Leeds: Jay Mooney reacts to Tyler Roberts injury

Leeds United’s communications chief Jay Mooney has been reacting to Tyler Roberts’ injury on Twitter.

The Lowdown: Roberts out for the season

The 23-year-old was named on the bench in Jesse Marsch’s first game as manager against Leicester City and came on with 14 minutes remaining.

Unfortunately, the Welshman suffered a hamstring injury shortly after coming on but didn’t come off despite the fact he was seriously struggling.

Late Monday night, it was confirmed by the Whites that Roberts has undergone surgery on a ruptured hamstring tendon which is set to keep him out of action for three months.

The Latest: Mooney reacts

The club’s official Twitter post received plenty of interaction on Monday evening, including from head of communications Mooney.

He replied using his personal account, labelling it as ‘sad news’.

“Sad news but Tyler will come back fighting. Unbelievably good soul, always happy to go the extra mile for the club.”

The Verdict: Unfortunate

Roberts has made just seven Premier League starts this season, contributing to two goals in 974 minutes of action.

He may have been in line to feature more regularly under Marsch, though, due to the American’s 4-2-2-2 system, so the injury update is extremely unfortunate for the player ahead of 11 make or break fixtures starting against Aston Villa on Thursday.

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The good news for Marsch is that Patrick Bamford is set to make a return after a lengthy period out, so it is a case of one in and one out on the treatment table at Thorp Arch.

In other news: Phil Hay drops huge Leeds news from Thorp Arch before Villa. 

Confidence from win makes us favourites – Collingwood

Paul Collingwood isn’t too concerned about the lack of centuries from the England top order © Getty Images
 

Success breeds success in international sport. The England camp is a much more relaxed place now that the team is back to winning ways. The players have their families in tow and have taken over a marina on the northern side of Napier, where the third and final Test gets underway on Saturday. According to Paul Collingwood, the confidence gained from their 126-run victory in Wellington on Monday has reinstalled them as series favourites. “If we put in the performance we can do,” said Collingwood, “we should win.”England’s Wellington win was not without its flaws. Their catching was appalling and the top six batsmen once again made starts without threatening to build a big innings. But, having endured nine barren months since their last Test victory against West Indies in Chester-le-Street, Collingwood was content to be thankful for small mercies. “We still have areas to improve on, but we’d have taken that performance at the start,” he said. “We have a hell of a lot of positives to take into the next game.”It was a massive relief, and great to win,” said Collingwood, who joked that there’d been a few cobwebs gathering on the team’s victory song-sheet. “That’s what we play the game for. We’d gone a long time without a Test win so that starts preying on your mind, but I’m used to that over the years with Durham. It’s just one of those things. You’ve got to be confident in your ability to put in the big performances. You have to back yourself to go out there and do that, and there were some top performances last week.”Most of those performances, however, came at the bottom end of the team sheet. Tim Ambrose’s debut century was the stand-out batting performance, while the three seamers – James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Ryan Sidebottom – all excelled in helpful conditions. Collingwood was the pick of England’s specialist batsmen with a brace of half-centuries, but he knows full well that, on what is expected to be a flat and friendly track, the watching public will be expecting some centuries this week.Collingwood, however, warned that the more an issue was made of England’s lack of hundreds, the harder it would be to end the drought. “You can put too much pressure on yourself,” he explained. “You play your best cricket when you’re relaxed and reacting to the ball, and enjoying yourself with a smile on your face. You play your worst when you think ‘I must do this, I can’t do that.’ That’s when you start doing things wrong. If you say ‘I mustn’t drop short because he’ll smash it,’ that’s what you end up doing. That’s how life works, on a cricket pitch anyway.”Of the top six, only Alastair Cook has managed three figures this winter, and that innings came in a dead rubber at Galle before Christmas. Collingwood himself hasn’t made a Test hundred since June, while Kevin Pietersen – normally so dominant – has gone 10 consecutive innings without so much as a fifty. “We’re just one big ton away from opening the floodgates again,” said Collingwood. “It’s up to one of us to go out there and do that.”Apart from the reintroduction of Andrew Strauss at the expense of Ravi Bopara (and the odd rejig in the batting order), England’s top six has been unchanged since the Headingley Test last May, a situation that contrasts starkly with the treatment meted out to Steve Harmison and Matthew Hoggard after their failures in the first Test. But Collingwood denied that the players were stuck in the comfort zone.

