Moeen Ali was England's most successful bowler with four wickets

First Test, Galle (day two) England 342 (Foakes 107) & 38-0: Jennings 26* Sri Lanka 203: Mathews 52; Moeen 4-66, Rashid 2-30, Leach 2-41 England lead by 177 runs Scorecard

England bowled out Sri Lanka on day two of the first Test to move into a dominant position in Galle.

Debutant Ben Foakes reached his first Test century before falling for 107 as England added 21 to their overnight total to post 342.

The tourists then produced a fine all-round bowling performance, with Moeen Ali taking 4-66, to bowl the hosts out for 203 in 68 overs.

England reached 38-0 at the close, 177 runs ahead.

Jack Leach and Adil Rashid took two wickets each for England, with seamers James Anderson and Sam Curran getting one apiece.

Sri Lanka were 64-4 at lunch before a patient partnership of 75 between Dinesh Chandimal and Angelo Mathews, which was ended when Rashid dismissed Chandimal for 33 shortly before tea.

Moeen then had Mathews caught at short leg from the first ball after tea and the final five wickets fell in 18.3 overs in the evening session.

England are now in a strong position to secure their first overseas Test victory since October 2016 and end a 13-game winless run away from home.

England's spinners shine

England have not won any of their past four away Test series - drawing against Bangladesh and losing to India, Australia and New Zealand

England's first-innings total had looked like a par score at best but their bowlers have put Joe Root's side in one of their most dominant positions in an overseas Test in recent years.

The team's quick bowlers are expected to play a less significant role in this series as spin comes to the fore but Anderson had Dimuth Karunaratne caught behind from the second ball of the hosts' innings.

For a few overs at least, both he and Sam Curran, who shared the new ball, found a hint of swing; the latter trapped Kaushal Silva lbw in the fourth over.

Once the swing stopped, Root introduced his spinners, with Jack Leach coming into the attack after the seventh over, and all three impressed.

Playing in his second Test, Leach bowled accurately and had Kusal Mendis caught at slip for his first wicket of the match, while Moeen bowled Dhananjaya de Silva in his first over shortly before lunch.

Mathews and Chandimal offered some resistance but then Rashid produced a fine leg-spinner that dipped and turned sharply to have Chandimal stumped.

After tea Moeen then turned the game decisively in England's favour. He took the three quick wickets of Mathews, Niroshan Dickwella and Akila Dananjaya before Leach and Rashid returned to take the final two wickets.

Leach and Moeen did the majority of the work throughout the day, bowling 39 overs combined to Rashid's nine, but all three were impressive.

Foakes impresses with bat and gloves

Ben Foakes became the fifth wicketkeeper to make a century on Test debut

Foakes had done the majority of the work needed to reach his century on day one by helping his team recover from 103-5 to close on 321-8, and without him England's dominant position would not have been possible.

He had been calm throughout his first day in Test cricket and continued in that vein on day two, stroking the first ball of the day for four through extra cover.

Leach was dismissed with Foakes on 95, increasing the possibility of Foakes being left stranded before reaching three figures but Anderson survived the remainder of the over, giving Foakes the chance to reach the landmark.

The Surrey wicketkeeper-batsman then pulled a boundary behind square on the leg side to move to 99 and hit a fine back-foot drive through mid-on to complete his century from 200 balls.

In doing so he became only the second England wicketkeeper to score a hundred on his debut - following Matt Prior in 2007 - and just the fifth wicketkeeper to do so for any team in Tests.

He then claimed the joint-fastest dismissal by a keeper on his Test debut when taking a catch off Anderson to dismiss Karunaratne on the second ball of the hosts' innings.

Foakes also showed good glovework to stump Chandimal off Rashid and took a smart catch when standing up to the stumps as Moeen claimed the scalp of Akila.

Sri Lanka fall flat

For Sri Lanka this was a seriously disappointing day.

The hosts had England in trouble at 103-5 on day one but might now need rain to avoid defeat.

Their batsmen seemed not to learn from the wickets of the England top order on day one, with a number of them also falling to attacking shots.

Dhananjaya departed in a similar fashion to Ben Stokes on day one, trying to sweep fine but getting bowled around his legs, and Chandimal, struggling with an injury, came aggressively down the pitch and was stranded out of his ground.

And where England's lower order - Foakes, Curran and Rashid notably - were able to drag the tourists to a respectable total, Sri Lanka's final batsmen fell chipping to close fielders.

Analysis

Former England captain Michael Vaughan on The Cricket Social

Outstanding from England. They have played the proper way since lunch on the first day and Sri Lanka need rain or streakers from here.

England can go and bat for the whole day tomorrow. Get one or two players to 100 - that can give them confidence for the rest of the tour and beyond.

Take out the first session - England's last five sessions have been high class.

The pitch will only get worse to bat on. England will have to go some way to allow Sri Lanka to get back into the Test match.

England gave Rangana Herath a guard of honour when he walked to the crease to bat in his final Test match

'I was nervous when Jimmy came out' - reaction

England spinner Jack Leach, speaking to BBC Sport: "A great day. It couldn't have gone much more to plan really. The guys had a word and said we did what we set out to do today.

"Foakesy got his hundred which was great and we got as many runs as we could, and then it was a case of trying to build some pressure on them and get some early inroads. We managed to do that, Jimmy and Sammy bowled brilliantly and that took a lot of pressure off us spinners.

"Mo, Rash and myself bowled well. Mo deserved his four wickets. It was great to be involved in that group of spinners, I really enjoyed it.

"I feel like we complement each other nicely. We have a good relationship off the field which helps, we are always trying to bounce ideas off each other. It's a fun group to be part of with Saqqy [England's spin bowling coach Saqlain Mushtaq] as well. It's been good so far."

England centurion Ben Foakes, speaking to Sky Sports: "I was pretty calm this morning and I got a bit nervous when Jimmy Anderson came out with five to go. It was meant to be my day!

"It was amazing to get a hundred - such a relief and a great feeling. My brother got here last night. That's amazing and my mum is getting here in about an hour.

"Getting a few runs settled me down and with Jimmy bowling you know you're in the game, so to get a catch early was great. As the wicket dried out it is spinning more and staying low. It's tricky."