Key events
Lunch: England lead by 97 runs
The wicket means the players will go off for lunch. Sri Lanka are fighting hard here, and Kumaraâs impassioned celebration showed how much this match means, dead rubber or not.
WICKET! England 35-2 (Pope b Kumara 7)
Goddim on the stroke of lunch! Lahiru Kumara, on for Rathnayake, has picked up Ollie Pope with his fourth ball. Pope tried to steer it to third man but was cramped by the seam movement and deflected the ball onto the stumps. Thatâs a really good piece of bowling, even if Pope is fuming with himself.
7th over: England 35-1 (Lawrence 20, Pope 7) Popeâs first boundary is a beauty, cuffed elegantly off the hip when Asitha drops fractionally short. Later in the over heâs surprised by a bit of extra bounce but manages to drop the ball safely on the leg side for a single. Josh Hull wonât be much fun to face in the fourth innings if the pitch gets more uneven.
5th over: England 29-1 (Lawrence 19, Pope 2) Lawrence hurtles down the track, tries to slam Rathnayake into the crowd at extra cover and misses. âItâs opening batting, Jim, but not as we know itâ¦â says Mike Atherton on Sky. Nine minutes till lunch.
âWith that Duckett dismissal, over the two innings since Brook got out England have lost eight for not very many completely unnecessarily,â says Felix Wood. âBy taking it down to ultra attacking from reckless they could have been so far ahead in the game that a handsome win would be assured. On another day Pope would have got out early or on 30 or 60 or 90 or 120 and theyâd be a long way behind. Theyâre a bowler down so need big runs not quick runs now, and Iâm not sure theyâre focused enough to play more than one way.â
Itâs the last day of term and theyâve come to school in their football kit. This has surely been their most indulgent batting performance since the first innings at Lordâs last summer but, while I donât love it, I can understand why it has happened.
5th over: England 28-1 (Lawrence 18, Pope 2) Lawrence gets his second boundary with a smooth swivel pull off Asitha. It went flat, hard and only just bounced inside the rope. Pope then chases a very wide delivery and is beaten.
âThe problem is, in some ways, Mo retiring from international cricket doesnât feel real or definite,â says Matt Dony. âEveryone keeps saying heâs such selfless and nice and team-oriented guy, you almost feel like, should he get a phone call, he would willingly join up with the squad. A fairly unique, life-affirming cricketer person.â
4th over: England 22-1 (Lawrence 13, Pope 1) âWith a record of 0 from 9 DRS reviews, Ollie Popeâs record is heading towards statistical significance,â writes Brian Withington. âMuch more of this and we will be moving into Stuart Broad territory where the most reliable tactic is to go with the opposite of whatever he thinks. Of course this will require some rigorous design to ensure that Popeâs âdecisionâ is not influenced by the prior knowledge that it will be reversed. A veritable field day for Bayesians.â
3rd over: England 20-1 (Lawrence 12, Pope 0) That might be the first time in Test history that an opener has been caught at mid-on inside the first three overs. It wasnât a good shot, and maybe he was a bit too frivolous, I donât know. What was it Dolly Parton said about rainbows?
WICKET! England 20-1 (Duckett c Vishwa b Asitha 7)
Asitha beats Lawrence, then draws a leading edge that flies safely past gully for two. A thicker edge yields two more, taking Lawrence into double figures from his ninth ball. In the first innings he made 5 from 21.
That was then and this is now. He charges Asitha and drags a reasonably disgusting hack through square leg for a single.
England are playing a shot a ball. But now Duckett has fallen very tamely, mistiming a drive straight to mid-on.
2nd over: England 15-0 (Duckett 7, Lawrence 7) Dhananjaya has given the new ball to Milan Rathnayake, preferring his discipline to Lahiru Kumaraâs pace. After a couple of sighters, Lawrence charges down the pitch to thump a thrilling boundary over extra cover. Shot!