 
 
Of the top six, only Alastair Cook has managed three figures this winter. Collingwood hasn’t made a Test hundred since June, while Kevin Pietersen has gone 10 consecutive innings without a fifty
 

“With the records they have, they’ve proved they can play against different bowlers and in different conditions,” said Collingwood. “We’ve come up against some good bowling, certainly in the India series [in July and August] when they were swinging it both ways, and in Sri Lanka, which is a difficult place to score hundreds. I wouldn’t put it down to desire or concentration or anything like that. We believe we are better players than that.”Owais Shah is England’s reserve batsman in this series, but he was overlooked for Bopara in Sri Lanka, and seems to have slipped further down the pecking order without actually doing anything right or wrong. “Nobody’s position is safe, but that’s always been the case,” said Collingwood. “There’s always going to be people waiting in the wings, and you need to do your job in the England side or your position is in doubt. That’s healthy for the England cricket team. As long as we win Test matches, hopefully we’ll stick together as a batting unit and keep developing in different conditions.”Looking ahead to the Napier Test, Collingwood hinted that England’s approach with the bat would be more purposeful, but stopped short of promising a run-fest. “We’ll score as quickly as we feel we can without taking a risk, that’s generally what we’ve tried to do,” he said. “The first goal is to get 400 on the board to put pressure on the opposition. How quickly we score them goes down to how well they bowl at us. We’re not going to be reckless and go out and say we’ll score at four and a half an over. The pitch dictates that.”I wouldn’t say there’s more pressure than usual,” he said. “It wasn’t going to be a canter coming over here. They bat right down to Nos. 7 and 8 and they’ve got a lot of skill in the bowling, so they are a tough side to beat. We were expected to come over here and steamroller them, but that wasn’t the kind of thoughts in our minds. We knew we’d have to play well and play tough cricket, and we got well beaten in the first game.”

Sarwan faces mental trial

When asked, during the World Cup and before Lara’s departure, about the possibility of becoming captain, he said he was ready to seize the chance with both hands © AFP

