WATCH: Chris Woakes makes Nasser Hussain fall off his chair

LONDON: England pacer Chris Woakes made renowned commentator Nasser Hussain fall off his chair by bowling spin in the third Test against Sri Lanka at The Oval on Saturday.

The incident occurred in the seventh over of Sri Lanka’s first innings when the on-field umpires, due to bad light, told England captain Ollie Pope to bowl spin with Woakes two balls into his fourth over.

Consequently, Woakes had to make a surreal transition and decided to bowl as an off-spinner, leaving Joe Root in splits.

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Furthermore, in the balcony region, England’s regular Test captain Ben Stokes, who has been away from action due to an injury, looked shocked watching his frontline pacer bowling as an off-spinner.

However, what attracted fans’ attention the most was a video of Nasser Hussain falling from his chair in the commentary box.

“In the commentary box, Nasser almost fell off his chair. The effect of Chris Woakes’ off-spin,” former England captain Michael Atherton informed fans during commentary.

However, it is important to note that Nasser Hussain falling from his chair was not from the moment it was thought of and instead was a prank by Michael Atherton, in a bid to provide a comical moment in the aforementioned fixture.

He described it as Nasser Hussain feeling the effects of Chris Woakes’ spin bowling.

The right-arm pacer started well as a spinner, allowing only a single on his first two deliveries.

Chris Woakes, however, faltered on his third delivery as a spinner as he pitched the ball horribly short, allowing Kusal Mendis to pull it towards the fine-leg region for a four.

He reciprocated with an arm ball, which Mendis respectfully worked for a single towards deep cover.

READ: England make one change to ODI squad for Australia series

Nissanka hits ton as Sri Lanka stun England in third Test

LONDON: Pathum Nissanka scored an unbeaten century in the run chase and powered Sri Lanka to a resounding eight-wicket victory over England in the third Test of the three-match series here at The Oval on Monday.

The victory marked Sri Lanka’s fourth against England in the latter’s backyard since their infamous win at Headingley in 2014.

But England took the three-match series 2-1, having won the Old Trafford Test by five wickets and Lord’s Test by 190 runs.

Sri Lanka, set to chase 219, resumed their second innings at 94/1 with Pathum Nissanka (53*) and Kusal Mendis (30*) going strong.

England made an early inroad with an important scalp of Mendis, who could score just nine to his overnight score and returned after scoring 39 off 37 deliveries.

Meanwhile, Nissanka remained unfazed by the dismissal and kept dominating the English bowlers. He put together an unbeaten 111-run partnership with veteran all-rounder Angelo Mathews (32*) to steer his side to glory before Lunch on the penultimate day of the third Test.

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He remained the top-scorer for Sri Lanka with an unbeaten 127 off just 124 deliveries, smashing 13 fours and two sixes amid his magnificent knock.

“It was a great opportunity to play in England and I enjoyed that innings,” said Nissanka.

“I just wanted to play my normal game and I have done that,” added the opener, who spent two years out of the Test side.

Sri Lanka captain Dhananjaya de Silva termed his side’s long-awaited victory over England as one of the happiest moments of his career.

“This is one of the happiest moments in my career and my life,” said De Silva.

“We had a tough time in the last two weeks so to come here and get a win in English conditions against an English team, it is a very good moment for me, my team, and my country as well.”

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WATCH: Chris Woakes bowls spin in third Test against Sri Lanka

LONDON: Right-arm pacer Chris Woakes bowled as an off-spinner on Day 2 of the third Test between England and Sri Lanka here at The Oval on Saturday.

The incident occurred in the seventh over of Sri Lanka’s first innings when the on-field umpires, due to bad light, told England captain Ollie Pope to bowl spin with Woakes two balls into his fourth over.

Consequently, Woakes had to make a surreal transition and decided to bowl as an off-spinner, leaving Joe Root in splits.

The right-arm pacer started well as a spinner, allowing only a single on his first two deliveries.

Chris Woakes, however, faltered on his third delivery as a spinner as he pitched the ball horribly short, allowing Kusal Mendis to pull it towards the fine-leg region for a four.

He reciprocated with an arm ball, which Mendis respectfully worked for a single towards deep cover.

Soon after the end of the seventh over, it began lighter and the umpires allowed the resumption of pace bowling.

