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Hostile bowling
and Umpiring Errors clinch Series for England |
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Scorecard
The Seven-Match NatWest
Series came to a tame end at Lord's with England
cruising to a seven-wicket win to clinch the
series 4-3. England had to chase a moderate 188
which they did without sweating much. India's
fame batting order came to nothing against a
hostile bowling upfront from Anderson and co. A
couple of horrible umpiring decisions helped the
homeside with both Rahul Dravid and Sachin
Tendulkar robbed of their innings which could
have changed the complexion of the game. Those
two umpiring decisions shook India out of the
contest.
Rahul Dravid won the
toss this time and decided to bat first which
was a brave decision as conditions were
overcast. But Dravid had two frontline spinners
in his line up, so it was better to get them to
bowl when the pitch gets slower. There was a
change in the Indian team with Ajit Agarkar
making way for RP Singh. The most significant
team change came from the homeside with Freddie
Flintoff getting himself fit after taking a
steroid injection; he got in for Alastair Cook.
Indian batsmen have been used to whacking the
ball on the up throughout their life. Today they
were shown the reality of cricket with James
Anderson greeting Sourav Ganguly with a nasty
lifter first up that set the tone for the day.
It was a barrage of short pitch stuff from
Anderson and Ganguly was all at sea playing ugly
looking hook shots. He finally got out in the
7th over after scoring 15 out of the opening
stand of 26. Gambhir was also sent back by
Anderson and India read a struggling 52 for 2 in
the 13th. Tendulkar was the only batsman who was
looking good against the short stuff. He took
Flintoff for two boundaries in the all rounder's
first over.
Dravid joined Tendulkar
and it needed these two batsmen to reconstruct
the innings against a quality pace attack.
Flintoff produced a magic ball which nipped back
off the seam to cut Dravid into two halves. That
delivery couldn't quite get the inside edge off
Dravid, but was good enough for umpire Aleem
Dar's finger to go up to give a shocker for
Dravid. The Indian Skipper hesitantly walked off
the park with a three-ball duck. After a couple
of overs, Tendulkar was beaten outside the off
to a delivery that held its line, a loud appeal
from Freddie and the finger went up from Aleem
Dar reducing India to 59 for 4! The two hasty
decisions from Dar spoiled the fun for India in
the series! Yuvraj and Uthappa did their best in
reviving the situation with their attacking
cricket but both fell playing injudicious shots.
India slipped to a hopeless 119 for 6. First it
was Uthappa (22 from 30) tempted in going for a
lofted shot off Mascarenhas and then Yuvraj (28
from 44 including a hook for a six off Broad)
guiding the same bowler to short thirdman.
India were just about to
get packed for a cheap total but were somehow
stretched to 187 with Dhoni getting a half
century. Dhoni made 50 facing 72 balls with his
innings containing 4 fours and a six. India were
bowled out in the 48th over when Dhoni holed out
to Anderson at long off. Anderson with 2 for 28
in 9 and Flintoff with 3 for 45 in 8.3 overs
were too hot to handle. Mascarenhas in the
middle overs pulled off a superb spell with 3
for 23 in his 10 including two maidens.
Matt Prior and Luke
Wright started the English innings and it was
just matter of time before both these dashers
were dismissed. Having survived a leg before
shout each, both right handers fell in RP
Singh's first over. First Wright was bounced out
and then Prior edging an away going delivery
that got the Indians into a huddle. But after
those two wickets, RP Singh and Zaheer ran out
of fuel forcing Dravid to bring on Piyush Chawla
in the 11th over. Ian Bell as always in this
series stroked his way in the middle and
Pietersen once again worked hard in his innings.
England were cruising with these two batsmen
putting on a fifty-run stand before Bell was a
victim of Pietersen's bad calling. Bell made 36
in 40 balls with the help of six fours. England
were 74 for 3 after 16 overs and then the
partnership between Pietersen and Collingwood
took them home with as many as 82 balls to
spare. The only bowler who looked good for India
was Piyush Chawla with his sharp turning
legbreaks. Pietersen was the Man of the Match
for his unbeaten 71 in 96 balls which had 6
fours and a six off Chawla. Collingwood played a
free stroking innings of 64 from 73 with 7 fours
and a six which came off a stunning pull from RP
Singh's bowling. The Player of the Series award
went to Ian Bell for showing sensational form
right through the series.
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