|
Yuvraj steers
India to Series victory |
July 01, 2007 (Link to
Scorecard)
Batting conditions at the Civil
Service Club Ground at Stormont were very
difficult with the ball always moving around.
Rahul Dravid and India were the lucky side
getting the coin to roll in their favour which
allowed them to put the South Africans to bat
first on a damp track. The Proteas somehow
managed to get a good target of 148 in 31 overs
for India. The chasing side got themselves in
trouble losing early wickets but a sensible
partnership between Dravid and Yuvraj was enough
to see them home by six wickets with four
deliveries to spare.
The
start of the match was delayed by more than five
hours because of rain and a wet outfield. The
match was still a 31-overs affair which wasn't
all that short. India got Gautam Gambhir and
Ajit Agarkar in for Ramesh Powar and Ishant
Sharma. The South Africans had got Justin Kemp
and Dale Steyn back in the side for Charl
Langeveldt and Thandi Tshabalala. The Proteas
were off to a disastrous start with both Zaheer
and Agarkar using the seam perfectly and going
past the outside edge often. Agarkar was even
more tough to handle as he was also getting the
ball to swing in the air. His first wicket had
come in his fifth delivery itself with Morne van
Wyk caught napping to a late inswinger that
caught him in the crease. The four deliveries
prior to this Agarkar had bowled outswingers to
AB de Villiers, so it was a surprise delivery to
get Morne van Wyk, the man in good form. In his
next over, Ajit Agarkar came up with a jaffa
that angled in and then left Kallis squared up
in his backfoot defence to kiss the offstump. It
was a second duck in a row for Kallis!
SA
should have been three down but a bizarre
umpiring moment saved them. Facing Zaheer, AB de
Villiers got a leading edge that was cleanly
caught by Sachin Tendulkar at first slip near
his waist. The Indians were celebrating
obviously but AB de Villiers just stood his
ground and umpire Aleem Dar was in some other
world saying not out! That was certainly one of
the worst ever umpiring decisions in the
history, infact there was no need for the umpire
to come into picture as it was so
straightforward! If that was the only drama,
then you are wrong, the next ball saw Gautam
Gambhir at square leg go blind! An uppish flick
shot from the same batsman went straight into
his hands but popped out! The next delivery was
insult to injury as AB de Villiers whacked
Zaheer for a boundary past mid on. Fortunately,
AB de Villiers didn't kick onto make a big score
as he was caught bat pad by Dhoni who was
standing upto the stumps to the second change
bowler Sourav Ganguly. Before that both RP Singh
and Sourav Ganguly had to bowl a combined three
overs during the powerplay. Both kept their cool
to give nothing away. The wicket of AB de
Villiers brought JP Duminy in and the left
hander got a skidding inswinger from Sourav
first up which trapped in front leaving Dada on
a hat-trick which didn't come through though.
But at 28 for 4 in 12.3 overs. the South
Africans were in tatters.
There wasn't much time left in the SA innings
and at the same time they didn't have many
wickets left. But they believed in their
abilities, they knew that they could break the
shackles once the spinners were employed. That
was the plan for Herschelle Gibbs and Justin
Kemp which was executed to perfection. The right
handers smacked 45 out of the five overs that
Piyush Chawla and Yuvraj Singh had bowled. That
was enough for SA to come back into the match
and put up a good total of 148 in the allotted
31 overs. However the total looks ugly because
of seven wickets going down. Herschelle Gibbs
got 56 from 67 with 3 fours and 2 sixes while
Justin Kemp got 61 from 61 with 5 fours and 2
sixes. Among the bowlers, Ajit Agarkar had the
best figures with 2 for 21 in 6 overs.
It was never going to be easy
for the Indian batsmen to chase this score but
they had to just fight it out for 31 overs only.
Tendulkar started with a nice flick for a
boundary off Steyn in the first over, things
looked good, but in the next over poked at a
delivery that held its line from Ntini. Gambhir
joined Ganguly and sort of looked as if he was
up to the challenge by getting a square drive
for a boundary. However, it was the red hot pace
of Dale Steyn that got the better of him in an
attempted pull shot that forcefully went back
onto his stumps. Steyn's fastest delivery in
this spell was as quick as 149.3 kmph! After a
little while even Ganguly went back to the hut,
forced to edge a great delivery from Andre Nel
from round the sticks. Ganguly made 18 from 25
with 3 fours leaving India at 38 for 3 in 8.5
overs.
Rahul
Dravid and Yuvraj Singh then had the
responsibility to see India to the 149 mark.
Dravid started very poorly, struggling to get
away from the extra bounce off Ntini. But it was
just a matter of seeing off Ntini who at the
maximum had only 7 overs to bowl in the match.
And it worked out well, once Ntini and Steyn
were gone, came the other pacers who couldn't
keep the pressure on the two batsmen. Rahul
Dravid got going and Yuvraj at the other end was
trying his best to leave as many as possible
wicket taking deliveries that were slanting
across his stumps. He had his share of luck when
he was dropped by Hall at wide slip and also
when an outside edge flew between Boucher and
the wide slip. The Indians had to just keep
their cool as the sun came out blazing to dry
out the moisture in the track. One of the overs
from Kallis saw Rahul Dravid taking him for
three fours which got the equation under India's
control. India did lose Rahul Dravid to give SA
some hope with 41 to win from 39 balls. Dravid
fell victim to casual running, not bothering to
drag his bat into the crease at the non
striker's end to be beaten by a superb direct
throw from Boucher.
The match was sealed by Yuvraj in the company of
Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who took his revenge over
Makhaya Ntini. Yuvraj got the winning runs with
a boundary to take his score to 59 from 82 with
six fours and a six straight down the ground.
Dhoni helped his batting average to improve with
an unbeaten 14 from 11 which had two fours.
Ntini and Nel bowled very well but they could
get just the one wicket each which made the
difference. Kallis was helpful for the Indians
by leaking 36 runs in his 4 overs. The Man of
the Match was given to Yuvraj Singh and the
Player of the Series to Sachin Tendulkar who
requested that the award to be shared by Yuvraj.
Tendulkar's reason was that without Yuvraj's 49
not out in the second game, India wouldn't have
held the trophy. Tendulkar really got
overwhelmed by the back to back match winning
knocks from Yuvi. This series win is the first
time ever for India outside the sub continent
against South Africa. Now India quickly travel
across to Scotland to take on arch rivals
Pakistan after a day's break.
Top of the Page |