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India face
disappointing defeat against Aussies |
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Scorecard
Australian
bowling line up pulled off a superb win under
lights at the Adelaide Oval despite the absence
of Brett Lee and despite defending a low target
of 204! Indian batting failed to hold ground to
ruin a wonderful bowling effort early on. They
let the Aussies win with a bonus point as well.
Australia won the toss and opted to bat first
on what looked to be a good day for batting and
a bad one for fielding with the temperatures
hovering at about 38 degrees C. India finally
made a change to its line-up with Sehwag giving
way to Munaf owing to a hip strain. The Aussies
had a a mix start with the ball often going past
the bat amidst some unplayable deliveries from
Ishant and Sreesanth. The latter gave way to
Munaf very soon, who was greeted by Hayden with
a disdainful shot over mid wicket for a six. The
Australian momentum came to a halt when Ishant
Sharma disappointed Gilly's fans in a packed
Adelaide House by forcing him to play onto his
stumps with a speedy delivery. Gilchrist
departed after making just 15 and to have his
side at 25 for 1 in the 6th over. A shaky
Ponting then joined Hayden and couldn't carry
the innings forward as the Indian seamers kept
lot of pressure with their tight bowling. That
reaped rewards for the fielding side with both
Ponting and Hayden falling in the space of 8
balls.
First Ponting (10) failed to keep a backfoot
drive along the ground off Munaf, and then
Hayden (13 from 34) lost concentration as he
played a loose cut shot off Irfan Pathan to be
caught behind. Australia could never recover
after this double blow which had them at 43 for
3 in the 12th over. The Indians sustained enough
pressure to take the wickets of Symonds and
Hussey cheaply to further reduce the score to 73
for 5 in the 24th over. The inform Michael
Clarke came to the rescue yet again as he got
helped by both James Hopes (19 from 18) and Brad
Hogg (32 from 52) to get their side to
respectability. Hogg's partnership with Michael
Clarke was worth 72 for the 7th wicket! Michael
Clarke fell in the 47th over slogging one in the
deep off Pathan. He made 79 from 108 with 6
fours. The Aussies eventually got to 203 for 9.
Irfan Pathan was the most successful bowler
taking four wickets conceding just 41 in his 10.
Ishant Sharma got two big wickets that of
Gilchrist and Symonds. Munaf and Harbhajan
picked up a wicket each without giving away too
many runs. India had a bad start to their chase
when Sachin Tendulkar (5) was wrongly adjudged
lbw by Umpire Peter Parker off an inswinger from
Nathan Bracken which was clearly going over the
top. From 20 for 1 in the 5th over, it was
consolidation phase for the Indians through a
partnership between Gautam Gambhir and Irfan
Pathan. Just when things looked to get under
control, the batting side lost three wickets out
of nowhere to find themselves at 59 for 4 in the
16th over! Both Pathan (14 from 30) and Gambhir
(34 from 42 with 3 fours) were dismissed by
sharp catches on the offside. James Hopes was
the surprise package taking two out of the three
wickets which were that of Pathan and Rohit
Sharma, who was caught behind.
The out of form Yuvraj Singh had to come good
this time. And that he did in the company of his
Captain. But that was only for a while before he
holed out in the deep off an innocuous long hop
from Hogg. Yuvraj made lot of promise in his
44-ball 26 which had 3 fours and a breathtaking
pull off Hogg in the crowd. India were under
tremendous pressure now at 115 for 5 with just
the last recognized pair of batsmen left in the
form of Dhoni and Uthappa. Dhoni in the run of
play had pulled off a hamstring strain which
forced him to have Rohit Sharma as a runner.
That proved detrimental for Dhoni (37 from 50)
as he misjudged a single towards mid off
to give Rohit Sharma no chance of reaching the
non striker's end to leave his team at a
hopeless 134 for 6.
Dhoni's run out was the turning point of the
match and if and only if he had not utter those
'Yes, Yes, Yes', things would have been
certainly different. India then lost their way
to be bowled out for 153 in 41.2 overs. Uthappa
(18 from 36) threatened to do some magic with a
few powerful shots but he failed to have a check
on his adrenalin. Johnson and Hopes were the
stars with the ball taking 3 for 42 and 2 for 16
respectively. Hopes had a great day with his
first spell reading an incredible 4-3-5-2!
Michael Clarke, without whom the 203 wouldn't
have been possible was the Man of the Match.
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