5.2.2008
The Bulletin by Jamie Alter
50
overs India 267 for 4 (Gambhir 102*, Dhoni 88*) v Sri Lanka.
No result due to rain
Scorecard
and ball-by-ball details
For
the second match running, a faithful Brisbane crowd was
denied a full day of cricket as further inclement weather
washed out the second match of the CB Series, this time
between India and Sri Lanka. What they were treated to,
in India's uninterrupted innings, was the prototype of the
perfectly-paced ODI century from Gautam Gambhir in only
the second battle between these two teams on Australian
soil.
It
was all happening during a compelling 50 overs of cricket,
where Gambhir and Mahendra Singh Dhoni breathed life back
into an innings that looked to have suffered a coronary
attack by the halfway mark, putting on 184 for the fifth
wicket to take India to a commanding 267 for 4. The average
score at the Gabba in the last five ODIs has been 233 and
India would have fancied their chances at recording a record
50th win over Sri Lanka, but the rain had other ideas.
After
a steady start, Tendulkar, who became the first batsman
to go past 16,000 ODI runs, dragged one from Lasith Malinga
back onto his stumps for 35. Virender Sehwag fell to a mistimed
pull shot soon after, while Muttiah Muralitharan nailed
two in his first over - he snapped up an out-of-sorts Yuvraj
Singh for 2 in his comeback match and an unlucky Rohit Sharma
for 0, after replays showed he didn't edge to the wicketkeeper.
The repair work began when India slipped to 83 for 4.
However,
there was little swing for Chaminda Vaas and Gambhir signalled
his intent, straight-driving and pulling the veteran bowler
for boundaries in the first over of a third spell. He should
have been caught on 11, after opening the face of the bat
off Ishara Amerasinghe, but Kumar Sangakkara dropped a left-handed
take. Gambhir showed his hunger for runs and took the fight
back to Sri Lanka.
Arguably
the best player of spin in the side after Tendulkar, he
relied on his ability to flick, nudge and sweep Muralitharan.
It worked very well, and an unflustered Gambhir negated
Muralitharan's mid-innings spell confidently. The spinners,
with the field especially spread between overs 33 and 39,
were quietly squirted into the gaps before Gambhir accelerated.
It was a good exhibition of building an innings under pressure.
Dhoni,
on the back of a poor Test series, helped the partnership
gain momentum with soft-handed pushes to the off side and
hard, trademark paddles down the leg side. Perhaps most
critically, the running between the wickets was top-drawer
stuff; in fact, rarely has it been better, against one of
the best fielding units around. The right-left combination
ticked runs along at about four-and-a-half an over and as
the conditions turned overcast, the 50-run stand came up
in 78 deliveries.
Gambhir
welcomed the hard ball - following a mandatory change after
34 overs - with an even harder cut for four. With rain in
the air, he began to target the shorter areas of the Gabba.
Muralitharan came back on before the slog overs and Gambhir
wasn't afraid to use his feet in an attempt to lift the
run rate. A thumping extra-cover-drive raised his ninth
fifty in the 41st over and Gambhir rounded off the over
with a firm pulled four. Singularly, Gambhir's handling
of Muralitharan was the stand-out feature of his innings.
The same bowler who was so threatening initially was handled
with utmost ease in the latter stage of the innings, and
went for 51 from ten. For good measure, Malinga was welcomed
back with an effortless six over extra-cover and India had
scored 40 runs in four overs. Gambhir's second fifty needed
a mere 28 balls.
Dhoni
brought his fifty up with a six down the ground and despite
cramping up after that shot, picked up boundaries down the
leg side. India successfully picked up at least one four
in each of the last ten overs, bar the 43rd, and they had
Dhoni to thank for much of this as they added 105 during
that period. Unflustered for his entire stay in the middle,
Dhoni played a captain's innings, an unbeaten 95-ball 88,
highlighted with punchy shots and superb running. Shot by
shot, run by run, he and Gambhir had turned damage control
into coruscating counter-aggression.
The
drizzle began towards the end of the Indian innings, and
only gained in intensity during the break. It soon turned
into an annoying shower, engulfing the Gabba. With further
thunderstorms predicted later in the evening both sides
were left to play the waiting game inside the dressing room,
while plenty of others began to furiously hit their calculators
to see what Messrs Duckworth and Lewis would have to say,
but play was finally called off at 7.55 pm local time.
During
the 1992 World Cup, these two sides met in Australia but
the match lasted just two deliveries owing to rain. Sixteen
years on from that washout the two most-capped players in
the game, Tendulkar and Sanath Jayasuriya, were the only
survivors but once again, they couldn't get out of the way
of a storm.
courtesy
- cricinfo
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