Mathews hailed for Sri Lanka fightback

Shahid Hashmi 11:10 05/01/2014
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  • Captain's knock: Mathews is congratulated by Pakistan's Younis Khan at the end of play.

    Pakistan captain Misbah-ul Haq praised his counterpart Angelo Mathews for his fightback which earned Sri Lanka a respectable draw in the first Test in Abu Dhabi on Saturday.

    Mathews hit a career-best 157 not out following his 91 in the first innings to help Sri Lanka avert a probable defeat after Pakistan dominated the first three days.

    Pakistan had gained a valuable 179-run lead over Sri Lanka’s first innings total of 204 and had their rivals in a spot of bother at 186-4 on day three.

    But Mathews put on 138 for the fifth wicket with Dinesh Chandimal (89) and unbroken 156 for the sixth wicket with Prasanna Jayawardene (63 not out) to pull Sri Lanka out of trouble.

    Set a challenging 302 in 67 overs on the last day, Pakistan finished on 158-2. Misbah said Mathews turned the match on its head.

    “Test cricket is all about this. In getting somebody out in the first innings, you can’t just think you won the match,” said Misbah. “This is how teams fight back, they fought hard and batted well. Mathews batted very well and turned the match.”

    Misbah, who has lost wicketkeeper Adnan Akmal for the rest of the series due to a fracture in his left finger, didn’t feel his team gave up the chase too early.

    “No I don’t think so. With first three wickets we were just trying to build partnership, that was our plan that if we can reach around of 170-180 with eight or nine wickets in hand then we can push onward but when Ahmed Shahzad got out then we thought we should go for the draw,” said Misbah, who hopes the pitch will assist spinners more in the second Test starting in Dubai on Wednesday.

    “Dubai must be different and the ball started to spin on the third day so there must be an important role of the spinner there,” said Misbah. Mathews admitted he went for safety-first on the fifth day.

    “First of all we had to make sure that we didn’t get into a losing position,” said Mathews, who batted for an hour and 30 minutes before declaring at 420-5.

    “It was a see-saw game and they dominated for the first three days and it was remarkable to stage a comeback and I am happy that we did that through our batting.

    “This was the best I have batted for Sri Lanka and I am proud to have justified my place in the team.”

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