Lyon impressed by Mendis masterclass

Nathan Lyon hailed the composure shown by Kusal Mendis after the 21-year-old batsman turned the first Test between Sri Lanka and Australia on its head with an impressive century on Thursday.

Published : Jul 29, 2016 12:12 IST

Kusal Mendis' innings helped Sri Lanka recover from a precarious position on the third day.

Nathan Lyon hailed the composure shown by Kusal Mendis after the 21-year-old batsman turned the >first Test between Sri Lanka and Australia on its head with a sensational innings.

>Report: Mendis' century pulls Sri Lanka out of rut

In only his seventh Test, Mendis almost single-handedly lifted Sri Lanka out of trouble on day three in Pallekele, striking 169 not out from 243 deliveries to move the host to 282 for 6 and a lead of 196.

Mendis' epic knock was all the more remarkable for the fact that he had only made one first-class century prior to Thursday and arrived at the crease with his side at 6 for 2 and with 22 wickets having gone down for 326 runs in the match.

'Credit where credit's due'

Australia off-spinner Lyon, who was able to celebrate his 200th Test wicket after dismissing Dhananjaya de Silva late in the day, said: "It's probably got a tad easier to bat, but you've got to give credit where credit's due. For the young fella [Mendis] to get 170, he's batted out of his skin, he's played extremely well.

"It's been a tough day for the bowlers, but the good thing about Test cricket [is] we'll bounce back tomorrow and look forward to taking the new ball and hopefully some early wickets."

Asked to define the most impressive aspect of Mendis' breakthrough innings, Lyon added: "I think just the composure. He's only 21 and the way he went about it [was impressive]. He had a simple gameplan and he stuck to it the whole day. Hats off to him - he batted extremely well."

Speaking through an interpreter, a smiling Mendis prompted laughter among the media when suggesting Sri Lanka would look to set Australia "the maximum possible, perhaps 400."

The youngster added: "When I walked into bat, it was very clear what my role was going to be, so I tried my level best and stuck to the plans. I wasn't thinking about the lead [of 86 Australia had after the first innings]. I went out and batted the way I would have batted in the first innings."

Australia's cause was hampered by an >injury to left-arm spinner Steve O'Keefe, who limped off with a hamstring problem. "I feel he [O'Keefe] was the biggest threat to the right-handers. It was a setback for Australia, for sure," said Mendis, who expects the wicket to provide increasing assistance to the slow bowlers on days four and five.

Lyon added: "I feel sorry for Steve. he's one of my good mates and to see him injure himself and for Australia to lose a vital member of our bowling attack, it's a pretty big loss for us."