England v Sri Lanka: third men’s cricket Test match, day two – live | England v Sri Lanka 2024

Key events

WICKET! England 307-8 (Pope c Karunaratne b Vishwa 154)

Sri Lanka deserved a load of wickets in the first hour; now they’ve been gifted a few. A surprise short ball from Vishwa is pulled straight to deep backward square by Pope, ending a mighty innings of 154 from 156 balls. He had some luck, it’s true, but England would be in all sorts without those runs.

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65th over: England 307-7 (Pope 154, Stone 0)

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WICKET! England 307-7 (Atkinson c Rathnayake b Dhananjaya 5)

A second wicket for the offspinner Dhananjaya. Atkinson charges down the pitch and drags him high towards deep midwicket, where Rathnayake steadies himself to take the catch. A crap shot, in truth, but we’ve all played them.

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64th over: England 303-6 (Pope 153, Atkinson 2) Vishwa Fernando has bowled beautifully this morning. He beats Atkinson twice in three balls, and the other delivery was a gorgeous inswinger that Atkinson inside-edged onto the pad.

“The first 80 or so of Zak Crawley’s 189 at Old Trafford in the Ashes was hilariously lucky so maybe fits the bill, although after that it was pretty astonishing so maybe not quite right?”

He was all over the show, you’re right, though I thought it was only for the first 30-odd runs. I wouldn’t put the farm on it mind.

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63rd over: England 301-6 (Pope 152, Atkinson 1) In other news, Tom Bowtell has a helluva memory. “Mike Atherton’s 160 against India in 1996 was always my benchmark for worst 150,” he writes. “As per Wisden: ‘Atherton had reached his tenth Test century – his fourth at Nottingham – 90 minutes after lunch, without ever looking convincing. He was beaten a fair number of times, but stuck to his task’

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WICKET! England 299-6 (Woakes c Rathnayake b Dhananjaya 2)

Dhananjaya is a genius, I am a fool. On a cloudy morning he has struck with his occasional offspin, tempting Woakes into an uppish drive that is well taken at extra cover.

That’s all, Woakes! Photograph: Glyn Kirk/AFP/Getty Images
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62nd over: England 298-5 (Pope 150, Woakes 2) Nope, Vishwa continues. Pope steers two to move to 149, is beaten trying to repeat the stroke and then taps a single to reach 150 from just 151 balls. In the context of what should be a low-scoring game, that’s a seriously impactful innings.

“Not quite 150,” says Marcus Abdullahi, “but Botham’s 149* at Headingley was similarly hit, miss, slash and edge.”

That’s an excellent shout. Robin Smith was out twice off no-balls when he smashed 175 at Antigua in 1994, though for the most part he played like the muscular legend he was and is.

Not pretty, but effective from Pope. Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images/Reuters
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61st over: England 294-4 (Pope 147, Woakes 1) Dhananjaya brings himself on to bowl some offspin, a bizarre decision unless it is to facilitate a change of ends. Four from the over.

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60th over: England 290-5 (Pope 144, Woakes 0) A memorable first summer is ending a little quietly for Jamie Smith, but overall it’s been a triumph: his average sits at 46.66

“I’m looking forward to seeing Josh Hull bowl later,” says Tom Van der Gucht. “Following Gus Atkinson’s incredible start to test cricket and how well Potts and Stone slotted back into the team, do you think Anderson may have had an impact behind the scenes feeding them key Intel and settling their nerves?”

I don’t know about the nerves – that’s Baz and Ben’s job – but he must be helping enormously with the gameplans. Even Mark Wood said it was a chat with Anderson that inspired his stumpbusting spell of reverse swing against West Indies.

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WICKET! England 290-5 (Smith c Kusal b Vishwa 14)

Vishwa, who has been curving the ball back into the right-handers, angles successive deliveries past Smith’s outside edge. Dhananjaya almost bursts out laughing at Dame Fortune’s vendetta against his team.

He soon has a better reason to smile when Smith clips an inswinger to midwicket, where Kusal Mendis takes a smart catch above his head. Sri Lanka are into the bowling allrounders.

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Nominations please!

