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Sri Lankan cricket team in England in 2006

Sri Lanka toured England for cricket matches during the 2006 international cricket season. England were back home for the first time since September and looked to maintain their Test standards, which saw them keep their second place in the ICC Test Championship in India, and the teams were also competing for sixth place in the ICC ODI Championship as both England and Sri Lanka were coming off the back of two lost ODI tours on the Asian sub-continent, against India and Pakistan respectively. To add to problems, both teams were likely to be missing some key members of the team as England were without some of their squad for their previous tour and, two days before Sri Lanka departed for England, it was revealed that skipper Marvan Atapattu would stay at home for the tour due to back problems that had forced him to skip his previous tour too. Jehan Mubarak was brought in as his replacement.

Sri Lanka in England 2006
 
  Sri Lanka England
Dates 24 April – 1 July 2006
Captains Mahela Jayawardene Andrew Flintoff
Test series
Result 3-match series drawn 1–1
Most runs Kumar Sangakkara (231) Kevin Pietersen (360)
Most wickets Muttiah Muralitharan (24) Matthew Hoggard (15)
Player of the series Muttiah Muralitharan (SL) and Kevin Pietersen (Eng)
One Day International series
Results Sri Lanka won the 5-match series 5–0
Most runs Upul Tharanga (347) Marcus Trescothick (277)
Most wickets Lasith Malinga (13) Steve Harmison (8)
Player of the series Sanath Jayasuriya (SL)
Twenty20 International series
Results Sri Lanka won the 1-match series 1–0
Most runs Sanath Jayasuriya (41) Marcus Trescothick (72)
Most wickets Sanath Jayasuriya (2) Paul Collingwood (4)
Player of the series Sanath Jayasuriya (SL)

Schedule edit

 
Twenty20 match at Rose Bowl
Date Match Venue
April
24-26 Tour Match Fenner's
29–1 May Tour Match County Ground, Derby
May
4-7 Tour Match New Road, Worcester
11-15 1st Test Lord's
18-21 Tour Match Country Ground, Hove
25-29 2nd Test Edgbaston
June
2-6 3rd Test Trent Bridge
15 Twenty20 Rose Bowl, Hampshire
17 1st ODI Lord's
20 2nd ODI The Oval
24 3rd ODI Riverside Ground
28 4th ODI Old Trafford
July
1 5th ODI Headingley

Squads edit

Tour matches edit

Three-day match: Sri Lankans v British Universities edit

24–26 April 2006
Scorecard
v
289 (74.2 overs)
Upul Tharanga 100 (134)
Ruel Brathwaite 3/61 (18 overs)
125 (49.4 overs)
Richard Clinton 44 (81)
Chaminda Vaas 4/34 (17 overs)
256/6d (67 overs)
Thilan Samaraweera 114* (183)
David Balcombe 3/67 (18 overs)
130/8 (56 overs)
Paul Harrison 28* (44)
Chaminda Vaas 2/10 (10 overs)
Match drawn
Fenner's, Cambridge
Umpires: Michael Gough (Eng) and Nigel Llong (Eng)
  • British Universities won the toss and elected to field.

Three-day match: Sri Lankans v Derbyshire edit

29 April–1 May 2006
Scorecard
v
219 (84 overs)
Steve Stubbings 43 (138)
Muttiah Muralitharan 3/47 (30 overs)
166/7d (47.5 overs)
Chamara Kapugedera 45 (73)
Kevin Dean 4/34 (11.5 overs)
208/4d (44 overs)
Travis Birt 83 (53)
Tillakaratne Dilshan 1/22 (3 overs)
262/4 (58.1 overs)
Michael Vandort 90* (157)
Ant Botha 2/10 (10 overs)
Match drawn
County Ground, Derby
Umpires: George Sharp (Eng) and Steve Garratt (Eng)
  • Derbyshire won the toss and elected to bat first.

Four-day match: Sri Lankans v England A edit

4–6 May 2006
Scorecard
v
179 (58.5 overs)
Tillakaratne Dilshan 47 (100)
Jon Lewis 6/49 (15 overs)
259 (87.3 overs)
Rob Key 63 (118)
Nuwan Kulasekara 4/83 (23 overs)
118 (50.3 overs)
Tillakaratne Dilshan 40 (85)
Stuart Broad 3/17 (11.3 overs)
41/0 (8 overs)
Alastair Cook 22* (29)
England A won by 10 wickets
New Road, Worcester
Umpires: Martin Bodenham (Eng) and Peter Hartley (Eng)
  • Sri Lankans won the toss and elected to bat first.

Four-day match: Sri Lankans v Sussex edit

18–21 April 2006
Scorecard
v
521/5d (161.4 overs)
Upul Tharanga 140 (252)
Tim Linley 1/56 (27 overs)
262 (85.5 overs)
Ollie Rayner 101 (134)
Lasith Malinga 5/79 (21.5 overs)
5/1 (2 overs)
Kumar Sangakkara 2* (4)
James Kirtley 1/2 (1 over)
Match drawn
County Ground, Hove
Umpires: Mark Benson (Eng) and Peter Willey (Eng)
  • Sri Lankans won the toss and elected to bat first.
  • Neil Turk and Ollie Rayner (Eng) both made their first-class debuts.

Test series edit

1st Test edit

11–15 May 2006
Scorecard
v
551/6d (143 overs)
Kevin Pietersen 158 (205)
Muttiah Muralitharan 3/158 (48 overs)
192 (55.3 overs)
Mahela Jayawardene 61 (118)
Matthew Hoggard 4/27 (14 overs)
537/9 (f/o) (199 overs)
Mahela Jayawardene 119 (220)
Monty Panesar 2/49 (27 overs)
Match drawn
Lord's Cricket Ground, London
Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Rudi Koertzen (SA)
Player of the match: Mahela Jayawardene (SL)