It is, at one and the same time, the most coveted and the most hazardous job in West Indies cricket. Six optimists have held it over the past dozen years, one three times, another twice. None has lasted more than four years, two as briefly as one.In a period when the West Indies have plummeted from their unchallenged status as world champions to near rock bottom, its pressures have been so great that they forced Richie Richardson and Brian Lara to take a break from the game, the former to recover from the stress-induced condition “acute fatigue syndrome”, the latter to “seek the assistance of appropriate professionals”.It is against this background, and much more besides, that Ramnaresh Sarwan has been appointed captain of the West Indies team for the tour of England that starts in less than two weeks’ time. In addition to the troubled history of his recent predecessors, Sarwan takes over in the immediate aftermath of a disastrous World Cup campaign that has led to the retirement of Lara, for 15 years the indisputable centrepiece of the team, and the resignation of Bennett King, the head coach.He and his team must undertake the tour with an interim coach, a new manager and, hopefully if only temporary, a fitness trainer, a post incredibly missing from the support staff since December. They are issues that, outwardly at least, appear not to faze Sarwan.When asked, during the World Cup and before Lara’s departure, about the possibility of becoming captain, his answer was full of enthusiasm. He was ready, he said, to seize the chance with both hands.Bruce Aanansen, the West Indies Cricket Board’s (WICB) new chief executive, believed that what swayed the selectors towards Sarwan, rather than the other strong candidate, Daren Ganga, was mainly his knowledge of the game, the impression he had made on the few occasions he led the team and the respect the players have for him.One match may have been enough to clinch it. With Lara nursing a stiff back, Sarwan was in charge when West Indies defended a total of 234 for 6 against Australia in the group stage of the Champions Trophy in India last October. There was rare energy on the field – in the body language, the commitment and the aggression – as the usually unflappable Australians faltered.But that was over 50 overs. Now Sarwan has a long assignment ahead, featuring four Tests away from home against opponents who have a 7-0 advantage in the previous two series between the teams three years ago. It will be a stern test of his mettle. The challenge, at the age of 26, can either bring the best out of him as a leader in every sense [his Test batting average of 38.8 is one area that needs attention] or, like those before him, crush him.He was the youngest player in the history of first-class cricket in the West Indies, when he debuted for Guyana at the age of 15. He moved inevitably into the Test team four years later, announcing his arrival with a cultured, unbeaten 84 against a powerful Pakistan attack. Except for one injury or another, he has scarcely missed a Test or ODI since. Based on his grasp of the game’s tactical complexities, demonstrated from his days as a successful Guyana captain in the regional under-19 tournament, he was elevated to the vice-captaincy when Lara returned for his second stint in 2003.The four intervening years have been filled with contradictory messages. No sooner had he become West Indies vice-captain than Guyana chose Shivnarine Chanderpaul as their captain instead, following the retirement of Carl Hooper.A year later, Sarwan and six others were declared ineligible for selection in the first Test of the home series against South Africa, since they held Cable & Wireless contracts that the board deemed were in conflict with its deal with new team sponsor, Digicel. When Lara, also on C&W’s books but qualified because it was a pre-existing arrangement, quit the captaincy in solidarity, the board turned to Chanderpaul to lead the team.It was a role for which he was clearly unsuited and in which he was, equally clearly, uncomfortable. Sarwan had, by then, been reinstated as vice-captain but he was overlooked in favour of Lara’s third term when Chanderpaul stepped down and returned to the ranks.Sarwan remained the deputy, as he had been in Lara’s second stint, but was to endure another public indignity during last year’s tour of Pakistan. His form had faltered and his physical condition was questionable. He was hardly the only one in the team with such shortcomings but he was dropped from the second Test and told by Lara to “reflect and come back strong”. It was a ringing condemnation.Then, as soon as he came back, for the next Test, Umar Gul broke his foot with a wicked yorker. He recovered six weeks later only for Fidel Edwards to promptly pin his thumb against the bat handle in a Carib Beer Cup match and fracture it. As a result, he had little cricket leading into the World Cup but he was still the leading West Indies batsman, in aggregate (375) and average (46.87), in a tournament in which their cricket touched new levels of mediocrity.Such mishaps were not unfamiliar but he has bounced back from each. His courage is not in doubt. In a 2003 World Cup match in Cape Town against Sri Lanka, he was knocked unconscious by a bouncer from Dilhara Fernando, stretchered off the field with blood pouring from the cut and taken to hospital. An hour and a half later, he was back in the middle, batting in a cap rather than a helmet, and taking the West Indies to within six runs of an improbable victory with an unbeaten 47.The trial he now needs to overcome is not so much physical as mental. It always is for the captain of the West Indies.

Vaughan won't be rushed back

Michael Vaughan is struggling to be fit for Yorkshire’s opening Championship game © Getty Images

Michael Vaughan is making a slow recovery from the knee injury, which forced him out of the current tour of India, according to the Yorkshire physiotherapist Scott McAllister.Vaughan has been undergoing an intensive programme of rehabilitation since returning from India to undergo further treatment on a right knee problem which was operated on last December. But hopes that he would be able to play in Yorkshire’s opening County Championship match, against Nottinghamshire on April 19, are now fading.”The only time schedule is how Michael’s knee responds, not the playing schedule,” McAllister told the . “We’re not going to push him and neither are England. It’s vital that he gets the knee right to ensure that when he does come back, he does so with confidence.”The encouraging thing is that Michael is progressing, step by step, slowly but surely. The signs are good, but at the same time we’re not getting over-excited about the situation.”There is also positive news on Simon Jones, who is hopeful of starting the season with Glamorgan, after he also returned from India after injuring his knee ahead of the first Test.”The knee is coming on well,” he said, “I have started bowling off a couple of yards and I’m sprinting up to full pace. I want to play for Glamorgan in the first couple of games and prove my fitness, and see where it takes me.”However, the fitness of Ashley Giles is still causing major concern as he has yet to start bowling since hip surgery in December. Giles flew home from Pakistan, missing the third Test at Lahore, and withdrew from the tour of India.His target had been to start the season with Warwickshire, but his recovery has been slow and Giles has admitted that the injury could be career threatening. Last week he told : “If the rehab doesn’t succeed, the alternatives are obvious. The specialist thought the hip would have done most of its healing after three months but that hasn’t happened.”