Ollie #Pope still mixing fine shots with false ones – top edges, inside edges, slashes through the slips. He’s well on his way to the worst 150 you’ll ever see#ENGvSL

— Tim de Lisle (@TimdeLisle) September 7, 2024

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Drinks

59th over: England 288-4 (Pope 144, Smith 14) Smith softens his hands to ensure an edge off Kumara bounces short of the slips and runs away for four. Actually that was a pretty good shot. But the over ends with another false stroke, this time a missed uppercut from Pope. Sri Lanka’s Expected Wickets tally must be through the roof.

“The ball pitched on leg stump,” says Gary Naylor. “There’s no predictive element for an umpire’s call to mitigate, unless the cameras are misaligned. Ridiculous rule.”

So you would allow LBWs even if 0.0001 per cent of the ball pitched in line? <Corrigan> There be monsters!</Corrigan>

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58th over: England 283-4 (Pope 144, Smith 9) Despite Sri Lanka’s desperate fortune this morning, Dhananjaya de Silva is still smiling. The coach Sanath Jayasuriya isn’t. He starts waving his hands furiously when Pope inside-edges an inswinger this far past leg stump and away for four. That is ridiculous.

An outstanding over from Vishwa, full of perfectly pitched inswingers to the right-hander, but the scorebook says seven runs, no wickets.

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REVIEW! England 277-4 (Pope not out 139)

Vishwa Fernando strikes with his second ball! It’s a classic left-armer’s dismissal, curving back to hit Pope plumb in front when he misses a flick across the line.

Pope reviews, just in case it’s pitching outside leg. And it is by about a millimetre! My word, that’s a bonus for England. Pope looked resigned to his fate.

“That’s as tight as I think I’ve ever seen,” says Ricky Ponting on Sky.

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57th over: England 276-4 (Pope 139, Smith 8) England’s luck continues when Smith tries to cut Kumara and inside-edges past off stump for four. The upside of all this for England is that you’d fancy their seamers to cause serious problems, Chris Woakes in particular. Maybe it’s time for an ultra-funky declaration.

“200-odd runs in 40 odd overs has to be one the norm if Test cricket is to survive the relentless onslaught of T20 and IPL,” says Krishnamoorthy V. “(Conversely it can also be 200 all out in 40 overs.) Caution today means shot selection rather than a Gavaskar or Boycott kind of an innings. Bring on good pitches, have a result within five days, let draw be the four-letter word. Hallelujah.”

From Kim Wilde to Leonard Cohen in one move; outstanding.

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56th over: England 269-4 (Pope 137, Smith 3) Rathnayake has changed ends to replace Asitha. No change of luck, though: Pope, trying to cut, edges his third boundary of the day between slip and gully.

“The England batsmen could learn a lesson from Brook’s not out decision this morning,” writes Kim Thonger. “ The umpire apparently heard a noise that was not there. If the batters started grunting every time they swish the bat at the ball outside the off stump, umpires would never know what noise was really a snick.

“By this method a sort of protective aural shield is erected. I suppose it’s a bit sneaky and would register on a Sneakometer, if such a thing existed, but all is fair in love and war, and besides, the Aussies wouldn’t hesitate to adopt such a ploy. Tennis professionals have done it for years anyway.”

Sneakometer, very good.

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55th over: England 264-4 (Pope 133, Smith 2) Smith tries to drive a beauty from the new bowler Kumara and is beaten. That was so close to the outside edge. Sri Lanka’s excellent, discipline performance this morning reinforces the brilliance of Ben Duckett’s performance yesterday. He ruined them.

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54th over: England 263-4 (Pope 133, Smith 1) Jamie Smith pushes Asitha for a single to get off the mark, and why not.

“The last Test of the summer is always bitter sweet,” writes Felix Wood. “In my mind it’s always sunny but you’re aware that if you don’t strictly need to put on a jumper you will very soon, and England are winning a dead rubber match with someone putting in a good enough performance to go on tour and be put to the sword.

“Maybe it’s just the melancholy talking, but all those empty seats at Lord’s have got me worried. What if this wonderful thing is allowed to die because humans just don’t deserve it? Anyway, Pope has just played a short arm pull and got away with it, when he didn’t at Lords. That’s a very Jamie Smith shot, but usually with him it ends up somewhere about 25 rows back in the cheap seats.”

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53rd over: England 261-4 (Pope 132, Smith 0) That catch gets better every time you see it, chiefly because Brook absolutely belted the ball.

