music to my ears hearing 'we're gonna bowl again'Yesssssssssss shilly gets him and we've forced the follow on!!!.. Come on wi!!!
Yeah it's going to be intense.Now to see whether WI can make inroads again, the effort of taking 10 wickets will have drained them.
I may be wrong, but I'm not convinced enforcing the follow-on was the best option here, this is assuming the pitch will deteriorate further on Day 5 & the bowlers will have had a break.I do have fears about this i must admit!!..they won't be easy to bowl out again at all, Sangakara could be a nightmare to deal with!!.. we'll need at least three or four wickets today to make a fight of this.
If we can get them all out for 300-360 by lunch tomorrow then we'd have a great chance of winning this, but we MUST start well now.
Ok, If that's the case then enforcing probably was probably the best option, certainly a less risky way to force a victory.The Galle wicket didn't seem to deteriorate much on day 5 in the recent India-SL Test, our tail stuck around for a long time and their openers chased 96 in less than 15 overs after tea.
Are you saying that Sri Lanka put up 400-500 in just 2-3 sessions at the most???? That might be too much to ask actually. I think it is the right decision.Not sure if this is the best idea, not just because it means the Windies will be batting last, but also because the bowlers will be shattered in the second dig. If Sri Lanka manages to put up 400-450 it could be a thriller on the last day.