10.2.2008
The Bulletin by Brydon Coverdale at the MCG
Australia v India, CB Series, 4th match, Melbourne
India
5 for 160 (Tendulkar 44) beat Australia 159 (Hussey 65*, Ishant
4-38) by five wickets
Scorecard
and ball-by-ball details
A
five-wicket win chasing 160 might seem a comfortable victory
but India made hard work of their success at the MCG, grinding
out their first triumph of the CB Series with less than
five overs to spare. Their youngest star Ishant Sharma set
up the small target and their oldest warrior Sachin Tendulkar
put their batting on track, but it was left to Rohit Sharma
and their captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni to complete the task.
Rohit
finished unbeaten on 39 and Dhoni was on 17 as Ricky Ponting
ran out of attacking options with only four specialist bowlers
in his line-up. The pair was in no hurry and for 13 overs
India scored only in singles as they battled from 3 for
93 to 5 for 118. While the match remained alive, the crowd
did not care that picket fences were being constructed on
the scoresheet instead of being cleared by towering sixes.
The
previous day in Wellington England were thrashed as New
Zealand chased down 131 with 20 overs to spare. But with
an extra 30 runs, a world-champion attack and helpful conditions
for the fast bowlers, Australia proved that low totals can
still make for gripping contests at the highest level.
It
was fitting that Dhoni was there at the end, as his aggressive
captaincy earlier in the day had put his side in a winning
position. He must have had moments of doubt though when
he watched his top order stumble. After India's Twenty20
thrashing at the hands of Australia less than a fortnight
ago Dhoni said the batsmen had forgotten their individual
roles. Similar problems were glimpsed in the 50-over format
until Dhoni and Rohit came together.
Things
were ticking along comfortably at 2 for 89 with Tendulkar
and Gautam Gambhir both looking dangerous. Gambhir was caught
when Brett Lee surprised him with extra bounce but Tendulkar
threw his wicket away by driving Mitchell Johnson to mid-off
on 44 as the runs began to dry up.
Still,
nothing silly was needed as they required less than three
an over with six wickets in hand. Unfortunately for India,
dot balls do not sit comfortably with Yuvraj Singh and the
superb tight bowling of Stuart Clark and Johnson tempted
him into folly. Yuvraj did not pick a slower one from Clark
and drove to short cover, which left India at 5 for 102
and handed the momentum back to Australia, albeit briefly.
Clark,
who for so long has been on the fringes of the ODI side,
highlighted his potential value with a ten-over collection
of 1 for 26 and Johnson was excellent with 2 for 24. But
it was Lee who put the frighteners into India, regularly
clocking over 150kph and generating some sharp bounce. His
figures of 1 for 41 suggested he was the weak link in Australia's
attack but it was his ferocity that sparked his colleagues.
His
figures ballooned after an early 12-run over when Tendulkar
drove him superbly straight and through cover for three
boundaries. Things might have been different had Rudi Koertzen
raised his finger when Tendulkar appeared to edge a Clark
legcutter to Gilchrist on 24; Gilchrist was extra frustrated
as Koertzen also failed to hear a thick edge off his own
bat in Australia's first over and wrongly adjudged him lbw.
Regardless
of how hard India made the chase look, Australia knew they
needed early wickets to defend such a small total. Ponting's
reluctance to push harder - during the second over Virender
Sehwag edged Nathan Bracken marginally wide of the sole
slip - made Australia's task even more difficult. Ponting
was out-captained by Dhoni.
Dhoni
realised the best way to rattle the world champions was
all-out attack and he juggled his three main strikers for
21 overs before thinking about spin. He backed the fast
men with an assortment of catchers, which forced Australia
into a different game-plan after Friday's thrashing of a
defensive Sri Lanka.
The
results spoke for themselves as Ishant had Matthew Hayden
caught behind following a pair of lucky slashes over the
three-man cordon and Ponting snared at first slip when he
was surprised by extra bounce. Between them, Ishant and
Harbhajan Singh have this season driven Ponting into what
by his high standards is a very rare slump.
A
lack of easy runs also frustrated Michael Clarke into a
loose flick straight to midwicket off Irfan Pathan after
Andrew Symonds edged behind to give Ishant his third. Australia
soon fell to 6 for 92.
Sreesanth,
who at 25 was the old man of India's pace attack, kept things
tight and fittingly it was he and Ishant who returned to
finish off the Australians after Michael Hussey and Lee
poked and prodded for a 53-run stand. Ishant was the pick,
finishing with 4 for 38, while Sreesanth complemented him
with 3 for 31 from nine overs.
Hussey's
unbeaten 65 was his first time past fifty in an ODI in nearly
a year. Most of his runs were sprinted ones and twos and
he found the boundary only four times, although a pull over
midwicket from a Sehwag delivery that wasn't that short
was particularly impressive.
But
Australia's pain had been inflicted long before and Hussey's
roll of sticking plaster ran out as the team's wounds gradually
gaped wider and wider. The only people who might have enjoyed
the game even less than Ponting's men would be Sri Lanka,
who on Tuesday face the conquerors of a team that beat them
by 128 runs in Sydney.
Courtesy -cricinfo
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