It was another struggle for India's batsmen on tour |
India succumbed meekly to the pressure of a chase of 253 - a chase they
were required to nail to remain in serious contention in the triangular
series - and were bowled out for 165 by an Australia side that eagerly
grabbed the chance to seal its own spot in the competition deciders.
Short of a bonus-point victory in their final match against Sri Lanka
and a subsequent loss to the hosts by Mahela Jayawardene's flourishing
side, India will fly home earlier than desired from an Australia tour
that peaked all too early with Rahul Dravid's Bradman Oration and has
disintegrated steadily ever since.
Australia's stand-in captain Shane Watson compensated for a poor showing
with the bat by nipping out Virat Kohli and Suresh Raina, and generally
led his team soundly in the field in the absence of the injured Michael
Clarke. He had a bonus point victory in front of 33,639 spectators to
show for it.
The folding of India's batting was a familiar tale of patterns and
misadventures. Virender Sehwag extended his horrid run on tour by
punching a return-catch to Ben Hilfenhaus, Sachin Tendulkar found
another way to fall short of 100 international centuries when he was
run-out after a mid-pitch collision with Brett Lee, and Gautam Gambhir
battled for fluency then dragged Clint McKay onto the stumps.
All this rather undercut the efforts of the touring bowlers, who had
done well to restrict Australia to 9 for 252. India were given a fine
start by the intelligent and miserly bowling of Praveen Kumar, whose
opening spell of six overs harvested two wickets at a cost of 14 runs,
including only one boundary. Umesh Yadav also made a mark with his speed
and aggression.
Praveen's victims included Shane Watson, playing his first international
of the summer as Australia's stand-in captain while Michael Clarke
recovers from a flare-up of the back trouble that has been an
intermittent problem across his career. Australia have now had four
captains of the national side in various formats this summer - Clarke,
George Bailey, Ricky Ponting and Watson.
David Warner fared the best of the batsmen, striking his way to 68 from
66 balls before skying Ravindra Jadeja. Suresh Raina claimed the catch
despite a heavy collision with Irfan Pathan that left both fielders laid
out on the outfield. Matthew Wade and Hussey also chimed in, but the
latter was perhaps fortunate to get past 17.
Running a single, Hussey held out his hand to block Suresh Raina's
return from the edge of the fielding circle - whether this was an
attempt to simply prevent getting hit was unclear - and MS Dhoni
immediately appealed either for handling the ball or the recently
changed laws for obstructing the field, which forbid a batsman from
changing his running line to intercept a ball headed for the stumps.
After a lengthy television consultation the appeal was rejected, much to
the consternation of the visitors. They exchanged plenty of words with
Hussey when he was dismissed, 37 runs later.
On a night when a rapid half-century might have set his side on the path
to victory, Sehwag's exit in the second over arrived courtesy of a fine
Hilfenhaus take, scooping up a low catch near his ankles. Tendulkar and
Gambhir prospered briefly against the new ball, but when the former was
called through for a single, both he and Lee ran in more or less the
same direction. Lee's pursuit of the ball ended when he saw David Warner
in better position, and Tendulkar had his path interrupted by the
bowler as Warner threw down the stumps.
Kohli again hinted at a decent score, only to be undone when Watson
introduced himself to the attack. Following Lee, Watson's seamers were
noticeably slower, and the reduction in pace had Kohli playing too early
as he looped a catch to Daniel Christian.
McKay ended Gambhir's cussed stay, and Watson struck again when he
angled the ball across Raina to induce a simple edge to Matthew Wade.
Ravindra Jadeja fell in a similar manner, though his edge from Daniel
Christian flew to Watson at first slip, where he held on to the catch
having earlier grassed a chance to pouch Dhoni.
For as long as Dhoni remained at the crease India had a chance, however
slight, so there was plenty of relief in Australia's huddle when
Hilfenhaus pinned him in front of the stumps for a painstaking 14. The
rest melted away.
The match appeared destined for a closer contest when Australia's early
progress was slowed by Praveen's wiles, though more runs were collected
from Pathan at the other end. Watson pulled at a delivery shaping away
from him and managed only to spoon a catch to mid-on, while Peter
Forrest fell to a slower delivery that he dragged onto the stumps.
Warner's innings provided the hosts with some momentum, but he lost
Michael Hussey due to a running mix-up, and his own bright stay was
ended by Jadeja. David Hussey's reprieve offered him and Wade the chance
to regather the innings, which they did well enough in a stand of 94.
Wade's stay was ended when he steered a swift Yadav delivery into
Dhoni's gloves, before Hussey fell to the same combination, snicking
behind in his attempt to pull Yadav from outside off stump. The fact
that Hussey appeared to walk did little to soothe India's frustration
about the earlier incident.
Clint McKay was not long in staying before he wafted at Virender Sehwag
and was stumped, and late blows from Christian and Xavier Doherty took
the tally past 250. It looked a mediocre total, but then there have been
times on this tour when India would have given much to achieve such
mediocrity. So it would be again this night.
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