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Thorpe may hold the key in evenly balanced game

da blaze casino: It should come as no surprise that the second day of this Colombo Test Match wasyet another gripping affair, with fortunes fluctuating throughout the dayand controversy an ever-present bed fellow

Charlie Austin16-Mar-2001It should come as no surprise that the second day of this Colombo Test Match wasyet another gripping affair, with fortunes fluctuating throughout the dayand controversy an ever-present bed fellow. It will come as even less of asurprise that the match remains evenly poised with both sides stillharnessing realistic hopes of winning the game.England dominated the morning as they efficiently brushed aside the SriLankan tail in the first half and then batted until lunch without loss, butSri Lanka’s spinners then swung the initiative their way as they took fourwickets between lunch and tea. Finally, Graham Thorpe rescued the innings inthe evening, adding 84 runs with Michael Vaughan, to leave England 66 runsbehind Sri Lanka.England’s position would appear to be the strongest, especially with GrahamThorpe still at the wicket. The Surrey left-hander played a key role inKandy scoring 59 in the first innings and an invaluable 46 in the second.Today too, he rescued the innings, defying the Sri Lankan spinners with anorganised combination of thrusting pad play and tempered aggression, toscore an unbeaten 71 at a time when England looked as if they were goingfold.He was well supported by Vaughan, who scored a disciplined 26 from 126 balls. He stroked two boundaries that betrayed his rich promise; a powerful sweep off the left arm of Dinuk Hettiarachchi and an exquisite cover drive off the beguiling Muralitharan.He will have been further boosted by the news that he has been added to theone-day squad, partly as cover for Nasser Hussain, who is unlikely to play,and partly because he offers an additional spin option on the slow SriLankan wickets.The Sri Lankan spinners proved a real handful after Chaminda Vaas had ended a 45-run opening stand when he dismissed Michael Atherton for the fifth time in five innings.Dinuk Hettiarachchi, a stocky left arm spinner making his debut, addedgreater potency to the attack as he offered the ball air and extractedconsiderable turn. He finished the day with creditable figures (19-4-33-2)and took the next two wickets to fall, as England slipped from 45 withoutloss to 66 for three.Marcus Trescothick was freakishly dismissed for 23 as he slog-swept straightinto the shirt sleeve of Russel Arnold at short leg, and then a limpingHussain, who was granted a runner by Sri Lanka after pulling his hamstringyesterday, was beaten in the air and drove straight to Sanath Jayasuriya atshort extra cover.Hussain had already been given out once in bizarre circumstances after hehad edged Hettiarachchi to Mahela Jayawardene at slip. The Sri Lankansimmediately appealed, but Jayawardene informed Sri Lankan umpire, Asoka deSilva, that he was unsure as to whether the catch had been taken cleanly. DeSilva conferred with David Orchard, who adjudged that the catch had beentaken cleanly and Asoka de Silva raised his finger, much to the horror ofHussain.England’s dumbfounded captain walked slowly off as television replaysclearly showed the ball had bounced. Asoka de Silva finally referred the decision to the television umpire, B.C. Cooray, who confirmed that the ball had bounced.In the event it proved irrelevant, as Hussain added only four more runs.Following the dismissal of Hussain, Alec Stewart and Thorpe added 25runs before Stewart was deceived by a straighter ball from Muralitharan tobe bowled.Both the Sri Lankan and England coaches believe that match to be evenlypoised and realise that tomorrow morning will be especially important. Thepitch is starting to wear and batting is becoming increasingly difficult. Alead of 70-90 runs would be very useful.