Pope hundred gives England upper hand on Sri Lanka
- Published
Third Test, The Kia Oval (day one of five)
England 221-3: Pope 103*, Duckett 86
Sri Lanka: Yet to bat
Stand-in captain Ollie Pope answered his critics with a sparkling century on a truncated first day of England's third Test against Sri Lanka at The Kia Oval.
Pope looked ill at ease at the crease in stepping up to replace the injured Ben Stokes, managing only 30 runs in the first two Tests, but found comfort on his home ground to crack an unbeaten 103.
The skipper's ton led the home side to 221-3, a position of strength they had no business being in after losing the toss and being asked to bat in conditions ideal for bowling.
The grey sky refused to brighten, the floodlights were on all day and there was a lengthy delay for bad light and rain, yet Sri Lanka were incapable of taking advantage.
Pope added 95 for the second wicket with Ben Duckett, who played some breathtaking strokes in 86 from just 79 balls. In a third-wicket stand of 51 between Pope and Joe Root, Root contributed just 13.
Though play could have possibly been extended until 19:30 BST, a battle with the light was always likely and the players were again taken from the field at 17:54 one delivery into the 45th over.
England, 2-0 up, are looking for their second series clean sweep in succession and a first 100% home summer in 20 years.
- Published6 September
England shine through Sri Lanka gloom
Sri Lanka's only previous visit to The Oval, in 1998, produced one of their greatest Test victories, when Muttiah Muralitharan took 16 wickets in the match.
This was an abysmal return, a scruffy end-of-tour performance from a side that has already lost the series. They packed their side with four frontline seamers, yet rarely put the ball in the right place and were often sloppy in the field.
If Sri Lanka were bad, the initial delay for bad light was borderline farcical and reignited the debate about the hesitancy to play Test cricket in gloomy conditions. In the 80 minutes possible in the morning session, England scored at almost a run a ball, so it was hard to make a case the batters were compromised in any way.
The murk and mizzle kept the players off for almost three hours, though the break did little to stall England's momentum. Duckett was flying and Pope eased into his slipstream.
The ovation when Pope reached his hundred was filled with warmth from a crowd understanding of the scrutiny the Surrey man has been subjected to.
It was another period when the batters looked entirely comfortable, and the joy turned to boos when, shortly after, the players were led off for a second and final time.
Pope's home comforts
Realistically, Pope's place in the team was never under pressure. He made a century and two half-centuries against West Indies earlier in the summer, while England have a successful policy of giving their players long-term backing.
Still, his methods have come into question. When he gets runs, he is praised for being busy, but that busyness can become frenetic, especially at the start of his innings. Perhaps the captaincy was a burden too far.
At The Oval, Pope is peerless. His first-class average on this ground before this match was 81 and when he got off the mark with a crisp cut for four, it seemed destined to be his day.
Pope continued to pounce on any width, peppering the point boundary, while also pulling two sixes.
He survived a Sri Lanka review for a catch down the leg side on 89, then reached three figures with a square drive off Asitha Fernando. Pope punched the air and lapped up the applause, then saluted the England dressing room.
His ton from 102 deliveries is the second fastest by an England captain, behind a 95-ball effort by Graham Gooch, while Pope is the first Test batter to score his first seven hundreds against seven different opponents.
Dazzling Duckett sets tone
England should have been in for a torrid time in the early stages, only for Duckett to cash in on Sri Lanka's generosity.
If runs for Pope were welcome, then there was no such return for makeshift opener Dan Lawrence. He got into an awful position trying to pull Lahiru Kumara and skied a pull for only five, leaving his place on England's winter tours in jeopardy.
Pope arrived, Duckett repeatedly scored through the off side and Sri Lanka lost the plot. Captain Dhananjaya de Silva followed the ball, to the extent there were three fielders on the boundary inside the first hour.
Duckett was halted by the first delay, but picked up where he left off on the resumption. An attempted scoop at Kumara flew off an edge for four, a second scoop went for six. The left-hander was on track for the fastest Test hundred by an England opener, only for another scoop at Milan Rathnayake to end in the gloves of Dinesh Chandimal.
Root made two centuries in the second Test at Lord's and began needing 96 runs to overhaul Sir Alastair Cook as England's leading run-scorer. His pull to fine leg off Kumara means he must wait a little longer.
Harry Brook, usually an aggressor, was another that played second fiddle to Pope in an unbroken stand of 40 of which Brook has so far made eight.
Pope 'gets job done' - what they said
Ex-England captain Sir Alastair Cook: "If Pope had played like that in the first two games, there would never have been talk about him as a player.
"As England captain, everything that you do is heightened, the narrative was how can the captain bat. Sometimes it actually brings focus. Today, it didn't matter how he scored runs, it was about getting them.
"He did seem stronger at the crease during the first 20 balls, his head looked higher up and straighter, he had much more control.
"He punished a lot of poor bowling today. He managed better today than the past two games, he didn't have to play the big shots and he's guilty of doing that in the past two games."
Former England captain Michael Vaughan: "Pope arrived at a venue that he adores. So straight away he'd feel more comfortable. He's got a tremendous cut shot and they fed it all day, got him right back into form. But bar a poor bowling performance, you've got to get the job done.
"I was worried about him, because you've got players to come back, but scoring runs today and that all goes away. He won't be captain and he can go back into the ranks."
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- Published6 June