Chris Tremlett marked his return to the Rose Bowl with a Test-best haul to leave Sri Lanka on 177 for nine when rain forced an early close to the second day of the third and final Test here on Friday. Fast bowler Tremlett took six for 42 in 18.2 overs, surpassing his five for 87 against Australia in Perth in December -- a match that marked his return to Test duty following a three-year absence since his debut in 2007. The 29-year-old giant quick ripped through Sri Lanka\'s middle and lower order with four wickets for 16 runs in 32 balls here on Friday. Nevertheless Sri Lanka\'s total represented a revival from the depths of 39 for four. Dilhara Fernando was 33 not out and Chanaka Welegedara seven not out at stumps in a debut Test at the Rose Bowl that has been plagued by bad weather -- of the 180 overs scheduled for the first two days, only 61.2 have been bowled. England bowling coach David Saker was delighted by Tremlett\'s analysis, which followed the 6ft 7in paceman\'s successful Ashes tour. \"When he gets his length right, he’s a huge handful,\" Saker told reporters. \"He\'s challenging the stumps, the gloves, the splice of the bat. \"Batters really struggle against tall bowlers who keep hitting the splice regardless of length,\" the Australian explained. \"All you need then is a bit of sideways movement that brings the rest of the fielders into play, as well as lbws and bowleds. He\'s been exceptional in the last 12 months.\" Tremlett, who made his name at the Rose Bowl with southern county Hampshire before moving to Surrey last season, had helped bowl England to an innings and 14-run first Test win in Cardiff before the drawn second Test at Lord\'s. He\'d already exploited the assistance offered by a green-tinged pitch to take two for 17 in 11 overs on Thursday before Thilan Samaraweera and Prasanna Jayawardene kept England at bay. But, after rain meant no play before lunch Friday, Samaraweera could added seven to his overnight 24 before he was dismissed in Tremlett\'s first over of the day, caught in the gully by Kevin Pietersen to end a stand worth exactly fifty. Tremlett then had Thisara Perera edging an intended pull to wicketkeeper Matt Prior. Sri Lanka were now 91 for six, with Tremlett having taken two wickets for two runs in seven balls. Tremlett had his five-wicket haul when Rangana Herath top-edged a pull to James Anderson at fine leg. But Stuart Broad was unable to follow-up, the seam-bowling all-rounder too often harmlessly short. \"We do want him to be the enforcer in our team,\" Saker said of Broad, who so far in this match has taken none for 50 in 18 overs. \"There\'s probably no better bowler in the world at bowling bouncers as Stuart Broad. We like him when he\'s aggressive. We want him to be like that. \"He\'s been dreadfully unlucky and it\'s only a matter of time before he turns it around.\" Prasanna Jayawardene, who made a century in the first Test, repelled England\'s attack with several stylish shots on his way to 43. But England captain Andrew Strauss saw his move in bringing on Graeme Swann vindicated by just the off-spinner\'s second ball, which Prasanna Jayawardene slog-swept straight to Eoin Morgan at deep midwicket. Prasanna Jayawardene, in for nearly three hours, helped Fernando add 41 for the eighth wicket -- runs that could yet prove valuable -- before Tremlett\'s first ball back saw Suranga Lakmal caught behind for a duck.