Sri Lanka clinched a thumping 10-wicket victory over Bangladesh in the second Test match to win the series 1-0 as the Mominul Haque-led side fell to pieces from 156/5 to 169 all out in their second innings on Friday.
The series of collapse also saw nine of the Bangladesh batters going back to pavilion on Duck and with this the losing side also became the third team in Test history to have as many batsmen out for a score of zero in a longest format match. The previous two occasions were Sri Lankan batters against India in Chandigarh in 1990 and West Indies against Australia in Brisbane in 2000.
While Mahmudul Hasan Joy, Tamim Iqbal, Shakib Al Hasan, Mosaddek Hossain, Khaled Ahmed and Ebadot Hossain claimed ducks in the first innings, Tamim, captain Mominul Haque and Khaled Ahmed were dismissed for nought in the second innings of Bangladesh batting.
Meanwhile, Sri Lanka easily reached the target on the fifth and final day to finish 29-0 in three overs with Oshada Fernando hitting 21 off only nine balls. Captain Dimuth Karunaratne was 7 not out.
Fast bowler Asitha Fernando did most of the damage for Sri Lanka's bowlers, registering his first 10-wicket haul in a match with 4-93 in the first innings, followed by 6-51.
“We knew the top order was struggling in the first innings so we wanted to bowl line and length first,” said Sri Lanka wicketkeeper Niroshan Dickwella.
“With Asitha's pace and tactics with the short ball, we knew it would be hard for them. We wanted to spread the field, not to give easy runs. Then attack when possible." Shakib Al Hasan (58) and in-form Liton Das (52) earlier helped Bangladesh avoid an innings defeat though the damage had already been done.
“You won't win tests from 24-5 and 23-4 in both innings. We have to change something. It has happened too many times in the last six to eight months,” said Bangladesh head coach Russell Domingo.
“We are competing for four days and then have such a bad session that there's no way back. I am sure it is equally frustrating for the players. They are fighting back but getting behind the game at certain stages.” Resuming the day on 34-4 and still needing 107 runs to make Sri Lanka bat again, Bangladesh lost Mushfiqur Rahim (23) in the eighth over of the day when Kasun Rajitha (2-40) bowled him with a delivery that kept low.
Allrounder Shakib, who took 5-96 in the first innings, counterattacked to keep the scoreboard ticking.
Liton, after scoring 88 runs in the drawn first test and a career-best 141 in the first innings of this test, went slowly but smoothly to deny Sri Lanka bowlers' quest for another wicket.
The wicketkeeper-batter pushed left-arm spinner Praveen Jayawickrama through cover for a single to bring up 2,000 runs in his 33rd test.
Shakib reached his 27th half-century off 62 balls, whipping a delivery from off-spinner Dhananjaya de Silva through midwicket for a boundary on the stroke of lunch.
But soon after reaching his 13th fifty off 130 balls, Liton gave a return catch to Fernando and it sparked the collapse. Bangladesh's hopes of saving the test took a big hit when Shakib edged behind a delivery from Fernando after hitting seven fours in his 72-ball knock.
Fernando then cleaned up the tail to give Sri Lanka a small target to chase. Bangladesh chose to bat first and scored 365 in the first innings. Sri Lanka took control of the test and series after replying with 506.