Harris shines as Australia finish off Sri Lanka

Mahela Jayawardene

GALLE, Sri Lanka, (Reuters) – Paceman Ryan Harris  captured five wickets as Australia made full use of the second  new ball to break a stubborn sixth-wicket partnership and mop up  the tail on the way to a 125-run victory over Sri Lanka on the  fourth day of the first test yesterday.

Mahela Jayawardene

Harris took two wickets in the afternoon session to finish  with figures of 5-62, with the removal of Mahela Jayawardene for  a brilliant 105 proving to be the catalyst for the victory  charge after the hosts had frustrated Australia in the morning.

Jayawardene and Angelo Mathews had batted superbly to rescue  Sri Lanka from 68-5, the pair adding 142 runs before the former  edged a Harris delivery on to his stumps six overs after  Australia had taken the new ball as soon as it became available.

The remaining four wickets fell cheaply and Mathews was  dismissed an agonising five runs short of a maiden test century  after he opted to attack the bowlers when he was running out of  partners.

“Ryan Harris bowled beautifully,” Michael Clarke told  reporters after his first test win as Australia captain.

“I was bit nervous at the rain. I was confident once we  changed the ball, once we got the harder ball, we were going to  get a little bit more inconsistent bounce in the wicket.

“All credit should go to Mathews and Mahela. Mahela played a  great innings. He was really hard to get out.”

Resuming on 187-5 after lunch, Jayawardene reached his 29th  century off 229 balls, spending five hours at the crease in Sri  Lanka’s forlorn chase of the 379-run winning target set by  Australia on Friday.

         TOUGH WICKET  

Jayawardene became the first player to score a test century  in the fourth innings on a Galle pitch that historically favours  spin bowlers while Australia’s former captain Ricky Ponting  became the first player to participate in 100 test victories.

Mathews faced 238 balls to reach 95 when he was the ninth  wicket to fall, bowled by Shane Watson, with the last pair  adding four more runs before Nathan Lyon, who took five wickets  in the first innings on debut, completed the victory as the  hosts were dismissed for 253.

“That was one of the toughest wickets I have played test  cricket on. No doubt, it was prepared for spin bowling… Day  one looked like day four of a test match,” Clarke said.

The match was a low-scoring affair with Australia managing  273 and 210 in their two innings and Sri Lanka falling for 105  in their first innings as Lyon ran through the batting order  with figures of 5-34.

Rangana Herath was the pick of Sri Lanka’s attack with match  figures of 8-133 while Australia batsman Michael Hussey picked  up the man-of-the-match award for his battling 95 on the opening  day.

“We had planned for 220-230 in the first innings,” Sri  Lankan captain Tillakaratne Dilshan told reporters. “The  fightback in the second innings was good. We will have to see  the wicket before deciding the team for the next test match in  Kandy.”

The second test in the three-match series starts on  Thursday.