached hundreds perhaps merited some reproach, given Bangladesh were still 355 runs short of Sri Lanka’s total.Imrul was less cavalier, but when Sri Lanka strung together several tight overs, the limits of his patience were also soon discovered. On 115, he ran at Mendis and played an almighty, hamstring-twinging slog, and had his off stump pegged back. Worryingly for Bangladesh, he needed to be carried off the field on a stretcher, casting severe doubts on his further participation in the match.Sri Lanka’s spinners found their groove in the second session, and though poor balls still frustrated efforts to build pressure, they managed enough turn and variation from the surface to prevent another big stand. Dilruwan Perera was the more accurate bowler, wheeling away on middle and off, and turning the ball away from Bangladesh’s left-handed batsmen. He removed Mominul Haque and Mushfiqur Rahim after they had made promising starts, either side of tea.Shakib Al Hasan played with characteristic enterprise for his 50, though he had first batted with reservation, scoring 1 from his first 25 balls. Soon he began to pick off the poor balls, particularly those wide of the stumps, as he flayed nine boundaries on the off side. He had seemed set for a bigger innings himself, but Perera, under Angelo Mathews’ guidance, ambushed him with a pair of short covers. The bowler floated one up outside off stump and Shakib’s drive, perfectly timed, was snaffled half a metre from the turf by Dimuth Karunaratne.