KAMINDU 182* EQUALS DON BRADMAN”S RECORD FASTEST TO 1000 RUNS KUSAL 106* IN 200 RUN UNBROKEN STAND PROPELS SL TO 602 FOR 5 DECLARED

Mendises hit powerful centuries to put Sri Lanka in position of dominance
New Zealand ended the second day on 22 for 2, 580 runs behind, after Conway fell in controversial fashion

Stumps New Zealand 22 for 2 (Williamson 6*, Ajaz 0*, Jayasuriya 1-3) trail Sri Lanka 602 for 5 dec (Kamindu 182*, Chandimal 116, Kusal 106*, Mathews 88, Phillips 3-141) by 580 runs

For Sri Lanka, it was a day of big numbers. Kamindu Mendis became the fastest man to 1000 Test runs in 75 years when he struck 182 not out. He equalled Don Bradman’s pace to the milestone, and sits third-equal alongside the greatest batter cricket has ever seen.

Kusal Mendis made a hundred too – the tenth in his career – as he and Kamindu put on an unbeaten stand of 200 for the sixth wicket. All up, Sri Lanka got to 602 for 5 before declaring the moment Kamindu had crossed the 1000-run mark. They had batted 163.4 overs.

For New Zealand, it was a day of much smaller numbers. They claimed only two wickets in the 73.4 overs they bowled on day two, with Glenn Phillips the only bowler to make breakthroughs. Towards the end of the day, they had 14 overs to face, and inside those, Tom Latham was out for 2, and Devon Conway dismissed – via a controversial third-umpire’s decision – for 9. They finished at 22 for 2, with hope getting slimmer by the over that they can meaningfully compete in this match. The pitch seemed to be taking substantial turn towards the end of the day, while Sri Lanka operated with the new ball at least.

Kamindu’s progress from 51 overnight was largely in the morning session, in which he moved to 93. He scored heavily square of the wicket, as usual, rarely going several balls without finding a scoring shot. Through this period Phillips always seemed the likeliest bowler to get a wicket, thanks in part to the work he was putting on the ball.

In fact, Phillips would get two, both off top edges as Angelo Mathews and Dhananjaya de Silva attempted sweep shots. Mathews had added only ten to his overnight 78, before de Silva made 44 in Kamindu’s company.

But after lunch, Sri Lanka had it almost entirely their way. Kamindu moved unfussily to a fifth Test hundred and celebrated with trademark reserve. Kusal started slowly as New Zealand put together some tight spells after lunch – Mitchell Santner bowling with particular control – before he too began to find run-scoring easier, particularly thanks to his strong sweep shot. He made only 24 off his first 71 balls, with only one four on his ledger. But with batting to come, and Sri Lanka’s total growing gigantic now, he began to attack, going after Phillips first, as he got to his fifty in an over that he struck two fours and a six in, before settling into a more positive outlook in general. Twice he launched Ajaz Patel, who went wicketless in the innings and conceded 135, over deep midwicket for six. Kamindu also launched Ajaz down the ground for a six.

Tom Blundell took a good catch as Glenn Phillips got his third wicket, Sri Lanka vs New Zealand, 2nd Test, 2nd day, Galle, September 27, 2024
Glenn Phillips was the only New Zealand bowler who looked like taking a wicket – he finished with three•AFP/Getty Images
The pair batted right through the middle session, going to tea at 135 and 70. The evening was about notching milestones – Kamindu making the second 150 of his career, before Kusal strode to his century, off 148 balls in the end. After that it was about letting Kamindu get to 178, so he could surpass the 1000-run career tally. Captain de Silva declared soon as Kamindu had launched Ravindra down the ground for the six that got him there.

New Zealand faced a testing spell from Asitha Fernando first up, as the bowler got substantial late swing in to the left-handed openers. One of these balls moved back in to Latham in the first over, took his edge and flew to gully, where Pathum Nissanka gobbled it up.

The dismissal of the struggling Conway in the ninth over of the innings was not as straightforward. Conway had defended at a turning ball from Prabath Jayasuriya, with the bowler and wicketkeeper appealing immediately – seemingly for the lbw. Umpire Nitin Menon gave Conway out, but when the batter reviewed, there was an obvious outside edge, before the ball struck thigh pad.