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WICKET! England 261-4 (Brook c Kamindu b Rathnayake 19)

Brook pushes tentatively at Rathnayake and is beaten. He charges the next ball, has a lusty swish outside off stump and is beaten again. Sri Lanka have bowled very well to Brook, holding a fifth-stump line – and now they’ve been rewarded! Brook smashes a drive that is wonderfully caught at extra cover by Kamindu Mendis, two-handed as he swoops to his right. Pick that out!

Kamindu Mendis holds on to dismiss Harry Brook! Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images/Reuters
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52nd over: England 261-3 (Pope 132, Brook 19) Brook is beaten by Asitha, then Pope cloths a front-foot pull over midwicket for two. Sri Lanka have been much better this morning. But Pope is good enough to steer another boundary between second slip and gully; he meant it that time. I think.

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51st over: England 252-3 (Pope 124, Brook 18) Sri Lanka go up for LBW, caught behind, the full monty when Pope pushes outside the line of a lovely delivery from Rathnayake. It was too high and missed the inside edge.

“I’m going to preface this by saying I’m a true believer in the McCullum/Stokes method, if only because it is much more fun than the pitiable slump that came before, but can’t help feeling that Harry Brook is going about this the wrong way and that maybe he needs to have a chat with Root about letting some of the ultra-violence go and refinding his natural rhythm,” says Will Vignoles. “With his shot-making ability and absurd power he will surely score quickly and dominate even if he isn’t trying to yeet everyone into the crowd, and at the moment it all feels a bit forced.”

It might also be that he needs a stiffer Test to really focus his mind. It doesn’t feel like a coincidence that his best innings of the summer was played when England were in a bit of bother.

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50th over: England 249-3 (Pope 122, Brook 17) Pope flicks four more to the right of mid-on, this time off the bowling of Asitha. Beautiful shot. He was jittery for 10 minutes but is playing nicely now.

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49th over: England 245-3 (Pope 118, Brook 17) Pope plays an outrageous shot, charging Rathnayake before whirling his wrists to get four through wide mid-on. England’s run-rate of 5.02 per over is the seventh highest by a team that was put into bat. Top of the list, a Baz special.

“That Flintoff/Hull cap presentation is brilliant,” writes Ben Heywood. “It in no way reminded me of my own first and thus far, only, cap for my adopted country (ahem).

“The Montenegro cricket side’s first game was back during the pandemic when an enterprising bunch of lads representing Estonia came to play two games over one weekend. All eleven starters that Saturday were making our international debuts, so we didn’t have any senior figure – let alone legend – to make a speech.

“Instead, the newly arrived headgear was chucked together in a bin bag on the ground next to the scorer’s chair and we all had a tussle over who got which size, on a first come first served basis. As the last member of the team to be named, I wound up with an ‘S’ that had such tight elastic I was left with an indented ring around my skull after a morning spent fielding, and during which I dropped a catch.

“In the afternoon I added two runs before getting caught at point, a meager contribution to what turned out to be an unexpected win. I’ve missed out on all subsequent selections, but every now and again I’ll get the cap out of my kit bag and stroke it with a ridiculous grin on my face, knowing that even if it was just once, I was still part of something special and albeit flukily joined a very select club indeed.

“Josh Hull must have felt ten foot tall. So only marginally taller than he actually is. Lovely.”

What a great story. I always intended to play football for San Marino one day, though that dream has probably died after the other night.

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48th over: England 239-3 (Pope 113, Brook 16) Pope charges Fernando, fiddles outside off and is beaten again. He’s riding his luck like Willie Shoemaker this morning. Some good running brings England four from the over.

“A warm and sultry day in store at the Oval,” says Guy Hornsby. “After yesterday’s profligacy, I hope Sri Lanka can bowl better today. The ball is a long way from being replaced, and they only have themselves to blame for their inaccuracy, which is a real shame given how well they’ve bowled at times. After all, those less partisan of us take no joy in thrashings, and an even contest is what Test cricket is about. Brook is a huge talent but he’s vulnerable early on, too. And no, this isn’t a reverse jinx.”

They’ve started well. It helps having two right-handers, and no Ben Duckett.

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47th over: England 235-3 (Pope 110, Brook 15) Rathnayake, a more disciplined bowler, replaces Kumara. Brook charges his first ball, smashes it a million miles in the air, and is dropped pitifully by Asitha Fernando on the cover boundary. To compound his misery, he then slipped over as he tried to retrieve the ball.

