Red-hot Kumara leaves South Africa reeling



Sri Lanka players celebrate the dismissal of Aiden Markram


Lahiru Kumara struck twice in two overs 


 

Under dark Durban skies, Sri Lanka had very nearly their perfect first morning of a first Test, their Captain inserting the opposition, before his seamers removed four South Africa batters in Kingsmead yesterday.

At stumps on day one, with only 20.4 overs possible, South Africa were 80 for 4.

Vishwa Fernando and Asitha Fernando led Sri Lanka’s advances, zipping the ball around on a somewhat moist surface to frequently beat and occasionally collect the outside edges of South African bats. 

Vishwa, the left armer, was especially disciplined, finding significant inswing in the air from over the wicket, as well as away-movement off the surface. 

He took the wicket of Tony de Zorzi, who was caught by a diving Kamindu Mendis at first slip, soon after Asitha had had Aiden Markram held in the cordon - both bowlers striking in their second over of the day.

Temba Bavuma and Tristan Stubbs scratched their way through to the drinks break, putting on 32 together, with many of those runs coming off the outside edge through deep third. 

But Lahiru Kumara, Sri Lanka’s fastest bowler, made amends for a wayward first over by having Stubbs fend one to second slip, before seaming a ball through David Bedingham’s defences to send his off stump cartwheeling.

Sri Lanka could have had an even better morning but for two indiscretions. Bavuma, who survived 47 balls and went to lunch on 28, should have been held by Dimuth Karunaratne for one but he grassed the low chance at second slip. 

That was off the bowling of Vishwa. Then, shortly before rain arrived to cut the session four minutes short, Bavuma edged a Kumara bouncer he was trying to hook but Kumara was found to have marginally overstepped. 

Bavuma was on his way to the dressing room when the umpires called him back. He’d been on 20 at that point.

Bavuma, however, was perhaps the most restrained of South Africa’s batters. He covered the line of his stumps nicely as Sri Lanka’s opening bowlers plugged away in the channel, and though he frequently had his outside edge beaten, did not appear especially eager to feel bat on ball. 

He had wicket-keeper-batter Kyle Verreyne for company when the light shower came through.

Though Kumara claimed two wickets, his four overs cost 35 runs. Asitha and Vishwa both went at less than three runs an over. 

(Agencies)

 



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