The next ball, on the pads, is tucked easily behind square for three. No idea how long it will last but this has to be the right approach for Lawrence. Itâs always the correct approach for Duckett, who wallops a pull through midwicket for four to complete the over.
1st over: England 4-0 (Duckett 3, Lawrence 0) Duckett is busy from ball one, taking three off the first two balls. Lawrence runs down the pitch to his first delivery from Asitha, which suggests heâs not going to die wondering. The ball hits him on the hip and runs away for a leg-bye. The rest is dots.
âJust what is it about cricket?â says Simon McMahon. âIâm pretty sure I wonât feel the same way as I do now about Moeenâs retirement when I hear that Ronaldo has finally decided to call it a day. But maybe thatâs just me.â
Not sure Ronaldo is the best comparison, although Moeen is also notorious for posting those topless selfies in the gym.
Lunch is at 1.45pm so Englandâs openers have around 40 minutes to survive bat. Here they come: Ben Duckett and, probably for the last time as opener, Dan Lawrence.
Loads of love for Moeen today, and quite right too.
John Swan âTotally agree with you about Moeen Ali. A perfect example of when stats donât come close to telling the whole story. That classical cover drive, the effortless muscle over long on, the strangely enjoyable both-arms-aloft bowling action, plus I donât recall him dropping anything in the field. I have a slight (Thorpe-influenced, Iâll admit) tear in my eye at the thought that we wonât see him again.â
Brian Withington âI wholeheartedly concur with all the positive sentiment about Moeen Ali. I shall really miss those quintessential came(M)os for England: an elegant 29 in quick time; a couple of overs taking a key wicket; a bit of sage advice in the field; and a fleeting appearance in the group celebration before the corks start flying. Itâs almost like he never sought or wanted the limelight but was just there whenever needed. Great team man. Great guy.â
James Brough âItâs a sad day to know weâve seen the last of Mo in an England shirt. I was at Headingley in 2017 on the fourth day against West Indies with a blind friend. She would go to matches with a little portable radio and listen to TMS. Her batteries failed and I spent the last session giving her ball by ball commentary. Moeen made 84 at a run a ball and was an absolute joy to describe. It was one of the most enjoyable couple of hours Iâve spent at a cricket match, looking for the right words to describe effortless cover drives and flicks through midwicket by a man who could make batting look as easy as anyone Iâve ever seen. Go well, Mo. Youâll always have a place in my heart for that afternoon.â
âMoeenâs announcement took me back to the time I met him â at an airport lounge in Abu Dhabi, back in 2016,â says John Bailey. âWe lived in Singapore at the time and were flying home for Christmas. We managed to blag our way into the Etihad lounge and found an empty section so our then 18 month-old toddler could run around without bothering anyone.
âNo sooner had we arrived than the whole England cricket team filed in â they were on their way home from India. Joe Root almost trod on our daughter as she darted across in front of him, and Alastair Cook gave me a lovely smile as I ran to pick her up. As they settled in around us, I found myself behind Moeen at the breakfast bar, my daughter on my hip. I couldnât resist telling him that this little girl had watched his century in Rajkot a few days earlier, sitting on my knee in Singapore and clapping wildly every time the camera cut to the crowd applauding him.
âHe was very relaxed and friendly and I still have a great photo of my daughter pointing at his beard as he smiles back at her â sheâd never seen anything like it. What a genuinely good guy. Heâs given cricket lovers a lot of enjoyment and some great moments. Best of luck in his coaching career.â
âGod knows Bazball can be infuriating but five debutant fifers in two years is incredible,â writes Max Williams. âBeing part of this team must be the best thing in the world.â
The fact even Jimmy and Stuart Broad describe it as the most enjoyable period of their careers says everything.
England lead by 62 runs Theyâve had a good morning, taking the last five wickets for 43. Josh Hull and Olly Stone took three wickets apiece, with Stone the pick of the attack. But it was Hull who had us all looking at the ceiling.
