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England crush
India by a huge margin |
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Scorecard
The fancied Indian batting line
up came up croppers in the first ODI at
Southampton resulting in a huge loss of 104
runs. Two young guns - Alastair Cook and Ian
Bell got England to a formidable 288 for 2 and
then Jimmy Anderson came to the party with the
ball to bowl the homeside to a comprehensive win
at The Rose Bowl.
It was no contest at all once
India had lost its first four wickets. Even
though Rahul Dravid and MS Dhoni were building
up a partnership, it was very difficult that
India could have pulled out a victory as the
required run rate was climbing up well over 7.00
runs per over. Early on, Rahul Dravid won the
toss and decided to put England to bat first
under overcast conditions. India went with three
quicks and the lone spinner in Piyush Chawla.
There was no place for Munaf Patel after his
lackluster show in the warm-up match against
England 'A'. England dropped Owais Shah while
Ryan Sidebottom missed out because of a side
strain. The big news was the return of Freddie
Flintoff after a long time in International
Cricket!
The light conditions were so bad
at the start of the match which forced the
artificial lights to come into play right from
the first ball. The two pacers - Zaheer Khan and
Ajit Agarkar bowled a tight first few overs
which piled up the pressure on the English
Openers - Cook and Prior. The home team started
to gain a bit of momentum when Matt Prior lofted
Zaheer straight over his head for maximum. He
however couldn't go beyond a 31-ball 19 as he
miscued a pick up shot to be caught at mid on
off Zaheer. England were 43 for 1 in the 11th
over. Although the Indian bowling was
economical, the bowlers failed to make complete
use of the cloudy conditions because of bowling
little too short. Alastair Cook was always
looking to play the sheet anchor's role at one
end while Ian Bell, the no.3 was stroking the
ball freely. England got a nice momentum going
thanks to a few attacking shots from Bell in
particular. There was no looking back for this
pair as they stretched their partnership to 178.
Cook had got to his maiden ODI Century, this
innings was the first time that he got past a
fifty. Cook finally fell in the 42nd over after
getting bowled playing a heave to the onside off
RP Singh.
Cook's dismissal gave way to the
big hitting Kevin Pietersen. The left handed
opener started off slowly but covered up well to
make 102 from 126 with 8 fours. After a few
overs, even Ian Bell managed to get a maiden ODI
ton. Indian bowlers did quite well in keeping
the big sixers down. All Kevin Pietersen could
do was hit just the three fours at the end of
the innings. Ian Bell stayed unbeaten on a
career best 126 which came in just 118 balls
with 10 fours and a six. KP got 33 from 25 as
England closed their innings at 288 for 2 on a
good batting track where the batsmen can go
through the line.
The Indian innings was opened by
Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly and both got
their team to a busy start. But Ganguly made a
school boy kind of mistake to lose his wicket
which got the fielding side pumped up. It all
happened when Tendulkar had driven Stuart Broad
to the left of Panesar at mid off to complete an
easy single. But the problem was that Ganguly at
the striker's end turned completely blind with
the bat in his wrong hand, in the right hand
rather than the left. And he was just not aware
of what was going on and he set off for a
non-existent second run and was rightly sent
back by Tendulkar. But by then Monty got the run
out with an accurate throw back to the keeper.
India were 15 for 1 in the 3rd over and soon
were in a shocking situation of 34 for 4 in the
12th over. Anderson picked up the three wickets
of Gambhir (Caught behind driving to give
Anderson his 100th ODI wicket), Tendulkar who
had made 17 from 33 (caught at short mid wicket
as he played an uppish flick) and then Yuvraj
Singh getting an outside edge to gully. The
wickets of Tendulkar and Yuvraj came in the 12th
over that became the turning point of the game.
Jimmy Anderson bowled 8 overs on
the trot and gave nothing away. He was well
supported by Stuart Broad who was able to
sustain the pressure and Freddie Flintoff
banging the ball onto the pitch at red hot pace
of over 145kmph. Dravid and Dhoni had a mountain
to climb. Flintoff bounced out Dhoni with a
quick short pitch delivery that the batsman had
gloved behind in an attempted hook shot but that
wasn't go to be out as the bowler had
overstepped. That wasn't going to bring India
back into the game. India were going nowhere
through the partnership of Dravid and Dhoni
which was just delaying an inevitable English
victory. The only relief the two batsmen got was
when Mascarenhas and Panesar got to bowl their
overs. Dravid eventually broke the shackles with
a clean six off Monty straight down the ground,
but the required run rate stayed out of reach at
8.40. Dhoni fell to the short delivery from
Freddie in the 31st over with India barely
getting past the 100-run mark. MS Dhoni made an
uncharacteristic 19 from 60 balls. Dravid
followed him back to the pavilion, caught
playing the paddle sweep off Mascarehnas to be
brilliantly caught down the legside by Prior.
India managed to bat out the
entire overs to be bowled out for 184. Dinesh
Karthik remained unbeaten on 44 from 45 with 4
fours. But the highlight of his innings was the
two run outs that he was involved in. Jimmy
Anderson finished with career best figures of 4
for 23 from 10 overs including two maidens.
Freddie had the perfect comeback with superb
figures of 1 for 12 in 7 overs. The Man of the
Match was Ian Bell for his busy knock. The
Second ODI is on the 24th at Bristol.
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