As a result, Chris Woakes resumed to bowl as a pacer and soon struck with an important scalp of Kusal Mendis, who managed to score 13 off 14 deliveries.

Chris Woakes set up Mendis with a good-length delivery in the channel and the ball, upon pitching, swung away just enough to take the shoulder of Mendis’ bat and flew to Harry Brook, who clung onto the chance in the slip cordon.

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When this story was filed Sri Lanka were 86/3 in 15 overs in response to England’s 325.

Interim captain Pope led England from the front with a marathon 154-run knock, followed by opening batter Ben Duckett, who made a brisk 86 up the order on the opening day.

The rest of the England batters struggled against Sri Lanka bowlers and could manage modest contributions.

Milan Rathnayake starred with the ball for Sri Lanka, picking up three wickets, while Vishwa Fernando, Lahiru Kumara and Dhananjaya de Silva bagged two wickets each.

READ: Ollie Pope becomes first batter in Test cricket history to set unique record

Ollie Pope becomes first batter in Test cricket history to set unique record

LONDON: Interim England captain Ollie Pope on Friday, made history as he became the first batter in the 147-year history of Test cricket to score his first seven centuries against different oppositions.

Pope created history in the first innings of England’s third Test against Sri Lanka by smashing his maiden Test century at his home ground – The Oval, where he averages 80 in First-class cricket.

His previous Test centuries came against South Africa, New Zealand, Pakistan, Ireland, India and the West Indies.

This was also his first hundred as England Test captain as he is filling in the void for injured Ben Stokes in the ongoing series.

Ollie Pope was under severe criticism over his string of failures, managing just 30 runs in his last four innings but made the most of his home-ground advantage and answered the critics.

His unbeaten run-a-ball 103 powered England to 221/3 on a rain-interrupted opening day of the third Test against Sri Lanka.

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Sri Lanka, already 2-0 down in the three-match series, failed to make the most out of the overcast conditions and a grassy pitch after skipper Dhananjaya de Silva won the toss and put England into bat.

Left-handed opener Ben Duckett provided the home side a rampant start but failed to convert his sensational knock into a century as he fell agonizingly short by just 14 runs. He scored 86 off just, hitting nine fours and two sixes.

Experienced batter Joe Root, who has been in red-hot form, had a rare failure as he managed just 13 before falling victim to Lahiru Kumara.

England dominated the day mostly due to the second-wicket partnership between Duckett and Pope.

The duo frustrated Sri Lanka bowlers and added 95 runs to the total until Milan Rathnayake dismissed Duckett.

Ollie Pope, unbeaten with a run-a-ball 103, will now resume England’s first innings from
221/3 on the second day of the match with Harry Brook, who had scored eight not out.

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Ollie Pope scores century as England make Sri Lanka struggle

LONDON: Ollie Pope returned to form on his Oval home ground with a first hundred as England captain on Friday’s opening day of the third Test against Sri Lanka.

Pope had managed a mere 30 runs in four previous innings since succeeding the injured Ben Stokes as skipper at the start of this series.

But when bad light ended play for the day, Pope was a run-a-ball 103 not out, with England well-placed on 221-3.

Sri Lanka, already 2-0 down in this three-match series, failed to make the most of overcast conditions and a green-tinged pitch after captain Dhananjaya de Silva won the toss and put England into bat.

And England should arguably have had two century-makers on Friday with opener Ben Duckett, not for the first time, giving his wicket away after making 86.

A rare bright spot for struggling Sri Lanka was the dismissal of Joe Root for 13 shortly before tea.

Root was fresh from two hundreds in a 190-run win over Sri Lanka at Lord’s where he set a new England record of 34 Test centuries.

England, who swept the West Indies 3-0 earlier this season are chasing their first home Test campaign clean sweep since 2004, when Michael Vaughan oversaw seven successive wins.

Duckett was soon into his stride, with the left-hander cover-driving fours off successive Milan Rathnayake deliveries.

It was a different story for makeshift opener Dan Lawrence, a middle-order batsman by trade.

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Lawrence was forced to face the new ball this series in the absence of the injured Zak Crawley.

He had made just five when he got in a tangle against a short-pitched Lahiru Kumara delivery and top-edged a simple catch to gully.

Number three Ollie Pope got off the mark in style by cutting a loose ball from fast bowler Rathnayake for four and he also hooked a six off Lahiru Kumara.