WICKET! Sri Lanka 263 all out (Avisha c Smith b Bashir 11)
Asitha slog-sweeps Bashir for four, then gloves a reverse sweep up in the air. Jamie Smith runs round to take an easy catch. Asitha reviewed but replays showed the ball hit the wristband that is attached to his glove.
61st over: Sri Lanka 259-9 (Kumara 5, Asitha 7) Kumara fences Stone just short of Pope at gully. The umpires went upstairs to check but it clearly bounced in front. Iâm not sure Pope even appealed.
England do appeal for caught behind when Kumara smears across the line. Ben Duckett started to run off the field, assuming it was out, but Ollie Popeâs latest review was unsuccessful. It hit Kumara on the shoulder of the body, not the bat..
60th over: Sri Lanka 257-9 (Kumara 4, Asitha 6) Asitha chips Bashir over midwicket for two, continuing this mildly irritating last-wicket partnership. Lunch is an hour away so England will want to get batting asap, especially as the sun has just come out.
âI would like to bring up the slip catch by one Joe Root,â says Mark Slater. âIs there not a England record for catches by outfielders, and does Root not now share it? It was a subject mentioned during the previous Test.â
Heâs now on 201 catches, behind only Mahela Jayawardene (205) and Rahul Dravid (210) among outfielders. I think he took the England record a couple of years ago.
59th over: Sri Lanka 254-9 (Kumara 3, Asitha 0) Kumara almost copies Rathnayakeâs dismissal when he swishes at fresh air outside off stump, then clunks a pull into the leg side for a single.
Blimey, the No11 Asitha charges down the track to clout Stone back over his head for four. Sri Lanka trail by 71.
58th over: Sri Lanka 249-9 (Kumara 2, Asitha 0) Shoaib Bashir replaces Josh Hull, who bowled an impressive spell of 6-0-27-2 either side of the rain break. Asitha misses a couple of disgusting smears across the line.
57th over: Sri Lanka 248-9 (Kumara 1, Asitha 0) Olly Stone has quietly had an impressive return to Test cricket, and with Mark Wood injured he has a good chance of playing in Pakistan.
WICKET! Sri Lanka 248-9 (Rathnayake c Smith b Stone 7)
Oh yes, this is excellent, merciless bowling from Olly Stone. Rathnayake, a very good lower-order batter, was smashed on the armguard and then the glove by nasty deliveries. That meant he was in no position to drive the sucker ball, fuller and wider, and he nicked it through to Jamie Smith.
56th over: Sri Lanka 248-8 (Rathnayake 7, Kumara 1) Rathnayake tries to uppercut a Hull bouncer that beats him and Jamie Smith behind the stumps. Kumara is beaten by a length delivery later in the over. Hullâs figures belong to an ODI circa 1991: 11-0-53-3.
âFor me the perfect example of Moeenâs selflessness was promoting himself to No3 during the last Ashes to protect Harry Brook,â says Mark Hooper. âIf you look at the figures it looks like he failed, but for the better of the team. It might be apocryphal but I love the story that he replied to his surprise recall to the England team by texting Stokes back âLOLâ.â
Yep, spot on. I donât think he ever explicitly stated it was to protect Brook, but we all know what Moeenâs like. Itâs no exaggeration to say that England would have lost, maybe been hammered, had he not moved up to No3. It was great that he had that partnership with Zak Crawley at Old Trafford and especially his spell on the final day at The Oval. I think weâll remember him as much for his decency as his wonderful elegance.
55th over: Sri Lanka 243-8 (Rathnayake 6, Kumara 1) Stone is brought on to replace Woakes and steal wickets from a 20-year-oldâs table. He almost does just that when Kumara fences a good delivery just short of the slips. A maiden.
