Late wickets stall Pakistan’s progress

COLOMBO,  (Reuters) – Late strikes with the new ball  left Pakistan on 289 for seven at the close on the first day of  the third and final test against Sri Lanka yesterday.

Pakistan’s batsmen had dominated much of the day with opener  Khurram Manzoor scoring 93 and Mohammad Yousuf 90 after sharing  a 167-run stand for the third wicket.

However, three wickets fell for just two runs in the final  15 minutes of the evening session as Sri Lanka hitback.

Left-arm paceman Thilan Thushara was the pick of the  bowlers, dismissing Fawad Alam (16) and Younus Khan (two) in the  morning and then sparking the late collapse by trapping Shoaib  Malik leg before for 45.

Sri Lanka, 2-0 up in the series, had Pakistan in early  trouble as the ball swung and seamed in overcast conditions in  the morning.

But Yousuf and Manzoor steadied the innings as batting  became easier in the afternoon as cloud cover was replaced by  bright sunshine and Sri Lanka’s bowlers were forced to toil  hard.

Sri Lanka captain Kumar Sangakkara even turned to the  part-time medium pace of former captain Mahela Jayawardene in  bid to conjure-up a breakthrough.

It was Chaminda Vaas, who was included for his farewell test  match in place of spinner Ajantha Mendis, who made the  breakthrough, finding the outside edge of Manzoor and  Jayawardene took the catch at slip.

Minutes later Yousuf threw his wicket away trying to  complete a foolish second run after a miss-field and was run  out.

Malik and Misbah ul-Haq (27) steadied the innings once again  with a 75-run stand before Sri Lanka took the second new ball.

Malik was the first to go, pinned lbw by an inswinger,  before Nuwan Kulasekera found the inside edge of Misbah and then  bowled Umar Gul.