![]() |
Brett Lee |
Calcutta: Brett Lee helped Australia beat not only Sri Lanka but also the unpredictable Brisbane weather as the hosts rattled out the last five wickets between rain breaks on the final day. Lee claimed four for 86 to confirm Australia’s 1-0 lead ahead of the second Test in the two-match series, which starts in Hobart on Friday, according to www.cricinfo.com.
Australia won their first Test of the post-Warne, McGrath and Langer era by an innings and 40 runs and it was fitting that Lee, the attack’s new spearhead, was the leading trouble-maker and the Man of the Match. Pleasingly for Australia, he was also building on the work of their new opener, Phil Jaques, who made 100, while another fresh face, Mitchell Johnson, chipped in with two wickets in each innings.
After Michael Vandort induced a slight hiccup from Australia on the fourth day, Lee made sure the plan came back on track on the final morning despite Chamara Silva’s 43. Silva was guiding Sri Lanka closer to making Australia bat again when he fell 15 minutes before lunch, trying to flick Lee into the on side and finding a leading edge that flew to Michael Hussey at wide third man.
That was the key breakthrough in a session that brought two rain interruptions that halted Australia’s progress. Wet conditions in Brisbane overnight had indicated that Australia might have to race the weather radar while chasing victory, although play began under sunny skies.
Silva struck five fours — including two pulls and an edge past the slips from one Lee over — in his 63-ball stay as he tried to rein in Sri Lanka’s deficit as quickly as possible. However, his departure opened the door for Lee, who followed by bowling Dilhara Fernando for seven to leave Sri Lanka nine down at lunch.
Stuart Clark finished the job following the break when he bowled Muttiah Muralidharan for four with a fullish ball after Lee could not bowl straight enough to shatter the former’s stumps and earn a five-wicket haul. Lee had to settle for match figures of eight for 112, including Farvez Mahroof (18), who briefly helped Silva’s resistance before losing his off stump to Lee, who had rattled him with three bouncers in the same over.
Prasanna Jayawardene started the day with Silva but ran out of luck when he was lbw for one from 21 balls, failing to pick which way Clark moved the ball off the pitch. Jayawardene tucked his bat in behind his front pad expecting a leg cutter but the ball inched the other way and struck him in line with middle stump. Clark deserved a breakthrough after he should have had Silva in the fourth over of the day. Silva was on 10 when he clipped to midwicket where Phil Jaques spilled a straightforward chance to his right.
Jaques’s drop was a rare blemish from the new-look Australian outfit, which showed few signs of stress after losing several of its biggest stars following the Ashes triumph. Jaques’s hundred, Michael Hussey’s 133, Michael Clarke’s unbeaten 145 and Andrew Symonds’s quick 53 not out were terrific signs for a top order that could have relied on its two most experienced members, Ricky Ponting and Matthew Hayden.