Cricket

A momentous 100th: United they delivered

Tigers seal a historic four-wicket win in Sri Lanka
Bangladesh captain Mushfiqur Rahim (R) is ecstatic as Mehedi Hasan Miraz completes the winning runs on the final day of the second Test against Sri Lanka at the P Sara Oval in Colombo yesterday. The four-wicket victory in landmark 100th Test helped the Tigers draw the two-match series 1-1. Photo: BCB

The enormity of the achievement will take a while to sink in. Just six days ago, the Bangladesh team looked like sitting ducks as selection turmoil and backroom politics in the wake of a crushing 259-run defeat in the first Test in Galle overshadowed the joyous occasion that was to be the country's 100th Test match. They were sitting ducks because the match would be played at a venue where they recorded their lowest Test score of 62 all out in 2007, and where they had only known innings defeats in the three matches that they played here prior to this. The team that they were playing against had an unbeaten record against them, and won 15 of 17 previous matches. You could not have asked for a deck more stacked.

But once the Test match started at the P Sara Oval on March 15, from the first ball that Mustafizur bowled to Dimuth Karunaratne on the first morning to Mehedi Hasan Miraz's sweep past square leg off Rangana Herath that eluded the diving short fine leg fielder to the fence and sealed the four-wicket win 45 minutes after tea on the last day yesterday, all 11 Bangladesh cricketers were not only far from sitting ducks, but Tigers who dominated the Lions in their own den. 

Starting the day with Sri Lanka on 268 for eight, 139 runs ahead with two wickets in hand, Bangladesh did not let their shoulders droop when Suranga Lakmal and Dilruwan Perera rapidly increased the lead. They knew a wicket would bring another, and that is what happened when Perera decided to run off a Subashis Roy misfield at square leg and paid the price. In the next over, the 114th, Lakmal holed out to long off to give Shakib a deserved fourth wicket.

Adding to his already bulging collection of star turns in important matches, Shakib Al Hasan was adjudged player of the series, having hit a century in the first innings and taking four wickets in the Sri Lanka second innings. But there is not one member of the 11 of whom it can be said that they did not contribute. Taijul Islam and Subashis Roy may have been the quietest performers as far as the scoreboard goes, but Taijul broke partnerships in both innings and Subashis with his aggression and pace was a vital part of the machine.

In the chase of 191 after Sri Lanka were dismissed for 319, there were hairy moments but Bangladesh responded with maturity each time, like they had done throughout the match when umpires' decisions or the lack of a Snickometer or Hot Spot in the review suite seemed to conspire against them. 

Soumya Sarkar played an ill-advised down-the-wicket slog off Herath to be out for 10 and that was followed next ball by Imrul's first-ball edge to slip with the score on 22.

“I have never faced such a situation in Test cricket. It is new for us to chase on this type of wicket on a fifth day,” said Bangladesh skipper Mushfiqur Rahim, who was nerveless in taking Bangladesh home with an unbeaten 45-ball 22 after Tamim and Sabbir Rahman put on 109 runs for the third wicket.

Tamim set the template for the rest of the batsmen, mixing attack with defence perfectly for a 137-ball 82 which included a massive six off a Lakshan Sandakan googly that thudded off the plexigalss windows of the press box. The batsman did not much regret missing out on the hundred after being third out with the score on 131.

“I didn't hurry, but this was my plan. I couldn't be very defensive. We were batting on the fifth day, and there could be a good ball here or there so I needed to keep scoring runs and keep looking for boundary opportunities,” said Tamim after the match. “End of the day, we won. This 80 means a lot.”

Shakib's loss after tea to an inside-edge off Perera that disturbed the furniture so gently that replays were necessary to confirm the dismissal, with 29 still to be scored, brought debutant Mosaddek Hossain, who scored 75 in the first innings, to the crease. He immediately hit his stride knowing that the win was nigh and went after the bowling.

“What made me happy was how we understood the value of the match even when we were ahead or behind in the game. We tried to recognise these small things. The fact that we realised each and every bit of it was quite impressive,” said Mushfiqur, who dedicated Bangladesh's ninth Test win to the fans who faithfully cheer them through thick and thin. 

But the best quote of the day, fittingly, must go to Shakib who was sitting quietly by his captain's side during the press conference. Sri Lanka had won their last six matches at home, but a Sri Lankan journalist wanted to know if this is the worst Sri Lankan team Shakib has faced.

“They beat Australia 3-0,” was the deadpan yet immediate reply. That, in a nutshell, is the enormity of the achievement.

THE PERFORMERS

While Bangladesh relied on team work to clinch a thrilling four-wicket victory in the second Test in Colombo, there were plenty of individual performances, from both sides, over the five days of this riveting contest. We relive the key performances, one picked for each day, through this collage of pictures.

Day1: Young off-spinner Mehedi Hasan Miraz struck three times on the first morning to reduce Sri Lanka to 70 for four at lunch, handing Bangladesh back the initiative after they lost the toss.
Day2: Sri Lanka batsman Dinesh Chandimal steadied the rocking boat and notched his eighth ton on the following morning before eventually being dismissed for 138 as the hosts posted 338.
Day3: Bangladesh's reply was a strong one, a score of 467 punctuated by a crucial 116 from Shakib Al Hasan and a breathtaking 75 from debutante Mosaddek Hossain.
Day4: Sri Lanka made a brisk start and wiped off the deficit before lunch on the fourth day, but pacer Mustafizur Rahman brought Bangladesh back on top with three quick wickets.
Day5: In the end it was a collective performance in all three departments that propelled the Tigers to the historic victory, the first one against Sri Lanka, in their landmark 100th Test. PHOTOS: AFP/BCB