However, after it struck pad, the ball had flown to de Silva at slip, who seemingly took a low catch. The replays did not conclusively show that he had his fingers under that ball, though it was close. The third umpire ruled it out, however, much to Conway’s displeasure.

Such was the amount of turn Sri Lanka’s spinners were generating towards the end of the day, even Kane Williamson struggled. He was 6 off 42 at stumps, alongside nightwatchman Ajaz.

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Kamindu adds another banger to his growing list of hits
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Ronchi rues missed opportunities after another rough day for NZ
Kamindu equals Bradman, becomes fastest to 1000 Test runs in 75 years
He made an unbeaten 182 in Galle and helped Sri Lanka move to a commanding position

Kamindu equals Bradman, becomes fastest to 1000 Test runs in 75 years
Stats – Kamindu’s dream start in Test cricket puts him alongside Bradman
Only Everton Weekes and Herbert Sutcliffe have scored 1000 Test runs in fewer innings

– Kamindu’s dream start in Test cricket puts him alongside Bradman
Mendises hit powerful centuries to put Sri Lanka in position of dominance
New Zealand ended the second day on 22 for 2, 580 runs behind, after Conway fell in controversial fashion

Sri Lanka 1st Innings
Batting R B M 4s 6s SR
Pathum Nissanka
c †Blundell b Southee
1 3 5 0 0 33.33
Dimuth Karunaratne
run out (Phillips/Latham)
46 109 150 4 0 42.20
Dinesh Chandimal †
b Phillips
116 208 271 15 0 55.76
Angelo Mathews
c O’Rourke b Phillips
88 185 243 7 0 47.56
Kamindu Mendis
not out 182 250 391 16 4 72.80
Dhananjaya de Silva (c)
c †Blundell b Phillips
44 80 87 3 1 55.00
Kusal Mendis
not out 106 149 188 6 3 71.14
Extras (b 6, lb 8, nb 2, w 3) 19
Total
163.4 Ov
(RR: 3.67, 670 Mins)
602/5d
Did not bat:
Nishan Peiris,
Prabath Jayasuriya,
Milan Rathnayake,
Asitha Fernando
Fall of wickets: 1-2 (Pathum Nissanka, 0.6 ov), 2-124 (Dimuth Karunaratne, 39.1 ov), 3-221 (Dinesh Chandimal, 72.3 ov), 4-328 (Angelo Mathews, 96.3 ov), 5-402 (Dhananjaya de Silva, 118.3 ov) •
DRS
Bowling O M R W ECON WD NB
Tim Southee
19 1 70
1
3.68 0 0
William O’Rourke
17 1 81 0 4.76 2 2
Ajaz Patel
41 5 135 0 3.29 1 0
Mitchell Santner
33 5 82 0 2.48 0 0
Glenn Phillips
38 4 141
3
3.71 0 0
Rachin Ravindra
12.4 0 54 0 4.26 0 0
Daryl Mitchell
3 0 25 0 8.33 0 0
New Zealand 1st Innings
Batting R B 4s 6s SR
Tom Latham
c Nissanka b Fernando
2 5 0 0 40.00
Devon Conway
c de Silva b Jayasuriya
9 21 0 0 42.85
Kane Williamson
not out 6 42 0 0 14.28
Ajaz Patel
not out 0 16 0 0 0.00
Extras (b 5) 5
Total
14 Ov
(RR: 1.57)
22/2
Yet to bat:
Rachin Ravindra,
Daryl Mitchell,
Tom Blundell †,
Glenn Phillips,
Mitchell Santner,
Tim Southee (c),
William O’Rourke
Fall of wickets: 1-2 (Tom Latham, 0.5 ov), 2-19 (Devon Conway, 8.2 ov) •
DRS
Bowling O M R W ECON WD NB
Asitha Fernando
2 0 5
1
2.50 0 0
Nishan Peiris
7 1 9 0 1.28 0 0
Prabath Jayasuriya
5 3 3
1

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