Australia began as they had left off overnight, and you felt that only rain could prevent an embarrassing capitulation from Sri Lanka. Rain did indeed come early, and stayed late. Not much play was possible, but enough for Starc to pick up Kamindu Mendis with an unfortunate leg-side strangle, and for the captain de Silva to chase a wider ball from Kuhnemann. If he had missed it by any more he might have been batting on an adjoining oval. It was a terrible stroke, unbecoming of his position as captain. Carey had time to grow a beard and possibly raise a family between taking the ball and lifting the bails.
Being captain of Sri Lanka is not an office for which there is much clamour. Nobody seems to want it very much, and one can see why. The dread spectre of politics, and a suspicion of poisoned chalices, seems to hang over the job. It is likely that de Silva was at best a reluctant draftee. One of the former captains is Dinesh Chandimal, a cricketer of considerable substance. While wickets tumbled about him he kept his head admirably, only attempting strokes with reasonable prospect of success. When the clouds intervened he had reached 60, and seemed somewhat happier at having acquired a stalwart partner in the stumper Kusal Mendis. At 5/136 with two days remaining things might have been worse; but not to any great extent.
For Australia, they will probably not need to bat again. Their bowlers seemed a class above the home side’s. Starc found life and pace in this most somnolent of surfaces, and the spin trio varied their pace well, bowling on average somewhat quicker than did Jayasuriya and co. These pitches need bowlers prepared to make the ball hurry on and bite. All three looked threatening, which their counterparts only rarely achieved. The Australian batsmen used their feet superbly, as did Chandimal for the home side. Runs can be scored here. The weather has postponed the pitch’s expected disintegration, and with more rain expected the home side might possibly escape with a draw. But Australia has done very little wrong, and should feel well-pleased with their exertions.
Back in Melbourne one made a leisurely journey to the ground via Jolimont station and surveyed the pleasant view from the Members’. It was a perfect day, made yet more perfect by Australia’s resolute and sensible batting. Ellyse Perry, we were informed, would bat if needed, hampered as she is by a fielding injury. She would have loved to have been out there herself. Whatever demons might have lurked in the surface had evaporated by today, and Litchfield and Sutherland approached the bowling with all the enthusiasm of a ducal garden party setting about a luncheon buffet.
The twin Laurens (Filer and Bell) bowled with vigour and zest but without much artistry; and in the absence of Dean (or even Glenn) it was clear that Sophie Ecclestone was in for a long day of toil. There seemed a certain lack of zip in her bowling, as if she already feared the burdens of the day in advance. Yet she bowled well enough. She was unfortunate when Sophia Dunkley misjudged an outfield catch and missed it completely. Then she had Sutherland, of all people, dropped twice in quick succession. Later she trapped Healy in front, and still later had Gardner caught by Filer from a curious balloon stroke to short leg. Yet this was a meagre return for 39 overs of hard yakka. She herself dropped Mooney at slip from the promising McDonald-Gay: surely the shortest fast bowler in world cricket. Ecclestone is, by her record, the number one bowler in the world. Perhaps figures occasionally tell lies. On this same surface yesterday Alana King gave a masterclass in leg-spin bowling and England had no answers.
In Bell’s best spell of the day she repeatedly beat Litchfield’s flailing bat and had her caught behind for a sturdy 45. Which brought Healy to the crease. As she walked past down the player’s race one could not but notice how tiny is this feared destroyer of attacks. Tiny in body, yet fierce in spirit, verily. She and Sutherland set about the bowlers, rotating the strike constantly and ever on the alert for extra runs. By the time Healy departed the scores were level. Yet Sutherland and Mooney had not yet really begun. Despite the mild weather England wilted in the face of Sutherland’s onslaught. Mooney meanwhile fed her the strike with singles and watched the fireworks from the other end. Sutherland brought up her hundred with a forehand smash and basked in the applause of her home crowd. Including, naturally, Mum and Dad, and presumably also her brother. She comes from a notable sporting family, after all.
She did not stay her assault on England until she played onto her stumps from McDonald-Gay. She had made 163, with 21 fours and a six. Anyone now expecting Gardner to come out and smash would have been pleasantly surprised when she did nothing of the sort. Instead she allowed Mooney to open out, and supported her for a (by her furious standards) sedate 44. The day ended with Australia 5/422, with Mooney left hanging unbeaten on 98. She has never made a Test century. Fingers crossed for the morrow. Meanwhile England retired to lick their wounds, and the vast arena was left to the care of the ever-present seagulls. Crowds have been disappointingly sparse. Come tomorrow and see the finest cricket team in the world in their pomp.