Day One edit

England won the toss and decided to bat. Flintoff handed Sajid Mahmood his first Test cap, while Chamara Kapugedera made his Test debut for Sri Lanka. Marcus Trescothick opened for England for the first time since last year, alongside Andrew Strauss. 20 minutes before lunch Muttiah Muralitharan was brought in for his first over at Lord's, the 23rd of the England innings, with the seamers not having taken a wicket. However, in the fourth over of Muralitharan's innings Jayawardene had Strauss caught off Muralitharan, putting the English at 86 for one at lunch. The afternoon session started with Alastair Cook, playing in his first home Test, coming in to face his first ball in home Test cricket; after leaving that one alone, he proceeded to 44 not out by tea, while Trescothick was on 95 not out.[4] Trescothick got his hundred by "slogging"[4] Muralitharan for a single, but in the next over he, too, perished through being caught by Jayawardene. England batted through to stumps and lost only one further wicket, with Cook caught behind off Farveez Maharoof's bowling for 89, and England closed with nightwatchman Matthew Hoggard at the crease and the overnight total 318 for three. Sri Lanka, however, had taken a catch off a no-ball, a close lbw against Kevin Pietersen turned down off Chaminda Vaas, and Alastair Cook a couple of inches from being run out.[5]

Day Two edit

The day began with Hoggard staying in the crease opposite Pietersen for 37 balls before being bowled by Vaas. This gave way to Paul Collingwood, who had made his first Test century in the first Test of the 2005–06 India tour. Collingwood contributed 57 to a partnership of 173 between the two before Pietersen fell at 158 trapped lbw by Vaas, and Collingwood a few balls later fell in the same fashion by Muralitharan. With England six down, Andrew Flintoff and Geraint Jones were the new batsmen, and the two made scores 33 and 11 respectively before Flintoff declared following his second six, off Muralitharan. The umpires called tea time early due to the declaration and the touring team came back out with their openers Mubarak and Tharanga. However, Mubarak quickly went back, after he was bowled by Hoggard without a run scored by any of the batsmen. Tharanga went five overs later, though with a more successful partnership of 21, the same number of runs the third Sri Lankan, Kumar Sangakkara, managed to make before caught off Sajid Mahmood, his first Test dismissal. At this time, they were 81 for two: fifteen minutes later, the scoreboard read 85 for six, with three batsmen out for ducks including debutante Kapugedera who fell on his first Test ball. The day's play was curtailed by bad light, which left Sri Lanka at 91 for six, fourteen of which came off English extras, while Mahmood's debut figures read three for nine.

Day Three edit

It started with the clement weather of the last few days overshadowed by clouds and the forecast of rain. With Mahmood unable to add to his tally from yesterday, conceding 41 runs on the day. Sri Lanka batted through ten overs, but Farveez Maharoof gave a return catch to Hoggard, and two overs later Flintoff makes a breakthrough, getting Jayawardene out with a catch by wicket-keeper Geraint Jones. However, the ninth-wicket stand between Vaas and Nuwan Kulasekara gave the most runs of the entire innings, as the two add 62 in just over an hour. After lunch, however, they were out in the space of three deliveries, and Sri Lanka were all out for 192.

Flintoff enforced the follow on, and once again Mubarak was out in single figures to Hoggard, the total 10 for one. However, Tharanga and Sangakkara built Sri Lanka's largest partnership of the match thus far, both making half-centuries and sharing a stand of 109. Eventually both batsmen were caught by Jones off spinner Monty Panesar, with Sangakkara's innings lasting four and a half hours for 65 runs, but at this point England required seven wickets and had two days to do it in.

Day Four edit

Nightwatchman Farveez Maharoof frustrated the England bowlers. He was dropped on 30 by Paul Collingwood, and went on to bat through 40 overs and 166 minutes, as Sri Lanka went through the entire morning session without loss. England then got two wickets in five overs, both courtesy of Sajid Mahmood, but that only brought in Tillakaratne Dilshan. Another 20 overs followed without a wicket, with Mahela Jayawardene completing his century, before being caught behind for 119 four overs before the close of play on day four, as 24 overs were cut due to bad light.[6]

Day Five edit

Sri Lanka then lost both their last specialist batsmen, Kapugedera and Dilshan, but were leading by 62 runs at that time. The ninth-wicket partners Vaas and Kulasekara, however, had already showed their batting skills by having the highest partnership of the first innings, and they were eight runs away from achieving that again in the second. Batting through 189 minutes, the pair secured the draw for Sri Lanka, with Kulasekara even hitting a couple of sixes as he ended with 64 when Pietersen held a catch off Hoggard's bowling. However, by then it was too late, as Sri Lanka led by 167 runs and there was only half an hour left to score those runs in. Indeed, the tenth-wicket stand frustrated England until stumps: Muralitharan faced out that half-hour, scoring one run, while Vaas got his half-century before the close of play.

2nd Test edit

25–28 May 2006[n 1]
Scorecard
v
141 (51.2 overs)
Chaminda Vaas 30 (78)
Liam Plunkett 3/43 (12 overs)
295 (78.3 overs)
Kevin Pietersen 142 (157)
Muttiah Muralitharan 6/86 (25 overs)
231 (93.2 overs)
Michael Vandort 105 (303)
Liam Plunkett 3/17 (13.2 overs)
81/4 (27.2 overs)
Alastair Cook 34* (85)
Muttiah Muralitharan 4/29 (12.2 overs)
England won by 6 wickets
Edgbaston, Birmingham
Umpires: Aleem Dar (Pak) and Darrell Hair (Aus)
Player of the match: Kevin Pietersen (Eng)
  • Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat.

Day One edit

Sri Lanka won the toss and skipper Mahela Jayawardene chose to bat; it seemed that they made the wrong choice as England crippled them to 82/8 with the help of a swinging wicket, before Chaminda Vaas and Lasith Malinga put up a half century partnership and the team were all out for 141. Matthew Hoggard's swinging and cult-hero Monty Panesar put on impressive shows but regular ODI player, Liam Plunkett, was the real boon of the side. Before the end of the first day, England had all but closed the deficit as stumps was called at 138/3, Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Strauss putting on a 56 partnership before Alastair Cook came out, soon followed by big-hitter Kevin Pietersen who was 30 at stumps aided by a 6, and went on to score another Test century the next day - the only batsmen in the first innings to hit more than 30. Despite the hot-headed player's skills, England were not fully confident at the slip, Cook being saved by a dropped ball by the Sri Lanka skipper and Muttiah Muralitharan proved quite a threat.

