Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Test in balance after 15-wicket day

India 312 (Pujara 145*, Mishra 59, Prasad 4-100) and 21 for 3 (Pradeep 2-6) lead Sri Lanka 201 (Perera 55, Herath 49, Ishant 5-54) by 132 runs
Live scorecard and ball-by-ball details

India made up for all the time lost to rain on the first two days by reducing Sri Lanka to 47 for 6 and injuring Dhammika Prasad, Sri Lanka's strike bowler on this pitch, but the hosts negated India's advantage by adding 154 with their last four wickets and taking India's first three wickets for seven runs. With India effectively 132 for 3 and the last pair of specialist batsmen already at the wicket, this was anybody's game now.

Fifteen wickets fell for 242 runs in 65.1 overs on a frenetic day where fortunes swung wildly. Yet again Prasad produced a wicket in the first over of the innings, and Cheteshwar Pujara, who carried his bat through in the first dig, became the only man to follow such a feat with a duck in the same Test. At lunch Sri Lanka would have drawn heart from the drizzle that didn't cost the Test any time, but the heavy downpour at 4.40pm would have brought India relief, who yet again ran the risk of collapsing meekly after having watched runs from the Sri Lankan lower order.

It might not result in a win, but if anything, this turnaround from Sri Lanka was even more remarkable than in Galle. Back then they had umpiring decisions and all the luck going their way; here they copped three rough decisions when batting. Upul Tharanga was given out off a no-ball even though the TV umpire had a look at the replays, Dinesh Chandimal - counterattacking his way to 23 off 27 - was given out lbw to a ball that hit him bail high and was on its way up, and Tharindu Kaushal was given out lbw off an inside edge.

Debutant Kusal Perera, who ironically benefited from sloppy slip fielding from India, and Rangana Herath batted smartly in adding 79, the third-highest seventh-wicket partnership in Tests from under a score of 50. Against calculated risks from the lower order, tiring bowlers missed their rhythm. Coming back to bat with an injured hand, Prasad played around with the mind of Ishant Sharma, who had earlier starred with a rare five-for, and scored 27 off 23 to take Sri Lanka past 200.

Not being able to bowl tails out and slips catching have been India's twin tormentors in Test cricket of late, and they could do worse than to look at how they bowled in the first session of the day. The pitch didn't allow crazy seam movement or variable bounce. India just put the ball in areas when uncertain batsmen edge it. Sri Lanka's top order was uncertain.

A certain degree of uncertainty could be expected of a rejigged batting order in the first Test since Kumar Sangakkara's retirement. Tharanga came out to open on his comeback, Dimuth Karunaratane moved down, Chandimal moved up, and Perera batted at No. 7. This raw batting line-up could have done with some luck, which it turned out they didn't have, but it didn't seem like that in the first over after they had taken India's last two wickets for an addition of 20 to their overnight total.

Ishant Sharma, who had played dangerously with the crease when he batted for three balls in the morning, continued to do so. He might have been hitting out under team instructions, but more importantly, Ishant failed to stay in the crease with the first two balls he bowled. It looked like one of those bad days when everything goes against you when he produced Tharanga's edge in the first over, but saw KL Rahul drop it diving in front of first slip. Rahul and slips would go on to gain more and telling mentions.

Redemption nearly did not come for Ishant and Rahul. Tharanga, prone to offering these opportunities outside off, did so soon enough, and Rahul took a good low catch, but Ishant was asked to wait before he celebrated. Replays didn't show any part of his foot behind the line, but mysteriously Tharanga was asked to keep walking. Umesh Yadav soon got rid of Kaushal Silva with the short ball again. Chandimal attacked attractively, but he fell to Stuart Binny, who on the second day had fallen to an outswinger that pitched and seamed back in to hit him on the back thigh. Binny repeated the dose to Chandimal, but replays showed the ball was likely to sail over the stumps.

Ishant came back to deal Sri Lanka telling blows either side of the lunch break. With his first ball back, he had Angelo Mathews poking at one that held its line outside off. With his second ball after the break, Ishant asked a similar question of Lahiru Thirimanne, and the batsman responded with another edge. In between the two dismissals, Karunaratne played a loose drive to a wide half-volley from Binny.

Having taken both those catches, Rahul - like Ishant - was on his way to turning his day around. But with Perera on 9, Sri Lanka 63 for 6 and Prasad retired hurt, Rahul dropped a simple offering off the bowling of Yadav. This wasn't going to be Rahul's last mistake.

With Sanath Jayasuriya watching, the man he resembles at the wicket, Perera, went on to launch a calculated assault. In Herath, Perera found a determined ally. Perera hit nine fours in his 56-ball 55, Herath was more sedate, but the two had taken the sting out of India's bowling by the time Perera fell top-edging a trademark Jayasuriya pull to cow corner. There was resistance from Kaushal, who scored 16 but stayed in the middle for 11 overs, but after benefiting from dodgy lbws in the first innings of the first Test, he was at the receiving end this time.

One short of what could have been his second Test fifty, Herath was snapped up by Ishant just after tea with a ball just outside off and holding its line. Still, when Prasad began to run away from the stumps, India began to follow him and let Sri Lanka add more. With ball in right hand and heavy bandage on left, Prasad didn't follow anybody. He produced the perfect ball to get rid of a man who had played 290 balls without getting dismissed. It pitched short of a length, on middle, squared the batsman up, and hit off.

Rahul couldn't draw any such comfort from having been done in by an unplayable delivery. For the second time in the Test he premeditated a leave without covering his stumps, and had the top of off pinged. Only this time the bowler was Nuwan Pradeep, who went on to repeat the Ajinkya Rahane dismissal with a ball moving in after pitching.

Ishant gets 200

4

Number of India fast bowlers to take 200 Test wickets including Ishant Sharma. Kapil (434 wkts), Srinath (236), and Zaheer (311) are the others.

The Quartet

4

SL captains to get a fourth-innings ton including Mathews in this Test. The last one was Sangakkara at this venue, against Pak in 2009

only the third

2

No. of wicketkeeper-batsmen to make 2 fifty-plus scores on debut before Kusal Perera. The previous one was also from SL- Dinesh Chandimal.

Seamers at the SSC

28

Most wkts taken by seamers in a Test at the SSC - in a SL v NZ match in 1984-85. They have taken 26 in this Test.

Best in the last

70.00

Angelo Mathews' ave in the 4th inns of Tests - his best in any inns. He has three fifties in 12 inns and has been dismissed only six times.

Opening low

15

The top opening stand by either team in this series - this is the lowest stand to be the top opening partnership in any three-Test series.

Long time ago

1968

Last time India posted a total higher than the 274 in this inns after losing their first wicket for 10 or less - against Australia at the Gabba

Double stands

5

No. of times before this Test India's eighth wicket has had two fifty-plus stands in a Test. The previous one came at Lord's last year.

Walk after the trot

5.14

Scoring rate of the stand between Rohit and Binny. India added 78 at 3.22 from 24.1 overs till the drinks break post lunch.

Middle-order recovery

1953

Last time India had fifty-plus stands for the 4th and 5th after losing their first-three wickets for 10 runs or fewer - against West Indies.

Rohit in second innings

0

No. of second-innings fifties by Rohit Sharma in ten innings before this. He had averaged 18.88 with a highest of 39.

Long time ago

1985

Last time before this India's 4th wkt put up a 50-run stand after losing their first 3 for under 10 runs - against Sri Lanka at P Sara Oval.

Least favourite innings

21.80

Virat Kohli's average in the third inns of Tests - his worst among the four inns of a Test. He made 21 in this match.