Guernsey Press

Sri Lanka v England Day 3: England skipper Joe Root’s brilliant form continues

Root’s 186 helped England battle back against Sri Lanka in Galle.

Published
Last updated

Joe Root produced another masterpiece of sub-continental batting with a wonderful century that carried the England cause almost single-handedly in the second Test at Galle.

Root might have been brought up in Sheffield but he has never looked more at home than in Sri Lanka, where he followed his relentless 228 in the series opener with a knock of 186 from the same elite level.

The England captain had never before hit hundreds in back-to-back matches but there was an air of inevitability about his 19th Test ton, with his team endlessly grateful for his stocks of class and concentration as they finished on 339 for nine – still 42 behind.

There was a physical price to pay in the sapping heat, with the 30-year-old visibly suffering from fatigue, cramp and a late back spasm. It was tiredness which eventually cost him in the final over of the day, run out from short-leg as his stiff legs struggled to make the turn before Oshada Fernando threw down the stumps.

Root climbs the list

CRICKET England
(PA Graphics)
Sri Lankan wicketkeeper Niroshan Dickwella in one-day mode.
Sri Lankan wicketkeeper Niroshan Dickwella in one-day mode (Nigel French/PA)

View from the middle

Ground staff in Galle have all manner of tasks to attend to, beyond the business of fetching the removing rain covers. Midway through Sunday’s play one of the more junior members was despatched the boundary with the task of ushering a water monitor lizard from his chosen basking spot on the boundary rope. You don’t see that at Lord’s.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.