Smith and de Villiers rout West Indies

South Africa 214 for 0 (Smith 106*, de Villiers 103*) v West Indies
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

AB de Villiers: second hundred of the series © Getty Images

Just over a year ago, Brian Lara won the toss for West Indies on a typically flat Antiguan wicket, and rattled along to a world-record 400 not out out of a gargantuan total of 751 for 5 declared. It remains to be seen whether Graeme Smith and AB de Villiers have that sort of landmark in mind, but in compiling an unbroken opening stand of 214 on the first day of the fourth Test, they ensured that South Africa maintained the momentum that has been steadily accumulating throughout the series.The opening exchanges of the first Test, when West Indies posted a forbidding total of 543 for 5 declared in Guyana, now seem an eternity away. Ever since then, it has been South Africa making all the running. By the time a rain-interrupted day was brought to an early conclusion, Smith and de Villiers had reached, respectively, their third and second hundreds of the series, and in both cases they had come in consecutive matches.South Africa’s opening pair provide a microcosm of their team’s progress in this series. Each time they have been asked to bat, their returns have just got better and better: 15 and 46 at Bourda, 117 at Port-of-Spain, 191 at Bridgetown, and now this. Both batsmen reached their hundreds moments before the rains rolled in – Smith with a straight drive down the ground off Chris Gayle, and de Villiers with a tickle to fine leg and a loud whoop of delight, one over later. It was his third Test century and Smith’s 11th, and left West Indies hoping that Lara will be able to respond with his 29th – as and when his moment comes.In 19 matches at the Recreation Ground, 19 innings have totalled more than 400 runs, and only seven have ended up fewer than 200, and by the close, it was not difficult to see which category this particular effort was destined for. Lara, gnashing his teeth in the slip cordon, could only ponder what might have been, because the writing was on the wall from the opening exchanges. Smith and de Villiers clobbered four fours in seven balls from the new-ball pair of Daren Powell and Tino Best, and after that they scarcely contemplated a backwards glance.de Villiers, fresh from a career-best 178 at Bridgetown, was once again the early aggressor, peppering the cover boundary with a succession of gorgeous fours. His only alarm came on 83, when he popped a leading edge into no-man’s land off Powell, and as he raced ahead in the run-scoring, Smith was content to take the back seat. Smith did, however, come perilously close to being run out on two occasions – once early in his innings, when Wavell Hinds missed the stumps with an underarm shy, and then – criminally – after lunch, when Narsingh Deonarine fumbled a simple effort with Smith floundering for his crease.

Graeme Smith: three hundreds in a row © Getty Images

Best, who was back in the side for the first time since the tour of England last July, was showcasing a new and unnatural bowling action – a legacy of the back trouble that has plagued him since he burst onto the scene. There were shades of Brett Lee in his upright, poised arrival at the crease, but in conceding 37 runs from nine overs, he was a shadow of the former bundle of energy who was putting the wind up Nasser Hussain and Mark Butcher this time last year.Disappointingly for West Indies, Best was unable to resume his partnership with Fidel Edwards, who has been rested amid fears about overdoing his workload so soon after his return from injury. Into his place came the 22-year-old debutant, Dwight Washington, who used his height to good effect in a decent first spell, but aside from one flashing carve over point from de Villiers, there was no threat of a breakthrough.West Indies’ only other change was the return of Deonarine, the Guyanese allrounder who stepped in during the contracts dispute and performed admirably in his one outing, at Bourda. He returned in place of Ryan Hinds, although it was South Africa who could boast the most significant recall – that of Shaun Pollock, who has recovered from an inflammation of his left ankle. He took his place in the side ahead of Andre Nel, who wrapped up the series with figures of 6 for 32 in the second innings at Bridgetown, but has been forced to sit this one out with a worrying recurrence of an old back problem.St John’s is no place for bad backs, however. With the likes of Jacques Kallis and Herschelle Gibbs tripping over themselves to get their chance on this featherbed, West Indies can expect another long, hot and draining day when play resumes half-an-hour early on Saturday morning. At this rate, their only respite is the rain.West Indies 1 Chris Gayle, 2 Wavell Hinds, 3 Ramnaresh Sarwan, 4 Brian Lara, 5 Shivnarine Chanderpaul (capt), 6 Dwayne Bravo, 7 Narsingh Deonarine, 8 Courtney Browne (wk), 9 Tino Best, 10 Daren Powell, 11 Dwight Washington.South Africa 1 Graeme Smith (capt), 2 AB de Villiers, 3 Boeta Dippenaar, 4 Jacques Kallis, 5 Herschelle Gibbs, 6 Ashwell Prince, 7 Mark Boucher (wk), 8 Nicky Boje, 9 Shaun Pollock, 10 Monde Zondeki, 11 Makhaya Ntini.