âI will miss Moeen,â says Matt Emerson. âLike Graham Thorpe he was a selfless player and put the needs of the team before his own. I wish him a peaceful non-playing career. Oh, and itâs raining in Guildford. Expect an early lunch to be taken about 12.30.â
54th over: Sri Lanka 243-8 (Rathnayake 6, Kumara 1) Since Baz and Ben took over in 2022, five England bowlers have taken five-fors on debut: Will Jacks, Rehan Ahmed, Josh Tongue, Tom Hartley and Gus Atkinson. Before that there had been three in the previous 19 years.
Hull should be one wicket away from joining the list â but Olly Stone has just dropped a straightforward chance. The whole thing was weird: a full toss that Kumara spooned miles in the air towards long leg. Stone ran in, tried to catch it with a reverse cup and made a mess of it. There was no need to reverse his hands.
âSad to hear of Moeenâs retirement,â says Colum Fordham. âHis Gower-like cover drives, probing off-spin bowling and excellent fielding made him, as well as his humble demeanour, one of the most endearing and engaging cricketers on the world stage. I feel England may have missed a trick by leaving him out of the T20 team. I think Moeen still had/has much to offer in this format.â
I think itâs the right decision: heâs 37 and there were times in the last year or so when he almost felt like a specialist vice-captain. That sounds harsh, which wasnât the intention, but he has been fairly peripheral for a while. Time to look at Jacob Bethell in the middle order, maybe Sam Curran too.
53rd over: Sri Lanka 238-8 (Rathnayake 2, Kumara 0) Woakes bowls a few deliveries across Rathnayake, then gets one to swing back sharply to hit him on the glove. A maiden.
âI canât help but be reminded of another raw bowler, picked as a bit of an unknown, whose action looked in need of coaching, but who possessed the priceless ability to move the ball in the air and off the seam at decent pace,â writes Gary Naylor. âHe had a few bumps along the way, but he ironed things out and did okay. Maybe, up on the balcony this afternoon, Jimmy Anderson can tell Josh Hull about him.â
He was sharp at the start, wasnât he? We tend to forget that.
52nd over: Sri Lanka 238-8 (Rathnayake 2, Kumara 0) Tell you what folks, we might have found one here. For all the talk of pace and height, itâs the swing that really makes him dangerous. Well, that and the height, the left-arm angle and the potential pace.
âIâve seen quite a bit of Hull over the past couple of years at Leicester and heâs definitely capable of bowling over 85mph,â says Mike Daniels. âThatâll probably come as he relaxes into Test cricket.
âHeâs increased his run up this year, he had a shorter one previously. I think theyâve (Leicester) worked on a longer run up to help him get through the crease and maintaining body height to offset a tendency to âheaveâ the ball at the batter and lose body shape.
âHeâs only twenty and nowhere near the finished article but has enormous potential. Heâs a nice lad as well.â
You could argue his potential is unprecedented in English cricket. I know we have Reece Topley but heâs never been a serious contender for the Test team because of his injuries.
WICKET! Sri Lanka 238-8 (Vishwa LBW b Hull 0)
A classic left-arm swing bowlerâs dismissal. Hull curves a lovely delivery back into Vishwa, who misses a defensive push and is trapped plumb in front. Thatâs just lovely bowling, and Hull has a sniff of a debut five-for.
51st over: Sri Lanka 237-7 (Rathnayake 1, Vishwa 0) Woakes spears four byes down the leg side – Smith had no chance â then digs in a lovely bouncer that is gloved into the leg side by Vishwa.
âI wish Mo all the best now heâs called it a day for England,â writes Guy Hornsby. âSomeone who always seemed to play the game for the right reasons and put the team before himself, even when he was messed around. A beautiful, if mercurial player who seemed to be lauded for his strokeplay and singled out by many when he failed in ways that felt unfair to me. His book was really interesting, and seeing how he navigated the game and succeeded as a Muslim is something I hope inspires many after him. One of the good guys.â
Another thing I always loved about Moeen is his aversion to bee ess. His interviews were always so candid, particularly when he and/or England had played crap.