The 29-year-old Duckett completed a speedy fifty off just 48 balls, including seven fours.

Even with the floodlights on, the umpires decided it was too dangerous to continue and stopped play for bad light, with England 76-1 off 15 overs. Rain then fell as well and the match did not resume until 1410 GMT.

It was not long before Duckett ramped Kumara for six over fine leg and uppercut him high over the third man, with all of Sri Lanka’s four-man pace attack struggling to maintain a challenging line and length.

But Duckett, in sight of just his fourth century in 26 Tests, was out when he miscued an extravagant scoop off Rathnayake to wicketkeeper Dinesh Chandimal.

It was a careless end to a stand of 95 in 16 overs with Pope.

The 26-year-old Pope was fortunate with a top-edged six off Kumara but the persevering paceman did have Root hooking to fine leg, where Vishwa Fernando held onto the catch despite slipping on the wet turf.

Surrey favourite Ollie Pope, 84 not out at tea, went to his seventh hundred in 49 Tests, but first at the Oval, when he stylishly square-drove Asitha Fernando for his 13th four in 102 balls, also including two sixes.

Soon afterwards bad light at 1653 GMT again saw the players leave the field, with no more play possible Friday.

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England name 6ft 7in tall pacer in Playing XI for third Sri Lanka Test

LONDON: Leicestershire pacer Josh Hull will make his Test debut for England as he was named in the home side’s Playing XI for the third Test of the ongoing three-match series against Sri Lanka.

Hull, who was added to England’s squad ahead of the second Test against Sri Lanka, will make his international debut on Friday.

Josh Hull will replace Matthew Motts in the hosts’ lineup, who lead the three-match series 2-0.

The 6ft 7in left-arm pacer managed to take only 11 wickets in his nine appearances at the County Championship but his physical attributes drew the attention of England’s management, who presumably believed that his towering height would provide him with an extra bounce.

Josh Hull made his debut for the England Lions last month and returned match figures of 5 for 74 in the Tour Match against Sri Lanka.

Furthermore, Hull has also been named in England’s white-ball squad for the home series against Australia but his availability for the T20I series opener at The Oval on September 11 is in jeopardy, considering a tight 24-hour difference between the commencement of the third Test and the first T20I.

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Ollie Pope, who is serving as the interim captain in the absence of injured Ben Stokes, stated that Josh Hull could be “the point of difference” for England in the third Test against Sri Lanka.

“When you’re 6ft 7in and you can get it down pushing up to the 85-90mph mark, and with a bit of swing with the left-arm angle, there’s a lot to like about it,” Pope said. “It’s a really exciting week for him,” said Pope.

“With the height, you can draw in some more edges with that extra bounce,” he explained. “It makes it a lot harder to drive the ball, especially if there is a little bit of bounce at The Oval – which there can be, especially early in the game.

“And then the angle… We’ve played four right-arm seamers for the first two games, so it’s just something different for the batters to think about in the opposition, with the ball coming into the right-hander, and obviously away from the left-hander, with that swing. It’s a point of difference, and he’s got some good pace as well when he’s clicking in the nets.”

England’s Playing XI for third Test against Sri Lanka: Dan Lawrence, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope (capt), Joe Root, Harry Brook, Jamie Smith (wk), Chris Woakes, Gus Atkinson, Olly Stone, Josh Hull, Shoaib Bashir.

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Gus Atkinson stars as England wrap up Sri Lanka series win

Gus Atkinson continued his Lord’s love affair by taking five wickets as England thrashed Sri Lanka by 190 runs in the second Test on Sunday to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in a three-match series.

Sri Lanka set what would have been a new Test record fourth-innings winning total of 483, were dismissed for 292 after tea on the fourth day despite half-centuries from Dinesh Chandimal (58), Dimuth Karunaratne (55) and captain Dhananjaya de Silva (50).

Fast bowler Gus Atkinson, who scored his maiden first-class hundred in England’s first-innings 427, led the attack with 5-62.

Player-of-the-match Atkinson secured a fifth mention on the dressing room honours boards in just his second Test at Lord’s after taking 12 wickets on his England debut against the West Indies in July.

He also became just the third England cricketer after Tony Greig and Ian Botham to score a century and take five wickets in an innings of the same Test.

Gus Atkinson followed India’s Vinoo Mankad (against England in 1952) and Botham (against Pakistan in 1978) as the only men to have achieved that double at Lord’s.

