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India outplay
Australia in the Sydney Final; Mumbai duo shines |
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Scorecard
Sachin
Tendulkar's maiden ODI hundred in Australia
along with great support from fellow Mumbaiker -
Rohit Sharma clinched the first final of the CB
Series for India. The little master silenced his
critics who have been questioning his
temperament to perform in the crunch matches and
also about his abilities to see his side through
to victory right till the end. Tendulkar with
Rohit Sharma ensured that their team didn't
waste the good bowling show early on when the
Aussies were restricted down to 239 on a good
batting track.
India made some daring yet welcome changes to
its line-up. The welcome change was the
inclusion of rookie leg spinner - Piyush Chawla,
who would be a perfect surprise weapon to
unleash. The daring change was that they settled
with just Ishant Sharma as the lone quick along
with the medium pacers - Praveen Kumar and Irfan
Pathan. Dhoni threw the new ball straightaway to
Praveen Kumar which might have sent a lot of
jitters among the Indian fans. Fortunately
enough the gamble worked out with Praveen Kumar
providing an exit to the dangerous Adam
Gilchrist, who got out miscuing a pull shot in
the 3rd over. In his next over, Praveen got
another big fish - Ricky Ponting, who had played
onto his stumps attempting a pull shot. India
then got lucky with a caught behind decision
when an Ishant Sharma's delivery had brushed
only the pad before getting into the gloves of
Dhoni. The inform Michael Clarke was the unlucky
batsman and Australia found themselves in a
shaky position at 24 for 3.
Fortunately
for Australia, the experience of Matt Hayden and
Andrew Symonds came in handy. The monstrous pair
batted the Aussies out of trouble with their
natural game. India had to get rid of this
partnership as quickly as possible. They didn't
have to work too hard for it as Symonds stepped
out to loft Harbhajan out in the crowd but could
only find the man at deep mid wicket. Symonds'
stay was cut short to a knock of 31 (from 44
balls with 4 fours) and the Aussies were back in
trouble at 124 for 4 in the 24th over. They were
in further trouble when Matthew Hayden's
powerful sweep off Bhajji was held beautifully
by Piyush Chawla at squareleg. Hayden missed out
on an easy hundred with that, he had got 82 in
just 88 with 10 hits to the ropes. After Haydos'
fall, the home side had no option but to go
defensive as they had to preserve their wickets
till the end. The rest of the innings revolved
around Michael Hussey (45 from 67 with 2 fours)
with the left hander forming valuable
partnerships with Hopes (15) and Brad Hogg (23).
The Aussies finished at 239 for 8 thanks to
Brett Lee's cameo of 17 from 10 with 3 fours.
India could have restricted Australia for a
slightly lower total but the problem was that
Ishant Sharma couldn't return back to finish his
remaining two overs because of a finger injury
on his bowling hand. Yet, the other bowlers did
a fine job with the exception of a struggling
Irfan Pathan (hit for 63 in his 7). Praveen had
2 for 49, Harbhajan 2 for 38 and Piyush 0 for 33
in their respective 10 overs. The batting
strategy for the Men in Blue was to see that
Brett Lee didn't get any wicket with the new
ball. Robin Uthappa and Sachin Tendulkar were
cautious about this and were successful in their
task. Both openers gave a perfect opening by
putting on 50 on the board. The Australian
bowlers failed to bowl the wicket taking
deliveries but their fielders brought them back
in the game to have India at 56 for 2 in the
13th over. First Uthappa's full blooded pull
shot off Hopes was brilliantly caught by a
forward diving Michael Hussey in the deep.
Uthappa had made 17 from 33 in his opening stand
with Sachin. Gambhir was unlucky to be run out
because of Tendulkar's bad judgment of a non
existent second run. The inform Gambhir
sacrificed his wicket for Tendulkar after the
latter just ran towards the striker's end
without looking at what his partner was trying
to say.
Tendulkar
now had the double responsibility of also
getting the runs that Gambhir would have got.
The little master was left disappointed at the
non striker's end as Yuvraj Singh got cleaned up
by a Hogg flipper. India slipped to 87 for 3 in
the 19th over in the next 10 overs would have
lost the match for them. However, there was no
scope of a traditional batting collapse with the
veteran of more than 400 ODIs inspiring the
20-year-old Rohit Sharma to play a match winning
innings for his country. Rohit Sharma began his
innings with two gorgeous straight drives off
Nathan Bracken which would have made the little
master proud of. Both the right handers batted
sensibly with some good running and in between
playing some delightful shots to keep the
scoreboard busy. As the partnership grew, India
gained control of the match and at the start of
the 40th over, it looked to be an easy victory.
Tendulkar got his maiden ODI hundred on
Australian soil in just 106 balls. His partner,
Rohit Sharma (66 from 87 with 6 fours)
eventually fell in the 42nd over to an inswinger
from Hopes but not before taking India to 210
for 4. The Indians clinched victory through the
pair of Tendulkar (117* from 120 with 10 fours)
and Skipper MS Dhoni (15 from 12), who finished
the match with a boundary with 25 balls to
spare.
Brett Lee remained wicketless and Mitchell
Johnson leaked 70 in his 10 which had lost the
match for Ponting with the ball. They were two
notable incidents in the match - one being the
invasion by a streaker and the other a beamer
from Lee to Tendulkar. The Man of the
Match for this first final was obviously Sachin
Tendulkar. The pressure is completely on
Australia as they have to win the second final
which is at the Gabba on the 4th. India can
finish their long tour by winning the Gabba
match as the 3rd final is to be played only if
required.
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