WICKET! Sri Lanka 233-7 (Kamindu c Root b Woakes 64)
Thatâll do! Chris Woakes starts with a really good delivery that Kamindu, pushing defensively, edges to Root at first slip. The line and length were perfect, angled across the left-hander from over the wicket, and Kamindu had to play.
50th over: Sri Lanka 233-6 (Kamindu 64, Rathnayake 1) Kamindu Mendis turns Hull fractionally short of the man at leg slip, then shapes to hook a bouncer before wisely deciding against it. The ball beats everyone and flies away for five wides.
This is a menacing start from Hull. The next delivery swings away to take the edge and fly through the vacant gully region at catchable height. Four runs but a moral victory for Hull against a seriously good player. As Stuart Broad points out, Mendisâs weight was back because of the bouncer which was why he edged the drive.
Lunch has been pushed back to 1.45pm. Josh Hull is about to resume with the ball.
Play will restart at 11.50am
No word of a lie.
âAs to nicknames for Josh, simply calling him Rod doesnât seem surreal enough,â writes Kim Thonger (again). âIâd be calling him Emu because of his height as well.â
Isnât the unofficial rule of nicknames that there should only be one degree of separation?
âIâm sure the question on everyoneâs lips is, is Josh Hull related to Rod Hull of Emu fame?â asks Kim Thonger. âAnd does he also have a grudge against plain speaking Yorkshire folk?â
I didnât realise until recently that Rod Hull died because he wanted to watch Man Utd in the Champions League. I knew he was adjusting his aerial but didnât know it was so that he could watch Henning Berg v Ronaldo. It almost sounds made up. Poor bloke.
Rain stops play
Darn it.
49th over: Sri Lanka 223-6 (Kamindu 59, Rathnayake 1) Gus Atkinson has a tight quad which is why heâs off the field. The fielder is Jordan Cox, the next cab off the battingt rank and a magnificent fielder.
The next batter Rathnayake chases a very wide, very full delivery from Woakes and is beaten. Two left-handers at the crease now, though not for long because it has just started raining. Rathnayake is beaten again by the last ball of the over.
48th over: Sri Lanka 221-6 (Kamindu 58, Rathnayake 1) Hullâs figures are 7-0-36-2; thereâs plenty to like.
âThe England team seems to be referring to Josh Hull as âHullyâ,â writes Stephen Cottrell. âSurely theyâre missing some great opportunities here. I donât expect that Ollie Pope is a huge rugby league fan, but what about âKingstonâ or âKRâ. For my generation, anyone with the surname Hull would automatically be âRodâ.
WICKET! Sri Lanka 220-6 (Dhananjaya c Bashir b Hull 69)
Well bowled Josh Hull! He has bounced out Sri Lankaâs captain Dhananjaya de Silva, who top-edged a hook high towards Bashir at long leg. He took the catch a little awkwardly, falling to his left, but held on as he hit the ground.
Thatâs Hullâs second Test wicket but in a way itâll feel like the first, because it was a proper dismissal. The line was perfect, far enough outside off stump that Dhananjaya couldnât control his hook shot.
47th over: Sri Lanka 214-5 (Dhananjaya 64, Kamindu 57) Gus Atkinson is off the field, which is probably a factor in Josh Hull opening the bowling. Chris Woakes opens at the other end, taking a few deliveries to find his line before swinging a good delivery back into Kaminduâs midriff. A maiden.
âMo retiring is bad day for cricket – what a delight he was â but a good day for Wilfred Rhodes,â says Pete Salmon. âMo never did bat at 10 or 11, so Our Wilf keeps his record.â
For now: Ben Stokes has batted everywhere except No2.
46th over: Sri Lanka 214-5 (Dhananjaya 64, Kamindu 57) England open the bowling with Josh Hull, which depending on your perspective is either a) a clever way of boosting his confidence or b) two stiff fingers in the direction of Mother Cricket. He starts well, getting some nice some outswing to the left-hander Kamindu, who thick edges a good delivery wide of the cordon for a single.
