Samaraweera guides Sri Lanka to strong position

GALLE, Sri Lanka, (Reuters) – Thilan Samaraweera  scored a magnificent 159 to leave Sri Lanka in the driving seat  in the first test against New Zealand yesterday.

Sri Lanka piled up 452 in 117.4 overs after being put into  bat and New Zealand were 87 for two in reply when bad light  stopped play early.

Tim McIntosh will resume in the morning on 36 batting with  night-watchman Jeetan Patel on six.

Samaraweera’s 10th test hundred, which spanned 277  deliveries and included 24 fours and a six, was also his first  since he suffered a bullet wound during the attack on the team  bus in Lahore in March.

The right-hander added 166 for the fourth wicket with Mahela  Jayawardene (114) and a further 86 for the fifth wicket with  Angelo Mathews (39).

The hosts seemed to be cruising towards a larger total but  collapsed just before the tea interval, losing their last four  wickets for just eight runs.

Pace bowler Chris Martin was New Zealand’s best seamer with  four for 77 from 23 overs and skipper Daniel Vettori claimed  four for 78 from 37.4 overs.

Sri Lanka, resuming on 293 for three, lost Jayawardene  during the one-hour morning session — cut short because of  early rain — and added 35 runs in 13 overs.

Jayawardene was dismissed in the second over, nibbling at an  away-swinger from Ian O’Brien and edging to Ross Taylor in the  slips.

After the interval, the fifth wicket pair upped the tempo,  especially after Samaraweera reached his hundred.

However, while off-spinner Jeetan Patel was getting  punished, conceding 120 runs from 24 wicketless overs, Vettori  held his nerve and started to chip away at the middle order.

Mathews was caught behind off a quicker arm ball and  Prasanna Jayawardene pushed a catch to short leg.

The tail collapsed meekly after Samaraweera was finally  dismissed by Vettori.

After tea Sri Lanka pressed hard for early wickets with  Thilan Thushara bowling a penetrative burst, moving the ball  both ways.

However, openers McIntosh and Martin Guptill started  solidly, adding 45 for the first wicket.

Thushara did eventually break through, bowling Guptill off  an inside edge for 24.

Spinner Ajantha Mendis also picked up the wicket of Daniel  Flynn (14), deceiving the left-hander with a quicker in-cutter  that zipped back between bat and pad.