Day Two edit

Pietersen opened the second day, 80 minutes late thanks to rain, with nightwatchmen Hoggard, the latter putting on his normal single figures, this time 3 runs, but holding the line for 36 balls. Once normal play resumed with Paul Collingwood England continued to dominate, setting their targets high with a 69 partnership before Collingwood gloved Murali to short leg for 238/5 and was replaced by skipper Andrew Flintoff who was surprisingly tame. Pietersen went on to hit three 4s in as many balls before hitting a reverse-sweeper 6 but then being bowled lbw by Murali, achieving three Test centuries in consecutive Tests. After the departure of their number four, England crumbled hopelessly from 290/6 to 295 all out just before tea. The mood in the English camp was swiftly revitalised by the hot drinks as Hoggard bowled Upul Tharanga for a golden duck, having been bowled for nothing in the first innings. Two more men went to see the tourists at 43/3 with a 111 run deficit and before the close of play Geraint Jones redeemed his missed catch to Thilan Samaraweera by stumping soon after, unbeaten opener Michael Vandort remained at the crease for 30 when play closed at 7:30 due to the missed play earlier.

Day Three edit

After persistent rain over Birmingham, play was started at 4:45 and the fifth wicket held up for 125, helping them take the lead. Both batsmen fought off good efforts by Panesar and Plunkett but eventually it was Hoggard who made the only breakthrough on a day where Sri Lanka stood tall for a short day at 194/5.

Day Four edit

With the new ball due six overs into the fourth day Sri Lankan wickets fell thick and fast, half the team falling before lunch, the last of which being opener Michael Vandort who narrowly missed out on being the fifth batsmen ever to hold his wicket throughout an entire innings. England took to the crease just before lunch with a very slow run rate that came only from Strauss - Trescothick fell after nine runs, none of them contributed by him. The third man, Alastair Cook held out for the rest of the innings though achieving 34 not out; during this time Strauss fell to a controversial catch, replays showed it popped off his pads. Pietersen, wanting to end the Test quickly, took the wicket with his usual speed, taking 13 runs off 25 balls his confidence assured by a catch by the tourists' skipper to be called a no ball, and a further two no balls which he took boundaries off. However, his cockiness proved his downfall as he lashed out at a ball from Murali, the only bowler to take wickets in the second innings, and was caught plumb. Collingwood soon fell for 3 and it seemed as if the easy target of 78 was going to be more of a struggle but Cook, remaining from the second partnership, took two runs and two byes and skipper Flintoff, who done nothing with his first three balls, drove Murali down the ground to long on for four on his fourth ball to win the match, and his third in a row as English skipper.

3rd Test edit

2–5 June 2006[n 1]
Scorecard
v
231 (66.2 overs)
Chaminda Vaas 38 (94)
Andrew Flintoff 3/52 (15 overs)
229 (91.1 overs)
Paul Collingwood 48 (184)
Muttiah Muralitharan 3/62 (31 overs)
322 (113.1 overs)
Kumar Sangakkara 66 (133)
Monty Panesar 5/78 (37.1 overs)
190 (68.5 overs)
Andrew Strauss 55 (155)
Muttiah Muralitharan 8/70 (30 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 134 runs
Trent Bridge, Nottingham
Umpires: Darrell Hair (Aus) and Rudi Koertzen (SA)
Player of the match: Muttiah Muralitharan (SL)
  • Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat.
  • Jon Lewis (Eng) made his Test debut.

Day One edit

Sri Lanka came into the third Test looking to level the series, and Mahela Jayawardene won the toss and again chose to bat. Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Samaraweera were dropped from the side, and Sanath Jayasuriya and Chamara Kapugedera came in. This was a return to test cricket for Jayasuriya following a previously announced retirement.

As at Edgbaston, Sri Lanka struggled batting first and Andrew Flintoff and Jon Lewis (who was in the side on debut replacing Sajid Mahmood) took 5 wickets between them to leave Sri Lanka on 139/8. However, England were unable to finish things off and Chaminda Vaas, who had shown resistance batting throughout the series, added 92 runs with the last two wickets. Muttiah Muralitharan hit 3 fours and 1 six in a very useful cameo, which included some remarkable shots. This late flurry of runs would prove critical in the match.

England's openers began the reply tentatively, and by the end of the first day, England were 53/2 in reply to Sri Lanka's 231.

Day Two edit

Sri Lanka came out on the second day with a very positive approach, which was noticeable from the start of the day's play. Their body language was positive, and Mahela Jayawardene displayed good strategic application with the field placings he set, and frustrated England's batsmen in the process. A key point was the dismissal of Kevin Pietersen for 41, given that he had scored big centuries in the first innings of the previous two tests. Andrew Flintoff was dismissed cheaply and Sri Lanka had gained momentum in reducing England to 118/5.

The remaining batsmen struggled, with Paul Collingwood taking nearly 4 hours to score the innings highest score of 48. Jon Lewis hit a quickfire 20 to boost the score to almost parity with Sri Lanka as England were bowled out for 229. Although Sri Lanka lost Michael Vandort in the first over of their second innings, they reached 45/1 by the close of play on the second day.

Day Three edit

Sri Lanka showed application in their approach to batting, knowing that they did not need to score at a quick rate given the amount of time remaining in the match. Kumar Sangakkara and Chamara Kapugedera both scored 50s, and Jayawardene and Upul Tharanga scored 45 and 46 respectively. By the end of the day, their score had progressed to 286/7, a lead of 288.

Day Four edit

England took the final three Sri Lankan wickets, but not without their score progressing to 322 – thanks to the efforts of Lasith Malinga, who scored 22, and Chaminda Vaas who was unbeaten on 34. England had only managed to dismiss him twice in the entire series.

For England, Monty Panesar took his first five wicket haul, recording figures of 5/78. This left England needing 325 to win, a record for Trent Bridge.

England started their chase confidently, albeit with some slices of luck. Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Strauss progressed the score to 84 before the first wicket fell, to Muttiah Muralitharan. From that point on, Muralitharan assumed total control of the match, and of England's batsman.

He proceeded to take the next 6 wickets, reducing England to 132/7, and at that point, would have harboured hopes of capturing all 10 wickets. However, the next wicket to fall was to a run out. But this did not deter him, and he took a further wicket – that of Jon Lewis to leave the score at 153/9. England were on the verge of defeat, still needing 172 to win with one wicket remaining.

All was left to do was for Monty Panesar to dispel the popular belief that he was incapable of batting – he proceeded to attack Muralitharan's bowling – hitting 3 fours and one remarkable swept six on the way to a career best 26. In the end, Muralitharan did not claim his wicket – with Jayasuriya being the one to dismiss him lbw.

