Mike
Hussey bowed out of Test cricket with a win, when he guided Australia
to a five-wicket victory over Sri Lanka Sunday, giving the home side a
clean sweep of the three-match series.
Left-hander Hussey, playing in his 79th and final Test
after announcing his international retirement, got his team over the
line after the loss of five wickets on a tense fourth day at the Sydney
Cricket Ground.
The 37-year-old provided the steadying hand as Australia made hard work of running down 141 runs for victory on a turning pitch.
At the close Hussey was unbeaten on 27, while Mitchell Johnson hit the winning run to end on one not out.
Left-arm spinner Rangana Herath
had earlier threatened to bowl the Sri Lankans to their first-ever Test
victory in Australia at the 13th attempt. He finished with three
wickets for 47.
Young Australian fast bowler Jackson Bird was named man of the match with seven wickets and skipper Michael Clarke was picked as man of the series.
The umpires stunned the crowd when they took tea with just five runs
left to decide the Test, leaving onlookers with a sense of anti-climax.
The tourists were all out for 278 in their second innings earlier in the day as Dinesh Chandimal prolonged the resistance, batting with the tail in a defiant unbeaten knock of 62 off 106 balls with 11 fours.
Chandimal shared in a fighting 41-run last-wicket stand with Nuwan
Pradeep off 74 balls to give the tourists some vital extra runs and make
things uncomfortable for the Australian batsmen on a turning pitch.
Herath was bowled by Bird for 10 and Suranga Lakmal swung wildly and was cleaned up by Johnson for a duck.
Johnson finished with three for 34 and Bird captured three for 76.
Sri Lanka got an early reward when the threatening David Warner was out first ball.
He was caught in the slips by Mahela Jayawardene off paceman Lakmal's
first delivery for a duck, with the Australians going to lunch at 13
for one.
Phil Hughes hit four boundaries but never looked set, and was next
out leg before wicket on review to Herath for 34 off 49 balls.
Captain Michael Clarke used his feet and crease well against the wily Sri Lanka spinners as Australia's score crept along.
Herath and Tillakaratne Dilshan tied down the batsmen, although a big
lbw shout from Herath was turned down on review when Clarke was on 13.
But Dilshan got the skipper's prized wicket when he was caught off
bat and pad for 29, bringing Hussey to the wicket in his final Test
innings to a standing ovation.
Ed Cowan was out in the next over, lbw to Herath for 36 with 33 needed for victory.
First-innings centurion Matthew Wade was bowled by Herath for nine,
setting up a fairytale finish for Hussey to be there for the win.
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