âAstonishing that Moeen Ali played 298 times for England: 68 Tests, 138 ODIs and 92 T20s,â says Andrew Goudie. âUltimate team player.â
It was a unique career, wasnât it? Yes, yes, I know all careers are unique, strictly speaking. But I canât think of any that resemble Moeenâs.
Play is about to begin. For how long, we know not, so letâs enjoy it while it lasts.
Who wants the TMS overseas link? Whatâs it worth?
Today’s schedule
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Morning 11am-1.15pm
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Afternoon 1.55-4.10pm
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Evening 4.30-6.30pm
On-the-nose musical interlude
Barney Ronay on Josh Hull
You could â and some will â call Hullâs selection the most damning statement of thanks-but-no-thanks ever directed at county cricket. Picking him is literally saying, there is nothing to be gained from succeeding in this. We will instead pick a 20-year-old with 16 wickets at 62 because we like how he looks. How are you meant to feel about this if youâre a 27-year-old with hard-earned county numbers, winning games every week, running through the pain, dreaming of a bigger stage?
There were more issues with the light yesterday, including a weird few minutes in which Chris Woakes was obliged to bowl four balls of offspin. Hereâs what Olly Stone made of it all.
âImran Khan played 48 of his 88 Tests at No7 and averaged 35,â writes Gary Naylor. âHeâd be in the conversation. Shaun Pollock played half his 108 Tests from number 8 and averaged 31 there!â
Imran is in almost every conversation about great cricketers, isnât he? I do think he played his best cricket at No6, though he was still a giant.
âHi Rob,â writes Marcus Abdullahi. âBatters to average over 40 batting at 7 (min 20 Tests) from highest average to lowest: de Kock, Gilchrist, Greg Matthews, Litton Das, Chris Cairns, Wasim Raja, Alan Knott, Matt Prior and IT Botham.â
Thatâs a good list. Litton Das has played some extraordinary innings in that position.
And now itâs over to Andrew Miller for the weather
I think weâll start on time, but thereâs a yellow weather warning from 2pm, so thereâs that.
International cricket lost a bit of charm overnight when Moeen Ali announced his retirement from all forms. His England career is hard to summarise, isnât it? He could exhilarate and frustrate in equal measure; he was Englandâs most elegant left-hander since David Gower; he was too unselfish for his own good; and he was â for richer and poorer â a beacon of humanity. Moeen has an endearing honesty and self-awareness, as shown by his own assessment of his career.
I hope people remember me as a free spirit. I played some nice shots and some bad shots, but hopefully people enjoyed watching me.
He wasnât a great player, but he leaves cricket in a better place than he found it. And the extent of his influence on British-Asian cricketers may not become apparent for another 10 or 15 years.
Ali Martinâs day two report
The lower order clearly had licence to thrash and Sri Lanka, re-energised after that tricky first day, were getting the old ball to swing. But among the array of swipes that accelerated things was a curious innings from Harry Brook. So often appearing already set when he arrives at the crease, Brook was instead jumpy here, surviving one howling drop in the deep by Asitha Fernando on 12 before crashing a wide ball to short cover.
Preamble
Shall we try that one again? England were very poor yesterday, but they are still in a reasonable position to complete a clean sweep. Sri Lanka will resume on 211 for 5, a deficit of 114, with Dhananjaya de Silva on 64 and Kamindu Mendis on 54.
Letâs talk about Kamindu. Apart from Adam Gilchrist, has there been a better regular No7 in Test cricket? By that I mean the quality of the player when they were a regular No7. You can make a case for Ian Botham in the late seventies and early eighties and also Quinton de Kock, but Kamindu is in the conversation. And while Gilchrist is the best, Kamindu is probably the most classical No7 weâve seen.
While he is at the crease, assumptions of an England victory â and they are widespread, even among those who were most criticial of Englandâs confused, slightly indulgent performance yesterday â look dangerous.