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A momentous 100th: United they delivered

Tigers seal a historic four-wicket win in Sri Lanka
Bangladesh captain Mushfiqur Rahim (R) is ecstatic as Mehedi Hasan Miraz completes the winning runs on the final day of the second Test against Sri Lanka at the P Sara Oval in Colombo yesterday. The four-wicket victory in landmark 100th Test helped the Tigers draw the two-match series 1-1. Photo: BCB

The enormity of the achievement will take a while to sink in. Just six days ago, the Bangladesh team looked like sitting ducks as selection turmoil and backroom politics in the wake of a crushing 259-run defeat in the first Test in Galle overshadowed the joyous occasion that was to be the country's 100th Test match. They were sitting ducks because the match would be played at a venue where they recorded their lowest Test score of 62 all out in 2007, and where they had only known innings defeats in the three matches that they played here prior to this. The team that they were playing against had an unbeaten record against them, and won 15 of 17 previous matches. You could not have asked for a deck more stacked.

But once the Test match started at the P Sara Oval on March 15, from the first ball that Mustafizur bowled to Dimuth Karunaratne on the first morning to Mehedi Hasan Miraz's sweep past square leg off Rangana Herath that eluded the diving short fine leg fielder to the fence and sealed the four-wicket win 45 minutes after tea on the last day yesterday, all 11 Bangladesh cricketers were not only far from sitting ducks, but Tigers who dominated the Lions in their own den. 

Starting the day with Sri Lanka on 268 for eight, 139 runs ahead with two wickets in hand, Bangladesh did not let their shoulders droop when Suranga Lakmal and Dilruwan Perera rapidly increased the lead. They knew a wicket would bring another, and that is what happened when Perera decided to run off a Subashis Roy misfield at square leg and paid the price. In the next over, the 114th, Lakmal holed out to long off to give Shakib a deserved fourth wicket.

Adding to his already bulging collection of star turns in important matches, Shakib Al Hasan was adjudged player of the series, having hit a century in the first innings and taking four wickets in the Sri Lanka second innings. But there is not one member of the 11 of whom it can be said that they did not contribute. Taijul Islam and Subashis Roy may have been the quietest performers as far as the scoreboard goes, but Taijul broke partnerships in both innings and Subashis with his aggression and pace was a vital part of the machine.

In the chase of 191 after Sri Lanka were dismissed for 319, there were hairy moments but Bangladesh responded with maturity each time, like they had done throughout the match when umpires' decisions or the lack of a Snickometer or Hot Spot in the review suite seemed to conspire against them. 

Soumya Sarkar played an ill-advised down-the-wicket slog off Herath to be out for 10 and that was followed next ball by Imrul's first-ball edge to slip with the score on 22.

“I have never faced such a situation in Test cricket. It is new for us to chase on this type of wicket on a fifth day,” said Bangladesh skipper Mushfiqur Rahim, who was nerveless in taking Bangladesh home with an unbeaten 45-ball 22 after Tamim and Sabbir Rahman put on 109 runs for the third wicket.

Tamim set the template for the rest of the batsmen, mixing attack with defence perfectly for a 137-ball 82 which included a massive six off a Lakshan Sandakan googly that thudded off the plexigalss windows of the press box. The batsman did not much regret missing out on the hundred after being third out with the score on 131.

“I didn't hurry, but this was my plan. I couldn't be very defensive. We were batting on the fifth day, and there could be a good ball here or there so I needed to keep scoring runs and keep looking for boundary opportunities,” said Tamim after the match. “End of the day, we won. This 80 means a lot.”

Shakib's loss after tea to an inside-edge off Perera that disturbed the furniture so gently that replays were necessary to confirm the dismissal, with 29 still to be scored, brought debutant Mosaddek Hossain, who scored 75 in the first innings, to the crease. He immediately hit his stride knowing that the win was nigh and went after the bowling.

“What made me happy was how we understood the value of the match even when we were ahead or behind in the game. We tried to recognise these small things. The fact that we realised each and every bit of it was quite impressive,” said Mushfiqur, who dedicated Bangladesh's ninth Test win to the fans who faithfully cheer them through thick and thin. 

But the best quote of the day, fittingly, must go to Shakib who was sitting quietly by his captain's side during the press conference. Sri Lanka had won their last six matches at home, but a Sri Lankan journalist wanted to know if this is the worst Sri Lankan team Shakib has faced.

“They beat Australia 3-0,” was the deadpan yet immediate reply. That, in a nutshell, is the enormity of the achievement.

THE PERFORMERS

While Bangladesh relied on team work to clinch a thrilling four-wicket victory in the second Test in Colombo, there were plenty of individual performances, from both sides, over the five days of this riveting contest. We relive the key performances, one picked for each day, through this collage of pictures.

Day1: Young off-spinner Mehedi Hasan Miraz struck three times on the first morning to reduce Sri Lanka to 70 for four at lunch, handing Bangladesh back the initiative after they lost the toss.
Day2: Sri Lanka batsman Dinesh Chandimal steadied the rocking boat and notched his eighth ton on the following morning before eventually being dismissed for 138 as the hosts posted 338.
Day3: Bangladesh's reply was a strong one, a score of 467 punctuated by a crucial 116 from Shakib Al Hasan and a breathtaking 75 from debutante Mosaddek Hossain.
Day4: Sri Lanka made a brisk start and wiped off the deficit before lunch on the fourth day, but pacer Mustafizur Rahman brought Bangladesh back on top with three quick wickets.
Day5: In the end it was a collective performance in all three departments that propelled the Tigers to the historic victory, the first one against Sri Lanka, in their landmark 100th Test. PHOTOS: AFP/BCB

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