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'Careless' India
surrender the advantage |
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Scorecard
Careless
shot selection from some of the Indian batsmen
frittered away the advantage that the tourists
had on a bright afternoon at the WACA Ground.
The Aussies sprung back superbly to restrict a
promising Indian first innings to 297 for 6 on
the first day of the 3rd Test at Perth. India at
one stage were right at the top commanding the
proceedings at 198 for 2. But some relentless
bowling from Brett Lee & co. got the Aussies
right back in the scheme of things with India
losing four wickets in the final session.
After 10 days of high drama off the field,
the players were back to the arena. Both teams
made a couple of changes in their line-ups.
India got Virender Sehwag and Irfan Pathan in
for Yuvraj Singh and Harbhajan Singh. Australia
gave debut for the local lad Chris Rogers and
brought in Shaun Tait in the places of Matt
Hayden (out of action with a hamstring injury)
and Brad Hogg. Anil Kumble took the brave
decision which not many touring sides take,
which was to bat first on a WACA pitch. Virender
Sehwag lived upto his reputation and that was to
play and miss staying in his crease but at the
same time playing some blistering shots. That
provided an energetic start for the Indians, it
was no longer the 'Block Block' game of batting
out maidens like the last opening pair of Jaffer
and Dravid. Jaffer was refreshing as well as he
rotated the strike and looked competitive. India
raised up their 50 without losing a wicket.
Australia fought their way back in the first
session as they removed both Sehwag and Jaffer
in succession. Both Sehwag (29 from 58 balls
with 6 fours) and Jaffer (16 from 53) got out
nicking behind after playing loose shots outside
the off of Johnson and Lee respectively. That
got India in a spot of bother with Dravid and
Tendulkar required to do the repair. They first
safely took India to 74 for 2 in 24 overs at
lunch. After lunch, India almost lost their
third wicket but for a sitter put down by
Michael Clarke at first slip. Dravid was the
lucky man while Brett Lee was the unlucky
bowler. That was the only real chance for the
Aussies in that session as Dravid and Tendulkar
took control of the game bringing in all their
experience. They in turn were helped along by
the inexperienced Johnson, Tait and also Symonds
who were feeding them on the pads. India got
themselves into a good position by Tea at 177
for 2 in 51 overs with both the batmen getting
past their half centuries.
After
Tea, the pair of Dravid and Tendulkar were up
against the reverse swinging ball and the
charged up Lee. They saw the threat through and
things were sailing along smoothly until an
umpiring blunder (this time an innocent one)
sent Tendulkar back to the pavilion. Tendulkar
was struck high over his knee roll to a length
delivery from Lee and was also up in the air
slightly to negotiate the extra bounce. Asad
Rauf, the man who replaced Steve Bucknor
following the ICC's orders was responsible for
this bad decision. The Pakistani Umpire came
under pressure by a vociferous appeal from the
fielding side which was the second one of that
over from Lee. Tendulkar batted superbly for his
71 (from 128 balls with 9 fours) with lot of
runs coming through the special upper cuts over
the slip cordon which was employed for this
bouncy track. The tourists were compensated when
Dravid was not given out lbw thanks to Billy
Bowden despite getting hit on the boot by an
inswinging yorker from Johnson infront of the
off and middle stump. India were 198 for 3 and
soon were 214 for 4 as Ganguly played a careless
shot, swinging one away from his body to be
caught brilliantly at gully by Hussey.
After
Ganguly's exit, VVS Laxman joined Dravid to get
things back to normal with a 50-run partnership
which put the pressure back on the Kangaroos.
There was more pressure on the fielding side
because of their sloppy over rate which left
them to bowl more than 20 overs in the last
hour. They were forced to bring spin at both
ends through Symonds and Michael Clarke. Dravid
and Laxman didn't take advantage of the part
time bowlers and decided to play it safe. Dravid
finally thought he had to get things moving and
he played a couple of slog sweeps. The first one
was for a boundary, but the second one saw him
miscuing one up in the air off Symonds to lose
his wicket. Dravid (93 from 183 with 14 fours)
missed out on a hundred and India were now 278
for 5 with another 25 minutes left in the play.
India almost saw that through until another
careless shot them let them down. It was Laxman
playing a pull shot for the first time in the
innings which resulted in a miscued hit that
went straight to mid off. Brett Lee was the man
taking that wicket with the second new ball.
India finished the day at 297 for 6 in 84 overs
at stumps with all-rounders MS Dhoni (8 from 14
balls) and Irfan Pathan (8 from 9 balls) in the
middle.
It is upto the Indian lower order now to see
if they can stretch the total to 400. It was a
hard working day for Brett Lee, who finished
with 3 for 64. Stuart Clark bowled well in the
first two sessions but couldn't get any wickets.
Johnson and Tait weren't up to the mark at all.
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