England had been bowled out for 190 – pretty much by one man. Muralitharan's figures of 8/70 earned him man of the match, and were his second best bowling figures recorded. Sri Lanka won the match by 134 runs and squared the series. They would go on to carry this momentum into the one day series that followed.

Limited Over Matches edit

Tour Match: Sri Lanka v Essex (9 June) edit

Essex 174-4 (38) beat Sri Lanka 172 (43.3) by 6 wickets.[7]

Tour Match: Sri Lanka v Somerset (11 June) edit

Somerset 332-6 (50) beat Sri Lanka 281 (46.3) by 51 runs[8]

Twenty20 International Match edit

15 June
Scorecard
Sri Lanka  
163 (20 overs)
v
  England
161/5 (20 overs)
Sanath Jayasuriya 41 (30)
Paul Collingwood 4/22 (4 overs)
Marcus Trescothick 72 (58)
Sanath Jayasuriya 2/32 (4 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 2 runs
Rose Bowl, Southampton, England
Umpires: Ian Gould (Eng) and Nigel Llong (Eng)
Player of the match: Sanath Jayasuriya (SL)

First ODI edit

17 June
Scorecard
Sri Lanka  
257/9 (50 overs)
v
  England
237/9 (50 overs)
Upul Tharanga 120 (156)
Steve Harmison 3/52 (10 overs)
Jamie Dalrymple 67 (87)
Lasith Malinga 3/26 (9 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 20 runs
Lord's Cricket Ground, London, England
Umpires: Darrell Hair (Aus) and Nigel Llong (Eng)

Second ODI edit

20 June
Scorecard
Sri Lanka  
319/8 (50 overs)
v
  England
273 (46.4 overs)
Sanath Jayasuriya 122 (136)
Steve Harmison 3/31 (10 overs)
Kevin Pietersen 73 (77)
Sanath Jayasuriya 3/51 (9 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 46 runs
The Oval, London, England
Umpires: Darrell Hair (Aus) and Ian Gould (Eng)

Third ODI edit

24 June
Scorecard
England  
261/7 (50 overs)
v
  Sri Lanka
265/2 (42.2 overs)
Ian Bell 77 (114)
Chaminda Vaas 2/38 (9 overs)
Mahela Jayawardene 126* (127)
Jamie Dalrymple 1/40 (9 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 8 wickets
Riverside Ground, Chester-le-Street, England
Umpires: Mark Benson (Eng) and Billy Doctrove (WI)

Fourth ODI edit

28 June
Scorecard
Sri Lanka  
318/7 (50 overs)
v
  England
285 (48.4 overs)
Mahela Jayawardene 100 (83)
Jamie Dalrymple 2/44 (10 overs)
Andrew Strauss 45 (44)
Malinga Bandara 2/43 (10 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 33 runs
Old Trafford Cricket Ground, Manchester, England
Umpires: Billy Doctrove (WI) and Nigel Llong (Eng)
Player of the match: Mahela Jayawardene (SL)

Fifth ODI edit

1 July
Scorecard
England  
321/7 (50 overs)
v
  Sri Lanka
324/2 (37.3 overs)
Marcus Trescothick 121 (118)
Lasith Malinga 4/44 (10 overs)
Sanath Jayasuriya 152 (99)
Vikram Solanki 1/17 (3.3 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 8 wickets
Headingley Cricket Ground, Leeds, England
Umpires: Mark Benson (Eng) and Billy Doctrove (WI)
Player of the match: Sanath Jayasuriya (SL)

Sri Lanka completed their 5-0 rout of England's underperforming one day side in a dramatic and brutal fashion. Although England had recorded their highest score of the series batting first - 321/7, the Sri Lankans were enjoying such a rich streak of success that this normally challenging total posed no real threat.

England batted first having won the toss, and looked to be putting themselves in a strong position, guided by a century from Marcus Trescothick. Alastair Cook and Vikram Solanki also had scores in the 40s, and 321/7 seemed a reasonable total at the halfway stage.

However, any hopes that the 5-0 whitewash would be averted were quickly dispelled by Sanath Jayasuriya and Upul Tharanga, who both launched into the bowling attack which they knew had had its confidence already battered from the previous encounters of the series.

The first ten overs of the Sri Lankan reply yielded an amazing 133 runs. Andrew Strauss kept turning to different bowlers, even calling on the spin of Jamie Dalrymple as early as the 8th over in a futile attempt to stem the flow of runs. But Jayasuriya and Tharanga were unstoppable, and although their scoring rates tapered off slightly when fielding restrictions were lifted, they continued on their merry way and racked up an enormous partnership of 286, which was broken in the 32nd over - with only 36 more needed to win at this point.

Jayasuriya brought up his century in 72 balls, and Tharanga in 82. Tharanga was caught and bowled by Dalrymple for 109 with the score on 286/1, and Jayasuriya went 4 balls later for an outstanding 152 off just 99 balls.

Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene had over 17 overs left to score the remaining 33 runs, and the victory was completed soon after. The target of 322 was chased down with 12.3 overs to spare, and the whitewash complete.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b While five days of play were scheduled for each Test, the second and third Test reached a result in four days.

External sources edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sri Lanka Squad retrieved 27 April 2006, from Cricinfo
  2. ^ England Squad, retrieved from Cricinfo
  3. ^ Chapple in one-day squad, from Cricinfo, retrieved 7 June 2006
  4. ^ a b Cricinfo - Commentary - 1st Test: England v Sri Lanka, retrieved from Cricinfo on 16 June 2006
  5. ^ Trescothick sparkles on return, by Andrew McGlashan, published by Cricinfo on 11 May 2006
  6. ^ Jayawardene and light delay England by Andrew McGlashan, retrieved 16 June 2006, published by Cricinfo on 14 May 2006
  7. ^ Tour Match: Sri Lanka v Essex Scorecard, retrieved from Cricinfo, 11 June 2006
  8. ^ Tour Match: Sri Lanka v Somerset Scorecard, retrieved from Cricinfo

