Giles's doctored spin delivers for England Cricket First Test match

CRICKET: A revamped Ashley Giles turned around the opening day of England's Test series in Galle, Sri Lanka yesterday but warned…

CRICKET: A revamped Ashley Giles turned around the opening day of England's Test series in Galle, Sri Lanka yesterday but warned against a false sense of security.

The left-arm spinner finished with figures of 10-4-13-3 to signal a change in personal fortunes as the hosts closed on 138 for four.

Having endured a summer which resulted in just nine Test wickets at a cost of 63 runs apiece, Giles went through a crisis of confidence and remodelled his action in an attempt to get closer to the stumps in delivery stride.

Although he was given little opportunity in Bangladesh recently, he is sure to play a vital role here, given the threat of spin on the island and his part in the 2-1 win on the last tour, when a return of four for 11 in Colombo set up the clinching victory.

READ MORE

And Giles began where he left off after England suffered a double blow on the eve of the three-match series.

Nasser Hussain pulled out an hour before the delayed 11 a.m. start through illness and captain Michael Vaughan lost the toss at a ground which usually provides accentuated turn late in the contest and where the tourists lost by an innings in 2001.

After dismissing Sanath Jayasuriya, Mahela Jayawardene and Hashan Tillekeratne, Giles said: "I think we have come out of the first day very well but let us not kid ourselves, it is the first day of 15 very hard days of cricket. It was the first battle in the war.

"After our last experience here we were all hoping to win the toss this time around but this bunch of guys just get up and get on with it, we have got a lot of fight and character which cannot be emphasised enough.

"They have the best of the wicket and it is a good sign that we have them where they are - but come days three and four it is going to turn quite a lot."

That is when Muttiah Muralitharan, who has bagged an incredible 48 wickets in his last five Tests in Galle, is likely to come to prominence.

Giles grew in confidence after relieving off-spinner Gareth Batty and produced the initial breakthrough when Jayasuriya squeezed the ball to short-leg off a thick inside-edge.

"I am getting my mind back on bowling, where I am bowling and tactics to different batters rather than worrying about where my feet are landing and where my arms are," added Giles.

"That course against this quality of opposition on their home turf is vital.

"I need to produce this day-in, day-out for the rest of the series, their batsmen are very good in their own conditions and it is up to people like me and Batts to try and winkle them out."

Giles's second dismissal appeared to owe a lot to Jayawardene being distracted by a hot-air balloon, advertising the Sri Lankan team sponsors, protruding from behind the sightscreen.

Jayawardene spent some time advising umpire Daryl Harper about his concerns before inside-edging the next delivery onto his pad and into the hands of Paul Collingwood at silly-point.

"I had no idea what was going on, I was concentrating on what was going on down the other end, I saw him look up and he appeared quite startled when he was out and I didn't know whether he was upset with the decision or something else," Giles said.

"But I will stick to the balloon end if I can!"

That was the second of Collingwood's catches around the bat - the first the other side of a two-hour stoppage for rain - having been called up when Hussain complained of flu and aching limbs.

That broke a remarkable run of 40 straight Test appearances stretching back to his international recall in 1996 for the former England captain, who credits the 2-1 win here three winters ago as his best as leader.

Sri Lanka have won six and lost only one of the eight matches at Galle since its inception as a Test venue in 1998, relying on their spinners to suffocate the visiting batsmen on a slow, low surface.

"We are disappointed but then again we played some ordinary shots and there are no excuses for that," said captain Tillekeratne.

"We must regroup and look at a total in excess of 300 because we can defend that as it will spin later on."

SCOREBOARD

SRI LANKA

M Atapattu c Read b Flintoff 29

S Jayasuriya c Colingwood b Giles 48

K Sangakarra not out 39

M Jayawardene c Collingwood b Giles 17

H Tillakaratne C Read b Giles 0

T Samaraweera not out 1

Extras (1-b, 1-lb, 1-w, 1-nb) 4

Total (for 4 wickets, 60 overs) 138

Fall of wickets: 1-76, 2-88, 3-132, 4-132.

Did not bat: U Chandana, K Dharmasena, Dinusha Fernando, C Vaas, M Muralitharan.

Bowling: Hoggard 12-3-32-0, Johnson 12-4-33-0 (1-w), Flintoff 10-3-16-1, Collingwood 2-0-9-0 (1-nb), Batty 14-4-33-0, Giles 10-4-13-3.