Sri Lanka tightens grip as New Zealand wobbles in second Test
New Zealand faced another challenging day in Galle during the second Test against Sri Lanka. After a poor batting display in their first innings, New Zealand showed brief resistance through a 97-run partnership between Devon Conway and Kane Williamson in their second innings. However, they crumbled once again and ended Day 3 on 129/5 following on, trailing by 385 runs.
Conway and Williamson’s Brief Fightback
Devon Conway led a spirited fightback in the second session with a flurry of boundaries, including a six off left-arm spinner Prabath Jayasuriya. With support from Kane Williamson, the pair put together a quick half-century stand. Conway reached his fifty in just 48 balls, displaying attacking intent against the spinners. However, their efforts were short-lived. Conway fell for 61 to Dhananjaya de Silva, caught by Dinesh Chandimal, while Williamson was dismissed for 46, miscuing a shot off Nishan Peiris to long-on.
New Zealand’s Collapse
Following the dismissals of Conway and Williamson, New Zealand’s middle order crumbled. Daryl Mitchell was caught at short-leg off Jayasuriya, and Rachin Ravindra was bowled by Peiris, leaving New Zealand struggling at 121/5. Tom Blundell and Glenn Phillips managed to hold on till the tea interval without further damage.
Sri Lanka’s Dominance
Earlier, New Zealand was bundled out for just 88 runs in their first innings, their lowest total against Sri Lanka. Mitchell Santner was the top-scorer with 29, but most of the lineup failed to reach double figures. Prabath Jayasuriya was the chief architect of the collapse, taking 6 for 42, while debutant Nishan Peiris claimed 3 for 33. This gave Sri Lanka a massive 514-run lead—the largest first-innings lead in a Test since 2006.
The Struggle Continues for New Zealand
Jayasuriya’s accuracy and turn troubled the New Zealand batters throughout. He removed Williamson early on Day 3 and was well supported by Peiris, who dismissed Ravindra and Ajaz Patel to reduce New Zealand to 52/5. The middle and lower order struggled to build partnerships, with Jayasuriya claiming a five-wicket haul and dismissing key players like Tom Blundell and Glenn Phillips. Despite Santner’s brief resistance, New Zealand’s innings ended at 88. Their struggles continued when they were asked to bat again, with Tom Latham falling for a duck in the first over of the second innings.
Brief Scores
Sri Lanka 602/5 declared, lead New Zealand (88 all out – Mitchell Santner 29; Prabath Jayasuriya 6-42, Nishan Peiris 3-33) and 129/5 following on (Devon Conway 61, Kane Williamson 46; Nishan Peiris 3-44) by 385 runs.