lankan, cricket, team, england, 2006, lanka, toured, england, cricket, matches, during, 2006, international, cricket, season, england, were, back, home, first, time, since, september, looked, maintain, their, test, standards, which, them, keep, their, second, . Sri Lanka toured England for cricket matches during the 2006 international cricket season England were back home for the first time since September and looked to maintain their Test standards which saw them keep their second place in the ICC Test Championship in India and the teams were also competing for sixth place in the ICC ODI Championship as both England and Sri Lanka were coming off the back of two lost ODI tours on the Asian sub continent against India and Pakistan respectively To add to problems both teams were likely to be missing some key members of the team as England were without some of their squad for their previous tour and two days before Sri Lanka departed for England it was revealed that skipper Marvan Atapattu would stay at home for the tour due to back problems that had forced him to skip his previous tour too Jehan Mubarak was brought in as his replacement Sri Lanka in England 2006 Sri LankaEnglandDates24 April 1 July 2006CaptainsMahela JayawardeneAndrew FlintoffTest seriesResult3 match series drawn 1 1Most runsKumar Sangakkara 231 Kevin Pietersen 360 Most wicketsMuttiah Muralitharan 24 Matthew Hoggard 15 Player of the seriesMuttiah Muralitharan SL and Kevin Pietersen Eng One Day International seriesResultsSri Lanka won the 5 match series 5 0Most runsUpul Tharanga 347 Marcus Trescothick 277 Most wicketsLasith Malinga 13 Steve Harmison 8 Player of the seriesSanath Jayasuriya SL Twenty20 International seriesResultsSri Lanka won the 1 match series 1 0Most runsSanath Jayasuriya 41 Marcus Trescothick 72 Most wicketsSanath Jayasuriya 2 Paul Collingwood 4 Player of the seriesSanath Jayasuriya SL Contents 1 Schedule 2 Squads 3 Tour matches 3 1 Three day match Sri Lankans v British Universities 3 2 Three day match Sri Lankans v Derbyshire 3 3 Four day match Sri Lankans v England A 3 4 Four day match Sri Lankans v Sussex 4 Test series 4 1 1st Test 4 1 1 Day One 4 1 2 Day Two 4 1 3 Day Three 4 1 4 Day Four 4 1 5 Day Five 4 2 2nd Test 4 2 1 Day One 4 2 2 Day Two 4 2 3 Day Three 4 2 4 Day Four 4 3 3rd Test 4 3 1 Day One 4 3 2 Day Two 4 3 3 Day Three 4 3 4 Day Four 5 Limited Over Matches 5 1 Tour Match Sri Lanka v Essex 9 June 5 2 Tour Match Sri Lanka v Somerset 11 June 5 3 Twenty20 International Match 5 4 First ODI 5 5 Second ODI 5 6 Third ODI 5 7 Fourth ODI 5 8 Fifth ODI 6 Notes 7 External sources 8 ReferencesSchedule edit nbsp Twenty20 match at Rose BowlDate Match VenueApril24 26 Tour Match Fenner s29 1 May Tour Match County Ground DerbyMay4 7 Tour Match New Road Worcester11 15 1st Test Lord s18 21 Tour Match Country Ground Hove25 29 2nd Test EdgbastonJune2 6 3rd Test Trent Bridge15 Twenty20 Rose Bowl Hampshire17 1st ODI Lord s20 2nd ODI The Oval24 3rd ODI Riverside Ground28 4th ODI Old TraffordJuly1 5th ODI HeadingleySquads editSri Lanka Test Squad 1 England 2 3 Mahela Jayawardene c Prasanna Jayawardene wk Kumar Sangakkara wk Malinga Bandara Tillakaratne Dilshan Chamara Kapugedera Nuwan Kulasekara Farveez Maharoof Lasith Malinga Jehan Mubarak Muttiah Muralitharan Thilan Samaraweera Upul Tharanga Chaminda Vaas Michael Vandort Nuwan Zoysa Andrew Flintoff Test c Tests only Andrew Strauss ODI c Geraint Jones wk Ian Bell Tim Bresnan ODIs Glen Chapple ODIs Paul Collingwood Alastair Cook Jamie Dalrymple ODIs Steve Harmison ODIs Matthew Hoggard Tests Ed Joyce ODIs Jon Lewis Tests Alex Loudon ODIs Sajid Mahmood Monty Panesar Tests Kevin Pietersen Liam Plunkett Marcus TrescothickTour matches editThree day match Sri Lankans v British Universities edit 24 26 April 2006 ScorecardSri Lanka nbsp v nbsp British Universities289 74 2 overs Upul Tharanga 100 134 Ruel Brathwaite 3 61 18 overs 125 49 4 overs Richard Clinton 44 81 Chaminda Vaas 4 34 17 overs 256 6d 67 overs Thilan Samaraweera 114 183 David Balcombe 3 67 18 overs 130 8 56 overs Paul Harrison 28 44 Chaminda Vaas 2 10 10 overs Match drawnFenner s Cambridge Umpires Michael Gough Eng and Nigel Llong Eng British Universities won the toss and elected to field Three day match Sri Lankans v Derbyshire edit 29 April 1 May 2006 Scorecard nbsp Derbyshire v Sri Lanka nbsp 219 84 overs Steve Stubbings 43 138 Muttiah Muralitharan 3 47 30 overs 166 7d 47 5 overs Chamara Kapugedera 45 73 Kevin Dean 4 34 11 5 overs 208 4d 44 overs Travis Birt 83 53 Tillakaratne Dilshan 1 22 3 overs 262 4 58 1 overs Michael Vandort 90 157 Ant Botha 2 10 10 overs Match drawnCounty Ground Derby Umpires George Sharp Eng and Steve Garratt Eng Derbyshire won the toss and elected to bat first Four day match Sri Lankans v England A edit 4 6 May 2006 ScorecardSri Lanka nbsp v nbsp England A179 58 5 overs Tillakaratne Dilshan 47 100 Jon Lewis 6 49 15 overs 259 87 3 overs Rob Key 63 118 Nuwan Kulasekara 4 83 23 overs 118 50 3 overs Tillakaratne Dilshan 40 85 Stuart Broad 3 17 11 3 overs 41 0 8 overs Alastair Cook 22 29 England A won by 10 wicketsNew Road Worcester Umpires Martin Bodenham Eng and Peter Hartley Eng Sri Lankans won the toss and elected to bat first Four day match Sri Lankans v Sussex edit 18 21 April 2006 ScorecardSri Lanka nbsp v nbsp Sussex521 5d 161 4 overs Upul Tharanga 140 252 Tim Linley 1 56 27 overs 262 85 5 overs Ollie Rayner 101 134 Lasith Malinga 5 79 21 5 overs 5 1 2 overs Kumar Sangakkara 2 4 James Kirtley 1 2 1 over Match drawnCounty Ground Hove Umpires Mark Benson Eng and Peter Willey Eng Sri Lankans won the toss and elected to bat first Neil Turk and Ollie Rayner Eng both made their first class debuts Test series edit1st Test edit 11 15 May 2006 ScorecardEngland nbsp v nbsp Sri Lanka551 6d 143 overs Kevin Pietersen 158 205 Muttiah Muralitharan 3 158 48 overs 192 55 3 overs Mahela Jayawardene 61 118 Matthew Hoggard 4 27 14 overs 537 9 f o 199 overs Mahela Jayawardene 119 220 Monty Panesar 2 49 27 overs Match drawnLord s Cricket Ground London Umpires Aleem Dar Pak and Rudi Koertzen SA Player of the match Mahela Jayawardene SL England won the toss and elected to bat first Chamara Kapugedera SL and Sajid Mahmood Eng both made their Test debuts Day One edit England won the toss and decided to bat Flintoff handed Sajid Mahmood his first Test cap while Chamara Kapugedera made his Test debut for Sri Lanka Marcus Trescothick opened for England