England could easily have lost both batsmen already. Pope, beaten in the previous over, edges an outswinger between second slip and gully for four runs. The ball is doing plenty and, unlike yesterday morning, Sri Lanka are bowling a pretty consistent line.

“Just watched Flintoff presenting Hull with his cap,” writes James Brough. “No matter how the match or the rest of his career goes, that’s a moment that’ll live with him.

“I’d also say how much I like Flintoff – he’s someone who’s been through something horrible and has talked quite openly about what it’s done to him. Stokes too. I think seeing men as physically imposing as them talking about being unable to go outside or to be around other people because of their mental state can only be a positive.”

Oh hugely. It feels like society is starting to recognise that nothing about mental health is binary, which is a really important development.

Asitha Fernando fails to hold on to the catch! Photograph: Glyn Kirk/AFP/Getty Images
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46th over: England 227-3 (Pope 105, Brook 12) Asitha Fernando starts at the other end, and I’m determined to get through an OBO stint without calling him Avisha. He holds a fifth-stump line to Brook, inviting him to drive on the up.

Brook declines the offer, preferring to charge down the pitch and force a single to deep point. Pope then chases an outswinger and is beaten. Sri Lanka have started well.

“Stuart Broad and Ricky Ponting walking round the outfield after media duties. Broad acknowledging his applause with a little wave, Punter accepting his pantomime boos with a wave of his own and the widest of smiles,” says Gary Naylor. “He might be as loved as Richie by the time he finishes if he carries on like this.”

He’s an absolute gem. I think he’s the best micro-analyst around, and seems like a great bloke. But he’ll never be as loved as Richie.

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45th over: England 224-3 (Pope 103, Brook 11) Sri Lanka were speechless/perplexed by that decision, simply because the noise sounded like an outside edge. Even the umpire Joel Wilson has just asked Brook was the noise was.

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Brook is not out!

He tried to drive a full-length tempter from Kumara, and the keeper Chandimal was almost celebrating before the ball reached him. There was a noise, but there’s nothing on UltraEdge so Brook survives.

No idea what the noise was because his bat was nowhere near anything else.

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WICKET? Brook given out caught behind

He reviewed it straight away so maybe he knows something we don’t.

An early appeal from Kumar. Photograph: John Walton/PA
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Lahiru Kumara will resume the over he started last night. Harry Brook is on strike.

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Read Barney Ronay on Ben Duckett

At the same time Duckett also very obviously chucked away his wicket. Poor execution is the mantra with this England team, not poor selection. This is how I score. Back your talent. Be where your feet are. Find your neutral space. Put a lid on the squid. Eat some pizza. Do what it takes.

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“This feels like a heyday for English cricket, with genuine questions and options for selectors and coaches, for immediate use and development,” writes Bill Hargreaves. “The squad seem as though they’re in a good place. (A statement made all the more painful by the news of Graham Thorpe, a personal favourite of mine.)

“Watching Freddie Flintoff’s talk as he presented Josh Hull’s first cap was icing on top of icing on the cake. Am I being realistic here, I do I need shaking from my stupor?”

Not at all. Books will be written about this era. Books already have been written. We are so blessed to watch this life-affirming lot.

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Read Ali Martin’s day one report

The Oval is Ollie Pope’s happy place, however, where everything is familiar and comfortable and his first-class numbers are celestial. And as he slotted Asitha Fernando through the covers moments before the early finish, England’s stand-in skipper had Test century number seven. Remarkably, he is the first player in history to get their first seven against different opposition.

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Preamble

Morning. On the first day of the 1989 Ashes, Australia were put into bat and finished on 207 for 3. It was a similar story yesterday: England, inserted by Sri Lanka, reached 221 for 3 at the close. There was only one minor difference: Australia batted for 81 overs, England for 44.1 overs. Truly, the game has changed, and even half a day’s play was sufficient for England to take control of the match.

Ollie Pope made a breezy, charming hundred, the first by a stand-in England captain since 2010, but the catalyst was the remarkable Ben Duckett. He missed with Sri Lanka’s heads and then their line during a defiantly unconventional innings of 86 from 79 balls. Sri Lanka, who won what looked an extremely important toss, were on the back foot within five overs.

The weather forecast is better today, so batting should be slightly more comfortable. Pope will resume on 103, with Harry Brook on 8 at the other end. Three of Pope’s last four centuries have exceeded 140; if he gets through the first 20 balls, he has a great chance to go big again.

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