Top-order succumbs to Lakmal’s venom

India struggling at 17 for three as Sri Lankan paceman make the most of the conditions

November 16, 2017 06:55 pm | Updated 06:55 pm IST - Kolkata

Incisive burst: Not one to look a gift horse in mouth, Sri Lanka’s Suranga Lakmal extracted bounce and lateral movement off a juicy Eden Gardens pitch to have the Indian batsman hopping.

Incisive burst: Not one to look a gift horse in mouth, Sri Lanka’s Suranga Lakmal extracted bounce and lateral movement off a juicy Eden Gardens pitch to have the Indian batsman hopping.

The hissing delivery from Suranga Lakmal reared like a cobra, moved late and brushed K.L. Rahul’s glove. For the batsman, it was the kiss of death.

This was also the first delivery of the opening Test at the Eden Gardens, although it arrived only at 1.42 p.m. on a truncated first day marred by inclement weather.

Desiring to play in conditions they would encounter on the looming tour of South Africa, the Indians, rather bravely, opted for a seam trap. They were then given a real working over by the lively Sri Lankan pacemen here on Thursday.

Only 11.5 overs were possible on a dark day of rain, poor light and floodlights but these 71 deliveries revealed the need for the Indians to change their methods and mind-set in such conditions.

The host was struggling at 17 for three when the players went off for the last time on a start-stop day. Friday — the match is scheduled to start at 9.15 a.m. — promises more gripping action if the weather improves.

Glaring omission

Interestingly, M. Vijay — India’s technically best-equipped batsman on a seaming wicket — watched the proceedings from the pavilion, after being left out of the eleven. His omission was incomprehensible.

Lakmal’s burst with the new ball threw up incredible figures — 6-6-0-3. He extracted bounce from a high-arm action, moved the ball away late in the corridor, got it to nip back and bowled from an ideal seam position. The Sri Lankan was sharp and gave away nothing.

The juicy pitch offered lateral movement and bounce for the pacemen. The footwork of the batsmen was bound to be probed.

This was the sort of surface where the batsman had to essentially play straight and close to the body, leave deliveries outside off, collect runs with pushes in front of the wicket rather than big drives and wait patiently for the short, wide deliveries that could be despatched with horizontal bat shots.

Picking the line was critical. So was the judgement of length. The batsman had to cover for movement and play the ball late.

Good toss to win

For Sri Lanka, it was a good toss to win. With so much rain around, there was bound to be moisture on an already green pitch.

To his credit, Lakmal found his rhythm, length and direction straightaway. The cordon waited in anticipation.

Given his methods — he has this habit of playing away from his body with less than adequate footwork — the left-handed Shikhar Dhawan was unlikely to succeed on this pitch. He, eventually, dragged a widish delivery from Lakmal on to his stumps.

Lakmal continued to bowl with venom, beating both Cheteshwar Pujara and Virat Kohli outside off. He varied his length, pitching fuller or landing it at the back-of-the-length area. The batsmen needed to watch the seam closely.

The fired-up Lakmal eventually got Kohli leg-before with a delivery that nipped back. The Indian captain asked for a review — replays showed the ball clipping leg. The Indians, however, did not lose a review since it was umpire’s call.

Able support

At the other end, Lahiru Gamage, who has a rather front-on release, offered support. He seamed the ball both ways from a good length, pitched it up on occasions in an attempt to swing it and went round the wicket too. His action, though, lends itself more to seam than swing.

Surviving on a seaming pitch is an art. Rahul Dravid was among the finest Indian batsmen when coping with these tracks. He displayed footwork, played the ball late and only when he needed to.

This is still a young batting line-up and it will learn.

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