for the first time since last year alongside Andrew Strauss 20 minutes before lunch Muttiah Muralitharan was brought in for his first over at Lord s the 23rd of the England innings with the seamers not having taken a wicket However in the fourth over of Muralitharan s innings Jayawardene had Strauss caught off Muralitharan putting the English at 86 for one at lunch The afternoon session started with Alastair Cook playing in his first home Test coming in to face his first ball in home Test cricket after leaving that one alone he proceeded to 44 not out by tea while Trescothick was on 95 not out 4 Trescothick got his hundred by slogging 4 Muralitharan for a single but in the next over he too perished through being caught by Jayawardene England batted through to stumps and lost only one further wicket with Cook caught behind off Farveez Maharoof s bowling for 89 and England closed with nightwatchman Matthew Hoggard at the crease and the overnight total 318 for three Sri Lanka however had taken a catch off a no ball a close lbw against Kevin Pietersen turned down off Chaminda Vaas and Alastair Cook a couple of inches from being run out 5 Day Two edit The day began with Hoggard staying in the crease opposite Pietersen for 37 balls before being bowled by Vaas This gave way to Paul Collingwood who had made his first Test century in the first Test of the 2005 06 India tour Collingwood contributed 57 to a partnership of 173 between the two before Pietersen fell at 158 trapped lbw by Vaas and Collingwood a few balls later fell in the same fashion by Muralitharan With England six down Andrew Flintoff and Geraint Jones were the new batsmen and the two made scores 33 and 11 respectively before Flintoff declared following his second six off Muralitharan The umpires called tea time early due to the declaration and the touring team came back out with their openers Mubarak and Tharanga However Mubarak quickly went back after he was bowled by Hoggard without a run scored by any of the batsmen Tharanga went five overs later though with a more successful partnership of 21 the same number of runs the third Sri Lankan Kumar Sangakkara managed to make before caught off Sajid Mahmood his first Test dismissal At this time they were 81 for two fifteen minutes later the scoreboard read 85 for six with three batsmen out for ducks including debutante Kapugedera who fell on his first Test ball The day s play was curtailed by bad light which left Sri Lanka at 91 for six fourteen of which came off English extras while Mahmood s debut figures read three for nine Day Three edit It started with the clement weather of the last few days overshadowed by clouds and the forecast of rain With Mahmood unable to add to his tally from yesterday conceding 41 runs on the day Sri Lanka batted through ten overs but Farveez Maharoof gave a return catch to Hoggard and two overs later Flintoff makes a breakthrough getting Jayawardene out with a catch by wicket keeper Geraint Jones However the ninth wicket stand between Vaas and Nuwan Kulasekara gave the most runs of the entire innings as the two add 62 in just over an hour After lunch however they were out in the space of three deliveries and Sri Lanka were all out for 192 Flintoff enforced the follow on and once again Mubarak was out in single figures to Hoggard the total 10 for one However Tharanga and Sangakkara built Sri Lanka s largest partnership of the match thus far both making half centuries and sharing a stand of 109 Eventually both batsmen were caught by Jones off spinner Monty Panesar with Sangakkara s innings lasting four and a half hours for 65 runs but at this point England required seven wickets and had two days to do it in Day Four edit Nightwatchman Farveez Maharoof frustrated the England bowlers He was dropped on 30 by Paul Collingwood and went on to bat through 40 overs and 166 minutes as Sri Lanka went through the entire morning session without loss England then got two wickets in five overs both courtesy of Sajid Mahmood but that only brought in Tillakaratne Dilshan Another 20 overs followed without a wicket with Mahela Jayawardene completing his century before being caught behind for 119 four overs before the close of play on day four as 24 overs were cut due to bad light 6 Day Five edit Sri Lanka then lost both their last specialist batsmen Kapugedera and Dilshan but were leading by 62 runs at that time The ninth wicket partners Vaas and Kulasekara however had already showed their batting skills by having the highest partnership of the first innings and they were eight runs away from achieving that again in the second Batting through 189 minutes the pair secured the draw for Sri Lanka with Kulasekara even hitting a couple of sixes as he ended with 64 when Pietersen held a catch off Hoggard s bowling However by then it was too late as Sri Lanka led by 167 runs and there was only half an hour left to score those runs in Indeed the tenth wicket stand frustrated England until stumps Muralitharan faced out that half hour scoring one run while Vaas got his half century before the close of play 2nd Test edit 25 28 May 2006 n 1 ScorecardSri Lanka nbsp v nbsp England141 51 2 overs Chaminda Vaas 30 78 Liam Plunkett 3 43 12 overs 295 78 3 overs Kevin Pietersen 142 157 Muttiah Muralitharan 6 86 25 overs 231 93 2 overs Michael Vandort 105 303 Liam Plunkett 3 17 13 2 overs 81 4 27 2 overs Alastair Cook 34 85 Muttiah Muralitharan 4 29 12 2 overs England won by 6 wicketsEdgbaston Birmingham Umpires Aleem Dar Pak and Darrell Hair Aus Player of the match Kevin Pietersen Eng Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat Day One edit Sri Lanka won the toss and skipper Mahela Jayawardene chose to bat it seemed that they made the wrong choice as England crippled them to 82 8 with the help of a swinging wicket before Chaminda Vaas and Lasith Malinga put up a half century partnership and the team were all out for 141 Matthew Hoggard s swinging and cult hero Monty Panesar put on impressive shows but regular ODI player Liam Plunkett was the real boon of the side Before the end of the first day England had all but closed the deficit as stumps was called at 138 3 Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Strauss putting on a 56 partnership before Alastair Cook came out soon followed by big hitter Kevin Pietersen who was 30 at stumps aided by a 6 and went on to score another Test century the next day the only batsmen in