Joe Root’s composed half-century helped England overcome some serious concerns to defeat Sri Lanka on a tense fourth day of the first Test at Emirates Old Trafford.
England were down 70-3 in the three-match series after losing Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, and Dan Lawrence at 205 for the lead.
Joe Root and Harry Brook had to be extremely cautious as spinner Prabath Jayasuriya caused issues from one end and seamers probed from the other. Ramesh Mendis, a flying subfielder, might have caught Brook on four when England had 78 runs.
The Yorkshire combination contributed 49 for the fourth wicket, but England still need 85 when Brook was caught and bowled by Jayasuriya for 32.
While Jamie Smith scored 39 runs from 48 balls, Root was flawless. Even though Smith was dismissed with 22 needed, Root was accompanied by the steady Chris Woakes, and at 19:16 BST, a five-wicket victory was assured with the former captain at 62 not out.
All this after England endured a concerning morning when Sri Lanka looked primed to post an even larger target.
Kamindu Mendis moved to a fine 113 and Dinesh Chandimal 79, their stand for the seventh wicket worth 117 as England struggled without the injured Mark Wood.
The second new ball came to the hosts’ rescue, Sri Lanka losing their last four wickets for only 19 runs to be bowled out for 326.
Wood, who has a thigh problem, seems likely to miss the second Test at Lord’s on Thursday, leaving Olly Stone set for his first cap in more than three years.
This was a slow-burner of a Test, one that built to a gripping conclusion on a sunny Saturday afternoon, curiously in front of the smallest crowd of the match.
England made the running for most of the first three days, then were forced to work to get over the line by a spirited Sri Lanka.
The visitors, who improved as the game progressed, may wonder how things might have been were they afforded more than one warm-up game. In a tight contest, the most obvious difference between the sides was Sri Lanka finding themselves 6-3 in the first innings and 1-2 in the second.
For England, this was a hard-fought win for a young team led by stand-in captain Pope. They proved they can adapt their Bazballing instincts, at one stage in the run-chase inching along at two runs an over.
Ultimately, it was a master-and-apprentice combination that put the result beyond doubt. Root used all of his nous and experience, while 24-year-old Smith’s immense talent is matched by a temperament perfectly suited to Test cricket. The wicketkeeper was player of the match for his maiden hundred in the first innings.
Between them, Root and Smith staved off not only the prospect of defeat, but also the match bleeding into a rain-threatened Sunday.
Root guides England
A target of 205 was never likely to be a gimme for England, at a venue that has recently been the hardest in this country to chase runs, on a pitch occasionally playing tricks, and against a skilful and willing attack.
Duckett survived a superb leg-side catch by stand-in wicketkeeper Kusal Mendis, who dragged the ball along the ground in his dive, only to edge Asitha Fernando to the same man. Pope, characteristically skittish, toe-ended a reverse-sweep off Jayasuriya and Lawrence, on 34, played across Milan Rathnayake to be lbw.
Brook joined Root with England under pressure and Sri Lanka buoyant. The key moment was when Brook’s sweep off Jayasuriya bounced out of the right hand of diving sub Ramesh at square leg. It would have been a breathtaking catch.
Both men were patient with solid defence, and both survived Sri Lanka reviews. Runs were devilishly difficult to come by, yet England looked to have control until Brook stubbed a return catch to Jayasuriya.
Root remained, nudging and pushing, running hard. He did not find the boundary until the 95th delivery he faced. The former skipper was joined by Smith, at the opposite of end his career but equally unflappable.
Any question of a fifth day was ended when Smith swatted Jayasuriya for six. Shadows lengthened, Smith was bowled by an Asitha yorker, but Root was not to be denied.
New ball breaks Sri Lanka resistance
Sri Lanka would have been beaten inside three days had it not been for the Friday endeavour of Angelo Mathews and Kamindu, who was dropped by Gus Atkinson on 39.
Reprieved, Kamindu was able to resume on 56 in Sri Lanka’s 204-6. Chandimal, on 20, had already returned after being struck on the thumb by Wood. Instead, it was Wood who was absent and his pace was missed by England.
Kamindu’s drive for four off Woakes in the first over set the tone. Sri Lanka added 60 untroubled runs in the first hour. England were toothless and a little wayward. Chandimal scored through the leg side, Kamindu square on the off.
England took the second new ball after a 30-minute break for rain, but Kamindu cut Woakes for four to reach a third hundred in his fourth Test, then celebrated by driving Atkinson for three boundaries in an over.
Atkinson had his revenge with a change of angle. Round the wicket, an edge to first slip, Kamindu’s departure opening the door for England.
Jayasuriya edged Matthew Potts to the juggling Brook at second slip, Vishwa Fernando was palpably lbw to Woakes and Chandimal last out by skying Potts to sub fielder Harry Singh at deep cover. Sri Lanka battled hard, though not quite hard enough.
‘England show planning under way for Ashes’ – what they said
England captain Ollie Pope on BBC Test Match Special: “We had to work hard for that over the four days but we bowled really well throughout, Jamie Smith batted so well and then Joe put on a clinic for us at the end.”
Former England captain Michael Vaughan: “Ultimately, England want to win. If you look at the last few years, it’s been great fun, it’s been great entertainment. I love the way they play but fundamentally it’s about lifting trophies.
“They didn’t win the Ashes, they didn’t win in New Zealand when they should’ve. In a year’s time, they have got to beat India here and then Australia away is the ultimate challenge to pull off something special.
“But what I like about this team and what they’re doing, they’re already planning for that. The last time England won Down Under, the Andrew Strauss and Andy Flower era, that started years before. That’s what this England side are trying to achieve.”
Ex-Sri Lanka all-rounder Russel Arnold: “I am extremely pleased even though Sri Lanka lost. Recently, Sri Lanka have had a tendency to roll over, to not show much heart. But they didn’t do that, and in tough conditions that is admirable.”