by
John Pye
SYDNEY, Australia
(AP) - Sachin Tendulkar's belligerent 154 not out guided
India to a 69-run first innings lead over Australia on Friday
and extended his world record for most test centuries.
Tendulkar
was on 69 when India slipped to 345 for seven on the third
afternoon of the second test and he only had the tailenders
to help him reach his 38th test hundred and overhaul Australia's
first innings of 463.
And
help him they did. Harbhajan Singh score 63 in a 129-run
eighth-wicket partnership and India's last three wickets
added 187.
When
No. 11 Ishant Sharma (23) top-edged an attempted pull shot
to give Brett Lee a return catch and a fifth wicket for
the innings, India was out for 532.
Lee
finished with 5-119 to lead the Australian bowlers, while
Mitchell Johnson and Brad Hogg had two wickets apiece.
Openers
Matt Hayden (5) and Phil Jaques (8) survived the five overs
before stumps, moving Australia's second innings total to
13.
Tendulkar
resumed on the third morning on 9 and started to find his
world-renowned touch while playing the anchor role in an
108-run fourth-wicket partnership with Sourav Ganguly.
He
had just driven Brad Hogg for six straight down the ground
two balls before the Australian wrist spinner broke the
stand.
Ganguly,
on 67 from 78 balls, stepped down the pitch and miscued
a drive directly to Mike Hussey at mid-off.
The
former India captain smashed his bat into the pitch in frustration,
having wasted a start in perfect batting conditions.
Lee
then took three wickets in quick succession to have India
in trouble, trapping Yuvraj Singh (12) lbw just before lunch
and having Mahendra Singh Dhoni (2) and Anil Kumble (2)
caught behind just after the interval.
Those
wickets gave Adam Gilchrist his 400th and 401st test dismissals,
making him only the second wicketkeeper to reach the milestone,
and seemingly put Australia in control.
But
keen to make amends for the 337-run loss in the first test
last week, Tendulkar had other ideas.
Tendulkar,
who now has four more centuries than anyone in test cricket,
pushed a Stuart Clark delivery past cover point and ran
two to reach triple figures just before tea.
He
arched his back, raised his helmet and bat up, looked to
the sky, then embraced Harbhajan in mid-pitch - all to a
standing ovation by the Sydney Cricket Ground crowd.
It
was his third hundred at the ground, including an unbeaten
241 four years ago in the most recent test for India here,
and his eighth against Australia. He now averages 326 at
the SCG.
He
struck 14 boundaries and the six.
Singh
was the first wicket to fall in the evening session, getting
a thick edge off Johnson to Hussey in the gully.
R.P.
Singh added 13 to continue Australia's frustration before
Sharma's cameo, containing five boundaries, ended and left
Tendulkar without anyone else to bat with.
With
a deficit to make up and rain predicted for the weekend,
Australia's prospects of a world record-equaling 16th consecutive
test win are starting to diminish. Australia set the record
streak between October 1999 and February 2001. India ended
that streak in Calcutta in one of the great comebacks in
test cricket.
SCOREBOARD
Australia
1st Innings: 463
India,
1st Innings
(Overnight:
216-3)
R
Dravid c Hayden b Johnson 53
W
Jaffer b Lee 3
V.V.S.
Laxman c Hussey b Hogg 109
S
Tendulkar not out 154
S
Ganguly c Hussey b Hogg 67
Y
Singh lbw b Lee 12
MS
Dhoni c Gilchrist b Lee 2
A
Kumble c Gilchrist b Lee 2
H
Singh c Hussey b Johnson 63
R.P.
Singh c Gilchrist b Clark 13
I
Sharma c & b Lee 23
Extras:
(4b,13lb,8nb,6w) 31
TOTAL:
(all out) 532
Overs:
138.2.
Fall
of wickets: 1-8, 2-183, 3-185, 4-293, 5-321, 6-330, 7-345,
8-474, 9-501, 10-532.
Bowling:
Lee 32.2-5-119-5 (7nb), Johnson
37-2-148-2
(1nb,5w), S Clark 25-3-80-1 (1w), Symonds 7-1-19-0, Hogg
30-2-121-2, Michael Clarke 7-1-28-0.
Australia, 2nd Innings
P
Jaques not out 8
M
Hayden not out 5
TOTAL:
(without loss) 13
Overs:
5.
Still
to bat: Ponting, Hussey, M Clarke,
Symonds,
Gilchrist, Hogg, Lee, Johnson,
S
Clark.
Bowling:
R.P. Singh 2-0-7-0, Sharma 1-0-4-0, Harbhajan Singh 1-1-0-0,
Kumble 1-0-2-0.
Umpires:
Mark Benson, England and Steve Bucknor, West Indies.
TV
Umpire: Bruce Oxenford, Australia. Match referee: Mike Procter,
South Africa.
Toss:
won by Australia.
Series:
Australia leads 4-match series 1-0.
Courtesy - The Island
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