Lara lets West Indians build up a big lead

Day 3 Close West Indians 618 and 39 for 2 lead Free State 264 (Venter 79, du Preez 56, Rampaul 5-55) by 405 runs
ScorecardThe West Indian tourists pressed home their advantage on the third day at Bloemfontein, taking their lead over Free State to an imposing 405 by the close.It might have been worse for Free State, who were tottering at 114 for 7 at one stage, after an incisive spell from Ravi Rampaul, the young but rapid 19-year-old from Trinidad. Free State’s blushes were saved by Kosie Venter, who cracked 79 from No. 7 – he hit ten fours from 124 balls, and helped the last three wickets more than double the score. Dillon de Preez, at No. 10, contributed 56.Brian Lara decided not to enforce the follow-on, despite a lead of 354, but Chris Gayle couldn’t capitalise: he was bowled by Cliff Deacon in the first over of the second innings. Wavell Hinds was also out before the close, by which time the West Indians had added 39 to that lead in 15 overs.

ECB National Academy v Victoria 2nd XI – Day 2 of 4

The ECB National Academy ended the second day of the four-day match againstVictoria 2nd XI in Melbourne today in a strong position.The ECB NA were dismissed for 247 with Mark Wagh finishing on 74 not out, Ian Bell scoring 48 and Chris Schofield 49. Australian fast bowler, Damien Fleming ended with figures of five for 36 off his 20.2 overs.In reply the Victorians ended the day on 83 for 4. Yorkshire’s Steve Kirbytook two wickets with Steve Harmison and Chris Tremlett taking one each.

Moors SC spring surprise on SSC with 24 run victory

Charinda Fernado bowled Moors SC back into the game to beat Sinhalese SportsClub by 24 runs in the first match of the Premier League One-Day Tournament, which was played at Maitland Place. Fernando claimed six wickets in his 10 over spell and conceded just 29 runs.SSC were heading comfortably towards their 211 run victory target when they were on 107 for two in the 29th over. Fernando the entered the fray to dismiss Tilan Samaraweera for 43 runs and end a 79 partnership with Sajeeva Ranatunga.Suresh Perera was bowled next ball and Ranatunga was dismissed in Fernando’s following over.With the exception of SSC captain, Hemantha Wickramaratne, who made 36, none of the other batsmen were able to establish themselves at the crease. Fernando took three more wickets and SSC were left reeling on 178 for 8 with four overs remaining. The 23 runs needed off the final overs proved too much for the star studded SSC side and Ragana Herath mopped up the tail.”They bowled tightly and our batsmen failed to accumulate enough singles early on, to keep the run-rate under control. The pressure began to add up on the batsmen,” said a disappointed Wickramaratne after the defeat.Earlier, Moors SC elected to bat first and got of to a steady start, with the openers adding 48 runs in the first 13 overs. However, the two openers, Heshan Tillakeratne(23) and Dilshan Witharana(19), were back in pavilion at the 16th over with the total on 65.Thereafter, skipper, Rasika Priyadarshana (29), took charge of the innings and put up 41 runs with Bathiya Perera (19) for the third wicket.Nilantha Cooray who had a good start to the season, making 173 runs in four innings in the Under 23 tournament, showed his form again to score 49 runs in 54 balls. He dispatched five balls to the boundary and hit one six.Dilhara Fernando proved to be a handful for the visitors. He wrapped up the Moors innings for what appeared to be a modest score of 210. Fernando finished with figures of five for 32. Samaraweera chipped in with two for 28.

West Ham predicted XI to take on Liverpool

West Ham travel to Anfield this evening in the hope of pulling off an impressive double over Liverpool, having beaten the Carabao Cup winners 3-2 at the London Stadium earlier this season.

However, David Moyes is without four players – Angelo Ogbonna (knee), Arthur Masuaku (knee), Vladimir Coufal (hernia) and Andriy Yarmolenko (compassionate leave) – while Ryan Fredericks (groin) is also a doubt.

Tomas Soucek suffered a deep cut above his left eye against Southampton and was initially considered a doubt, but after seemingly making himself available for selection via social media, it is expected that he will be in the squad later.