the first innings to hit more than 30 Despite the hot headed player s skills England were not fully confident at the slip Cook being saved by a dropped ball by the Sri Lanka skipper and Muttiah Muralitharan proved quite a threat Day Two edit Pietersen opened the second day 80 minutes late thanks to rain with nightwatchmen Hoggard the latter putting on his normal single figures this time 3 runs but holding the line for 36 balls Once normal play resumed with Paul Collingwood England continued to dominate setting their targets high with a 69 partnership before Collingwood gloved Murali to short leg for 238 5 and was replaced by skipper Andrew Flintoff who was surprisingly tame Pietersen went on to hit three 4s in as many balls before hitting a reverse sweeper 6 but then being bowled lbw by Murali achieving three Test centuries in consecutive Tests After the departure of their number four England crumbled hopelessly from 290 6 to 295 all out just before tea The mood in the English camp was swiftly revitalised by the hot drinks as Hoggard bowled Upul Tharanga for a golden duck having been bowled for nothing in the first innings Two more men went to see the tourists at 43 3 with a 111 run deficit and before the close of play Geraint Jones redeemed his missed catch to Thilan Samaraweera by stumping soon after unbeaten opener Michael Vandort remained at the crease for 30 when play closed at 7 30 due to the missed play earlier Day Three edit After persistent rain over Birmingham play was started at 4 45 and the fifth wicket held up for 125 helping them take the lead Both batsmen fought off good efforts by Panesar and Plunkett but eventually it was Hoggard who made the only breakthrough on a day where Sri Lanka stood tall for a short day at 194 5 Day Four edit With the new ball due six overs into the fourth day Sri Lankan wickets fell thick and fast half the team falling before lunch the last of which being opener Michael Vandort who narrowly missed out on being the fifth batsmen ever to hold his wicket throughout an entire innings England took to the crease just before lunch with a very slow run rate that came only from Strauss Trescothick fell after nine runs none of them contributed by him The third man Alastair Cook held out for the rest of the innings though achieving 34 not out during this time Strauss fell to a controversial catch replays showed it popped off his pads Pietersen wanting to end the Test quickly took the wicket with his usual speed taking 13 runs off 25 balls his confidence assured by a catch by the tourists skipper to be called a no ball and a further two no balls which he took boundaries off However his cockiness proved his downfall as he lashed out at a ball from Murali the only bowler to take wickets in the second innings and was caught plumb Collingwood soon fell for 3 and it seemed as if the easy target of 78 was going to be more of a struggle but Cook remaining from the second partnership took two runs and two byes and skipper Flintoff who done nothing with his first three balls drove Murali down the ground to long on for four on his fourth ball to win the match and his third in a row as English skipper 3rd Test edit 2 5 June 2006 n 1 ScorecardSri Lanka nbsp v nbsp England231 66 2 overs Chaminda Vaas 38 94 Andrew Flintoff 3 52 15 overs 229 91 1 overs Paul Collingwood 48 184 Muttiah Muralitharan 3 62 31 overs 322 113 1 overs Kumar Sangakkara 66 133 Monty Panesar 5 78 37 1 overs 190 68 5 overs Andrew Strauss 55 155 Muttiah Muralitharan 8 70 30 overs Sri Lanka won by 134 runsTrent Bridge Nottingham Umpires Darrell Hair Aus and Rudi Koertzen SA Player of the match Muttiah Muralitharan SL Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat Jon Lewis Eng made his Test debut Day One edit Sri Lanka came into the third Test looking to level the series and Mahela Jayawardene won the toss and again chose to bat Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Samaraweera were dropped from the side and Sanath Jayasuriya and Chamara Kapugedera came in This was a return to test cricket for Jayasuriya following a previously announced retirement As at Edgbaston Sri Lanka struggled batting first and Andrew Flintoff and Jon Lewis who was in the side on debut replacing Sajid Mahmood took 5 wickets between them to leave Sri Lanka on 139 8 However England were unable to finish things off and Chaminda Vaas who had shown resistance batting throughout the series added 92 runs with the last two wickets Muttiah Muralitharan hit 3 fours and 1 six in a very useful cameo which included some remarkable shots This late flurry of runs would prove critical in the match England s openers began the reply tentatively and by the end of the first day England were 53 2 in reply to Sri Lanka s 231 Day Two edit Sri Lanka came out on the second day with a very positive approach which was noticeable from the start of the day s play Their body language was positive and Mahela Jayawardene displayed good strategic application with the field placings he set and frustrated England s batsmen in the process A key point was the dismissal of Kevin Pietersen for 41 given that he had scored big centuries in the first innings of the previous two tests Andrew Flintoff was dismissed cheaply and Sri Lanka had gained momentum in reducing England to 118 5 The remaining batsmen struggled with Paul Collingwood taking nearly 4 hours to score the innings highest score of 48 Jon Lewis hit a quickfire 20 to boost the score to almost parity with Sri Lanka as England were bowled out for 229 Although Sri Lanka lost Michael Vandort in the first over of their second innings they reached 45 1 by the close of play on the second day Day Three edit Sri Lanka showed application in their approach to batting knowing that they did not need to score at a quick rate given the amount of time remaining in the match Kumar Sangakkara and Chamara Kapugedera both scored 50s and Jayawardene and Upul Tharanga scored 45 and 46 respectively By the end of the day their score had progressed to 286 7 a lead of 288 Day Four edit England took the final three Sri Lankan wickets but not without their score progressing to 322 thanks to the efforts of Lasith Malinga who scored 22 and Chaminda Vaas who was unbeaten on 34 England had only managed to dismiss him twice in the entire series For England Monty Panesar took his first five wicket haul recording figures of 5 78 This left England needing 325 to win a