The 26-year-old Surrey paceman’s latest impressive return helped England seal a seventh successive win over Sri Lanka following their five-wicket success in last week’s first Test at Old Trafford.

“To get on both honours boards is incredible,” Atkinson told Sky Sports. “It will take a while to sink in.”

This game was also a personal triumph for Joe Root.

For the first time in 145 matches at this level, Root made hundreds in both innings — 143 and 103 — to set a new record of 34 Test centuries by an England batsman.

Sri Lanka have little time to regroup before the third Test at The Oval starts on Friday.

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De Silva admitted he had erred in opting to field on a good batting pitch after winning the toss.

“Definitely. I got it wrong,” he told the BBC, before adding: “We have got to improve on the first innings whether we bat or bowl first, that’s what I will be telling my boys is that we’ve got to start better.”

Sri Lanka resumed Sunday on 53-2, with the odds stacked against them given the highest winning fourth-innings total in any Test is the West Indies’ 418-7 against Australia at St John’s in 2002/03.

But Root — who on Saturday had taken his 200th Test catch — reprieved Karunaratne when dropping a tough one-handed slip chance from the opener’s edged cut off Atkinson.

Karunaratne, 36, drove and pulled Atkinson for fours off successive deliveries on his way to a 98-ball fifty including seven boundaries.

The left-hander, however, was out shortly before lunch when injury-plagued fast bowler Olly Stone, in his first Test for three years, produced a rising 87 mph (140 kmph) delivery that Karunaratne could only glove down the legside to wicketkeeper Jamie Smith.

Chandimal counter-attacked early in the afternoon on his way to a dashing 42-ball fifty including 40 runs in boundaries before Atkinson had him caught at short leg off bat and pad.

Kamindu Mendis, boasting a colossal Test batting average of 92 following his third hundred in four Tests at Old Trafford, had made 74 in Sri Lanka’s meagre first-innings 196.

But the 25-year-old left-hander, again batting low down the order, fell for just four on Sunday when caught in the slips off Atkinson.

Mendis’s exit left Sri Lanka, who have now not won any of their nine Tests at Lord’s, slipping towards defeat at 200-7.

De Silva kept England waiting before playing on to Atkinson, who then had Milan Rathnayake caught behind to complete his five-wicket haul.

Chris Woakes had the final say when Lahiru Kumara holed out to Stone at mid-on.

READ: Joe Root opens up on prospect of breaking Sachin Tendulkar’s record

Joe Root opens up on prospect of breaking Sachin Tendulkar’s record

England star batter Joe Root recently opened up on the prospect of surpassing legendary Indian batter Sachin Tendulkar as the highest run-scorer in Test cricket.

Root, who is enjoying a purple patch with the bat in red-ball cricket, scored another hundred in the ongoing second home Test against Sri Lanka on Saturday, taking his centuries tally to 34.

With his 34th century, Joe Root came level with legends of the game including Pakistan’s Younis Khan, India’s Sunil Gavaskar, Sri Lanka’s Mahela Jayawardene, and West Indies’ Brian Lara.

Root, who recently amassed 12,000 runs in Test cricket to become the seventh-highest run-scorer of all time, has second-placed Ponting and Tendulkar’s overall record within sight.

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The English batter has scored 12377 runs, meanwhile, Sachin Tendulkar is leading the list with 15921 runs.

With Root being 33 years old and 3544 runs away from Tendulkar’s record, it’s been discussed among cricket circles that he has a realistic chance of surpassing the Indian legend as the highest run-scorer in Test cricket.

He was asked if he is keeping an eye on breaking Tendulkar’s record after scoring his 34th Test hundred, however, the right-hander stated that he prefers to keep team goals over his personal milestones.

“I just want to play, and try, and do my bit for the team and score the runs as many as I can and see where we get to,” said Joe Root.

“It’s obviously amazing when, you score 100, you’d be lying if you said it wasn’t, a big part of why you start playing the game and what you love about it.

“But there’s no better feeling than winning a Test match. So the more, it can affect games and the more you can, add to the team, the greater it is. So, that will be the main focus. And hopefully more days like this will come with that mentality.”

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Joe Root equals Younis Khan’s Test record

England’s star batter Joe Root joined Pakistan’s great Younis Khan in the list of batters with the most centuries in Test cricket.