With all that in mind, here is our predicted West Ham line-up for this evening:

We expect Moyes to deploy the same 3-4-1-2 formation he has used in the last two games, particularly to counter the threat of Liverpool’s full-backs and front three in an effort to contain them and hit them on the break.

The 58-year-old is likely to make just two changes from the team which lost at Southampton in the FA Cup in midweek, with Alphonse Areola dropping out of the team in place of Lukasz Fabianski, and Aaron Cresswell coming in for Issa Diop.

On-loan Areola – who was once described by his former Paris Saint-Germain boss Thomas Tuchel as “exceptional” – had a night to forget on Wednesday, conceding three goals and making just one save, with SofaScore giving him a match rating of 5.9, while Cresswell missed out through injury.

He and Fabianski return, with Diop and Areola dropping to the bench, while Kurt Zouma and Craig Dawson retain their places in the team.

Ben Johnson and Pablo Fornals continue as makeshift wing-backs, with Declan Rice and Tomas Soucek marshalling the midfield, and Manuel Lanzini just behind Jarrod Bowen and Michail Antonio.

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The likes of Nikola Vlasic and Said Benrahma will likely be called upon to provide a spark off the bench, while the leadership and experience of Mark Noble could prove crucial should he come on as a substitute to help the Hammers protect a lead or gain a draw.

In other news: West Ham handed huge injury boost pre-Liverpool as exciting Rush Green image emerges

Running wild, and an old man not at sea

Praveen Kumar and Harbhajan Singh celebrate Mahela Jayawardene’s dismissal © Getty Images
 

Majestic
When Yuvraj Singh is in form, his placement is up there with best and when his confidence is high, it’s a crime to pitch it up to him. Farveez Maharoof did just that and paid the price. Yuvraj waited for the ball to arrive, went down on his knees, and unleashed a cover drive that sent the ball racing to the fence, completing the shot with a classy follow through. Everything was perfect about the stroke.Spot on
And just when one thought that Yuvraj would ensure Kumar Sangakkara’s century went in vain – as it eventually did – Chaminda Vaas, a smart assessor of a batsman’s strengths and weaknesses, sent one straight through the huge gap that is created by Yuvraj’s high backlift. Vaas landed the yorker at the right spot, knocking back Yuvraj’s middle stump to end a glorious innings.Old man not at sea
Robin Uthappa hit the ball to the mid-off and set off for a single thinking, perhaps, that taking on the 38-year-old Sanath Jayasuriya wouldn’t be much of a risk. Little did he know that the Sri Lankan warhorse still retains a youthful agility as Jayasuriya demonstrated with his sprint, pick-up and direct hit which found Uthappa marginally short of the crease.Good ol’ basics
Munaf Patel has faced a lot of criticism for his casual attitude while fielding, but he got his own back in the third over of the morning. Sangakkara punched a fullish delivery straight back; Munaf tried to field it in his follow through and the ball deflected off his fingers onto the stumps. It’s arguable that a more agile player might have fielded the ball cleanly, but here Munaf’s effort was just what India needed: Jayasuriya, who was holding the bat in the wrong hand, was well short of his crease and the batsman who had pummelled the Indian new-ball attack in their previous encounter was back in the hutch after facing just three deliveries.Too high, mate
Praveen thought he got the breakthrough that had eluded the Indians for close to 30 overs. Coming round the wicket, his high full-toss startled Sangakkara, whose attempted pull landed in the hands of Uthappa at midwicket. Just as Praveen was about to celebrate his first ODI wicket, umpire Peter Parker rightly ruled the delivery a no-ball, deeming it to have been above waist high.Too straight, mate
Sangakkara might rethink playing his straight drives. Earlier in the innings, his punch down the ground had accounted for Jayasuriya for a duck. Then just as Sri Lanka had taken the upper hand, Sangakkara’s drive deflected off Praveen, the bowler, to the stumps and Jayawardene, who was stranded out of his crease, became the second batsman to perish to Sangakkara’s accuracy.Running wild
As if two run-outs were not enough, Sri Lanka suffered another blow when a misunderstanding between Sangakkara and Chamara Kapugedera resulted in a third one. Rohit Sharma dived to his right at point, picked up the ball and threw in one motion towards the bowler’s end and knocked off the bails. Sri Lanka were running themselves out and India were back in the game.

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