Cricinfo Home |
|
|    Audio   |   Video   |   
Search
cricinfo australia
Cricinfo Quiz

Cricinfo Mobile
Grounds

Australia v Sri Lanka, 2nd Test, Hobart, 1st day

Bayliss calls for more discipline from bowlers

Sa'adi Thawfeeq in Hobart

November 16, 2007



Michael Hussey scored his second successive century of the series, while Muttiah Muralitharan had to be content with Ricky Ponting's wicket © Getty Images
Trevor Bayliss, the Sri Lanka coach, called on his fast bowlers to be more disciplined after they took another hammering at the hands of Australia on the first day of the second Test at the Bellerive Oval.

Sri Lanka could capture only three wickets as the formidable Australian batting line-up rattled up 329 for 3, with two of their top-order batsmen, Phil Jaques and Michael Hussey, scoring their second consecutive hundreds in the series.

"What you do need is very good discipline. That's an area that we need to work on a little bit. We can certainly be disciplined for eight-ten overs. Then when the plan doesn't work, the discipline goes away rather than sticking to it," Bayliss said.

"The Australians stick to their plans very well and they bowl a lot of balls in those wicket areas and eventually take wickets. We've got to try and learn from that and be even more disciplined and bowl even more balls in those wicket-taking areas."

Lasith Malinga's 22 overs cost 97 runs, Farveez Maharoof went for 82 runs from 23 overs and Dilhara Fernando, the most successful of the three fast bowlers, took 65 for 1 from 13 overs, but Bayliss felt his bowlers did well under the conditions."I thought we bowled pretty well this morning, but the wicket was very flat - a better wicket to bat and one harder to take wickets. It is very difficult for any bowler and probably difficult for the Australian bowlers.

"The positive out of the day is that the guys haven't given up. They've been putting in a 100%. They probably are a bit more disappointed than they were up in Brisbane because they didn't field quite as well.

"There's a lot of hard work to do. We've got no illusions how difficult the task is, but to their credit they are here to not only try and compete with Australia but they've gone into the two matches before hand with winning in mind.

"Certainly we were outplayed in the first Test; hopefully we can knock the rest of the guys over tomorrow and bat well in the first innings, which will be the key. The battle for us is to get through the new ball. As we showed in Brisbane, in the second innings, we've got guys who can bat for a long time."

Bayliss said veteran left-arm seamer Chaminda Vaas was left out because of a shoulder injury which made it unsure whether he would go through the whole game. Had Vaas played, it would have been his 100th Test match. Instead Malinga replaced him.

Fernando was playing with a niggling ankle injury, which he has been carrying for the past four-five months. "He is one guy in the team who has not whinged about it even once. He is desperate to play. That was a little bit of concern coming to this match. I am sure a lot of fast bowlers who have got those injuries don't play through."

Add to del.icio.us | digg this | Stumble It What's this?

WI v Aus edition now live - Play now
Cricinfo Cricket Quiz
NEW fantasy cricket game - England v South Africa (starts July 10)
Login and enter your team now
Cricinfo on the go - our mobile services
WAP and Mobicast
Cricinfo home Print this page Email this page to a friend Feedback
 
Related Links Latest News Features


Cricinfo Products
NEW fantasy game - England v South Africa
Starts July 10
The miracle of India's 1983 World Cup win
Cricinfo looks back
Cricinfo Widgets - new portable applications
Add to your site now
Cricinfo's expert betting editorial coverage
Get all the best odds tips

Sponsored Links
Legends of Cricket DVDs - new editions out now
Available at Cricshop
Bet now on Asia Cup & West Indies v Australia
Fixed odds at bet365
The latest rugby news & scores at Scrum.com
The perfect pitch for rugby


 
Top 5 player searches
Most read stories