Root, who is enjoying a purple patch with the bat in red-ball cricket, scored another hundred in the ongoing second home Test against Sri Lanka, taking his centuries tally to 34.

With his 34th century, Joe Root came level with legends of the game including Pakistan’s Younis Khan, India’s Sunil Gavaskar, Sri Lanka’s Mahela Jayawardene and West Indies’ Brian Lara.

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Earlier in the first innings, Root played a marathon 143-run knock which featured 18 boundaries.

He scored 103 as England bowled out on 251 in the second innings, setting Sri Lanka a 483-run target.

India’s batting great Sachin Tendulkar (51) scored the most number of centuries in Test cricket, followed by Jacques Kallis (45), Ricky Ponting (41), Kumar Sangakkara (38) and Rahul Dravid (36).

Most Hundreds in Test Cricket

Sachin Tendulkar: 51
Jacques Kallis: 45
Ricky Ponting: 41
Kumar Sangakkara: 38
Rahul Dravid: 36
Joe Root: 34*
Sunil Gavaskar: 34
Mahela Jayawardene: 34
Brian Lara: 34
Younis Khan: 34
Alastair Cook: 33

He also became the all-time leading century-scorer for England in Tests, going past former captain Alastair Cook.

The right-handed batter achieved the milestone in England’s first innings of the second Test against Sri Lanka at Lord’s.

Root immediately pointed to the sky after reaching three figures in a gesture in memory of former England batter and assistant coach Graham Thorpe, who died aged 55 earlier this month after taking his own life.

Joe Root, who recently amassed 12,000 runs in Test cricket to become the seventh-highest run-scorer of all time, has second-placed Ponting and Tendulkar’s overall record within sight.

Notably, no active player has as many hundreds as Root.

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Joe Root dedicates record-equalling century to late Graham Thorpe

England batter Joe Root paid an emotional tribute to the late Graham Thorpe after scoring a milestone 33rd Test hundred against Sri Lanka at Lord’s on Thursday, saying much of his success was down to the impact of his former coach.

His innings meant Root equalled Alastair Cook’s record for the most Test hundreds by an England batter after he came in with the side faltering at 42-2 on the first day of the second Test.

Root immediately pointed to the sky after reaching three figures in a gesture in memory of former England batter and assistant coach Thorpe, who died aged 55 earlier this month after taking his own life.

A deeply moved Joe Root, whose composed 143 helped England reach 358-7 at stumps, told reporters: “I’ve been very lucky to work with a lot of people, whether it be senior players, coaches, mentors, and Thorpey was one of those people who offered me so much.

“It was nice to be able to think of him [Graham Thorpe] in that moment. He’s someone I’m sorely going to miss, and who I owe a lot to. He put a lot into my game and my career, and without his help, I definitely wouldn’t be where I am now.”

Graham Thorpe, who won exactly 100 Test caps, was widely regarded as the best England batsman of his generation. The stylish left-hander was also one of the first to recognise Root’s talent.

“Before I’d even made a hundred at first-class level he picked me for an England Lions (A team) game against Sri Lanka at Scarborough,” said Root.

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“He saw something with me… He pushed very hard for me to be involved in that India tour where I made my debut (in 2012) and from that point onwards we worked together.”

Root added: “It evolved into more than that, we became good friends and I really enjoyed spending a lot of time with him. It was nice to pay a small tribute. He means a lot to me and that was a small thank you.”

Root’s innings revived England after Sri Lanka’s gamble in bowling first under blue skies and on a good batting pitch almost paid dividends.

England were faltering at 212-6 but Root’s century allied to Gus Atkinson’s Test-best 74 not out boosted the total after several top-order batsmen gave their wickets away.

Joe Root, eventually out to his trademark reverse ramp, came in after Ollie Pope was dismissed for just one — his third single-figure score since deputising as captain for the injured Ben Stokes.

Pope admitted he was finding it tough to balance the demands of batting and leadership after twice being out for six in an otherwise successful debut as skipper during England’s five-wicket win in last week’s first Test at Old Trafford.

But, with the home team 1-0 up in a three-match series, former England captain Root insisted: “I don’t think there’s anything for Ollie to worry about… He should keep doing exactly what he’s doing.”

Root added: “You know someone like him with his talent ability and his mindset, it won’t be long before he scores a big score.”

READ: First day of second Pakistan-Bangladesh Test called off due to rain

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