record for Trent Bridge England started their chase confidently albeit with some slices of luck Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Strauss progressed the score to 84 before the first wicket fell to Muttiah Muralitharan From that point on Muralitharan assumed total control of the match and of England s batsman He proceeded to take the next 6 wickets reducing England to 132 7 and at that point would have harboured hopes of capturing all 10 wickets However the next wicket to fall was to a run out But this did not deter him and he took a further wicket that of Jon Lewis to leave the score at 153 9 England were on the verge of defeat still needing 172 to win with one wicket remaining All was left to do was for Monty Panesar to dispel the popular belief that he was incapable of batting he proceeded to attack Muralitharan s bowling hitting 3 fours and one remarkable swept six on the way to a career best 26 In the end Muralitharan did not claim his wicket with Jayasuriya being the one to dismiss him lbw England had been bowled out for 190 pretty much by one man Muralitharan s figures of 8 70 earned him man of the match and were his second best bowling figures recorded Sri Lanka won the match by 134 runs and squared the series They would go on to carry this momentum into the one day series that followed Limited Over Matches editTour Match Sri Lanka v Essex 9 June edit Essex 174 4 38 beat Sri Lanka 172 43 3 by 6 wickets 7 Tour Match Sri Lanka v Somerset 11 June edit Somerset 332 6 50 beat Sri Lanka 281 46 3 by 51 runs 8 Twenty20 International Match edit 15 June ScorecardSri Lanka nbsp 163 20 overs v nbsp England161 5 20 overs Sanath Jayasuriya 41 30 Paul Collingwood 4 22 4 overs Marcus Trescothick 72 58 Sanath Jayasuriya 2 32 4 overs Sri Lanka won by 2 runsRose Bowl Southampton England Umpires Ian Gould Eng and Nigel Llong Eng Player of the match Sanath Jayasuriya SL First ODI edit 17 June ScorecardSri Lanka nbsp 257 9 50 overs v nbsp England237 9 50 overs Upul Tharanga 120 156 Steve Harmison 3 52 10 overs Jamie Dalrymple 67 87 Lasith Malinga 3 26 9 overs Sri Lanka won by 20 runsLord s Cricket Ground London England Umpires Darrell Hair Aus and Nigel Llong Eng Tim Bresnan Eng made his ODI debut Second ODI edit 20 June ScorecardSri Lanka nbsp 319 8 50 overs v nbsp England273 46 4 overs Sanath Jayasuriya 122 136 Steve Harmison 3 31 10 overs Kevin Pietersen 73 77 Sanath Jayasuriya 3 51 9 overs Sri Lanka won by 46 runsThe Oval London England Umpires Darrell Hair Aus and Ian Gould Eng Third ODI edit 24 June ScorecardEngland nbsp 261 7 50 overs v nbsp Sri Lanka265 2 42 2 overs Ian Bell 77 114 Chaminda Vaas 2 38 9 overs Mahela Jayawardene 126 127 Jamie Dalrymple 1 40 9 overs Sri Lanka won by 8 wicketsRiverside Ground Chester le Street England Umpires Mark Benson Eng and Billy Doctrove WI Alex Loudon Eng made his ODI debut Fourth ODI edit 28 June ScorecardSri Lanka nbsp 318 7 50 overs v nbsp England285 48 4 overs Mahela Jayawardene 100 83 Jamie Dalrymple 2 44 10 overs Andrew Strauss 45 44 Malinga Bandara 2 43 10 overs Sri Lanka won by 33 runsOld Trafford Cricket Ground Manchester England Umpires Billy Doctrove WI and Nigel Llong Eng Player of the match Mahela Jayawardene SL Alastair Cook Eng made his ODI debut Fifth ODI edit 1 July ScorecardEngland nbsp 321 7 50 overs v nbsp Sri Lanka324 2 37 3 overs Marcus Trescothick 121 118 Lasith Malinga 4 44 10 overs Sanath Jayasuriya 152 99 Vikram Solanki 1 17 3 3 overs Sri Lanka won by 8 wicketsHeadingley Cricket Ground Leeds England Umpires Mark Benson Eng and Billy Doctrove WI Player of the match Sanath Jayasuriya SL Sri Lanka completed their 5 0 rout of England s underperforming one day side in a dramatic and brutal fashion Although England had recorded their highest score of the series batting first 321 7 the Sri Lankans were enjoying such a rich streak of success that this normally challenging total posed no real threat England batted first having won the toss and looked to be putting themselves in a strong position guided by a century from Marcus Trescothick Alastair Cook and Vikram Solanki also had scores in the 40s and 321 7 seemed a reasonable total at the halfway stage However any hopes that the 5 0 whitewash would be averted were quickly dispelled by Sanath Jayasuriya and Upul Tharanga who both launched into the bowling attack which they knew had had its confidence already battered from the previous encounters of the series The first ten overs of the Sri Lankan reply yielded an amazing 133 runs Andrew Strauss kept turning to different bowlers even calling on the spin of Jamie Dalrymple as early as the 8th over in a futile attempt to stem the flow of runs But Jayasuriya and Tharanga were unstoppable and although their scoring rates tapered off slightly when fielding restrictions were lifted they continued on their merry way and racked up an enormous partnership of 286 which was broken in the 32nd over with only 36 more needed to win at this point Jayasuriya brought up his century in 72 balls and Tharanga in 82 Tharanga was caught and bowled by Dalrymple for 109 with the score on 286 1 and Jayasuriya went 4 balls later for an outstanding 152 off just 99 balls Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene had over 17 overs left to score the remaining 33 runs and the victory was completed soon after The target of 322 was chased down with 12 3 overs to spare and the whitewash complete Notes edit a b While five days of play were scheduled for each Test the second and third Test reached a result in four days External sources editTour home at ESPN Cricinfo CricketArchiveReferences edit Sri Lanka Squad retrieved 27 April 2006 from Cricinfo England Squad retrieved from Cricinfo Chapple in one day squad from Cricinfo retrieved 7 June 2006 a b Cricinfo Commentary 1st Test England v Sri Lanka retrieved from Cricinfo on 16 June 2006 Trescothick sparkles on return by Andrew McGlashan published by Cricinfo on 11 May 2006 Jayawardene and light delay England by Andrew McGlashan retrieved 16 June 2006 published by Cricinfo on 14 May 2006 Tour Match Sri Lanka v Essex Scorecard retrieved from Cricinfo 11 June 2006 Tour Match Sri Lanka v Somerset Scorecard retrieved from Cricinfo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sri Lankan cricket team in England in 2006 amp oldid 1130252968, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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