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Friday, March 28, 2008

India vs South Africa 1st Test Match at Chennai - Sehwag's double ton has Proteas drooping

Virender Sehwag smashed his way to a double century on Day 3 of the first Test against South Africa at the M A Chidambaram stadium in Chennai on Friday. The Delhi opener's fourth double hundred in Tests guided India to 309 for 1 in 70 overs at tea.

Sehwag was unbeaten on an entertaining knock of 218 from just 200 deliveries that saw him pummel 34 boundaries and three sixes. Rahul Dravid was unbeaten on a rather slow 10 from 56 deliveries, having added 96 for the second wicket with Sehwag.

India still need another 32 runs to avoid the follow-on after South Africa posted a mammoth 540 in their first innings.

Morning session: (94 runs, 25 overs)

Resuming on 82 for no loss, India showed their intent as early as the first over when Wasim Jaffer pulled Makhaya Ntini through the square leg region for a boundary. A couple of deliveries later he was fortunate though, as his edge flew past the slip and gully region when he tried to play a shot through the covers.

Sehwag then thumped Ntini through the off-side in his next over, the 24th of the innings, to signal his presence and the sign of things to come. A double on the leg side off the final ball of the over brought up the 100-run stand in 24 overs.

It was a good start for the day, as the first 45 minutes brought up 52 runs in the first 10 overs as India progressed to 134 for no loss in 34 overs.

Jaffer brought up his 11th Test fifty with a single on the leg side off Paul Harris in the 34th over. He had problems getting the middle of the bat as quite a few edges flew past the slip region.

Harris resorted to a defensive line against Sehwag, bowling on his pads in a bid to restrict his cover drives. However, the dashing batsman, in the 90s, was quite content to play out the singles as he approached his century.

But with Kallis bowling from the other end, Sehwag finally found some room to unleash his strokes. A short of length delivery was dispatched ruthlessly through mid-wicket as he moved to 99. It also brought up the highest opening partnership between Sehwag and Jaffer, surpassing the 159 they put up against the West Indies at Gros Islet in 2006.

Sehwag brought up his hundred in his own flamboyant style, slamming Jacques Kallis over the mid-off field. It was his second century in as many matches, coming on the heels of the brilliant 159 he scored in Adelaide in January.
It was also his second century at Chepauk and 14th overall. It took him 160 deliveries to reach the landmark and included 15 boundaries and a six.

South Africa had no answer and the only way they tried to stop him was by bowling on the pads. Sehwag, meanwhile, was quite content just to pad away the deliveries with lunch break approaching.

At lunch on day three, India were comfortably placed on 176 without loss in 46 overs, having dominated the morning session.

Sehwag was unbeaten on 110, having smashed 16 boundaries and a six in 133 deliveries. Jaffer, on the other hand, scraped his way to 60 from 143 deliveries, inclusive of five boundaries and a six.

The Chennai heat combined with India's brilliant batting proved too hot to handle for the South African bowlers. Both Dale Steyn and Makhaya Ntini had nothing much to offer as Sehwag launched into them with a few cracking shots. Paul Harris did not make an impression either and one is sure that till a wicket falls, he will restrict himself to bowling a negative line.

Post-lunch session: (133 runs, 24 overs, 1 wicket)

Sehwag started the second session with a boundary through fine leg off Kallis. The visitors, it seemed, had given up all hopes of getting him out as they removed all slips and were hoping he would commit a mistake.

In the 51st over, he gave himself room and once again smashed Harris through the cover region. In the next over, he creamed Steyn with ease through the off-side to bring up India's 200. It was the eighth instance of Indian openers putting on 200 runs or more for the first wicket and, amazingly, Sehwag was involved in four of those partnerships.

Not surprisingly, with news of Sehwag taking on the bowlers spreading, the empty seats at the Chepauk rapidly got occupied.

It was Harris who gave South Africa its first success. He got the wicket of Jaffer for 73. The India opener tried to play a drive through the off-side but got an edge which was taken by Kallis at first slip.

Jaffer, who hit six boundaries and a six in his 166-ball knock, added 213 runs for the opening wicket in 53 overs to register the best opening partnership at this venue.

The first wicket slowed down India's progress, as new batsman Rahul Dravid struggled struggling to get a start. He and Sehwag scored a painstaking 14 runs in six overs before the latter broke the shackles with two consecutive boundaries off Morne Morkel.

The first of those boundaries, a cracking drive through the off-side, also brought up his 150 in 171 deliveries. It included 23 fours and a six.

In the same over, Sehwag creamed his third boundary through the covers to move to 159 and register his highest score at the venue. His previous best score was the 155 he made against Australia in 2004-05.

Sehwag crashed Ntini straight down the ground to move to 173 and add another record to his name. He became the highest individual scorer against South Africa, going past Sachin Tendulkar's 169 at Cape Town in 1996-97.

Such was Sehwag's dominance in the middle that Dravid could score just seven in the 50-run partnership between the two batsmen. Slowly, but steadily, Dravid though got to grips with the pitch, thereby adding to South Africa's task woes.

With tea time fast approaching, Sehwag stepped up the pace to get to a double century before the break. The hapless Harris was a mere spectator as Sehwag unleashed his wide array of strokes to hit three consecutive boundaries and race into the 190s.

He lofted Ntini high into the stands at square leg in the 168th over to race to 199. The crowd rose in unison to salute the dashing opener as he brought up his fourth Test double with a flick to midwicket that fetched him three runs.

It took him just 194 deliveries to race to the mark and included 32 boundaries and two sixes. It is also the third fastest double century in Test history after Nathan Astle's (153 deliveries against England at Christchurch in 2001-02) and his 182 against Pakistan at Lahore in 2005-06.

He now joins Tendulkar and Sunil Gavaskar with four double centuries, while Dravid heads the list for Indian batsmen with five double tons.

In an amazing display of attacking batting, Sehwag smashed 23 runs in just eight deliveries to race from 174 to the 200-run mark. Such was his domination that South Africa could just hope and pray as every trick they tried had backfired.

There was no stopping Sehwag even after the double century. He showed scant respect to Ntini as he carted the pacer over the mid-on fence for his third six. He followed it up with a delightful boundary through the point region to bring up India's 300 in the 70th over. He then ended the session just as he had started it -- with a boundary -- as a few South African sprinted back to the comfort of the dressing room unable to bear his brutal attack in the unforgiving Chennai heat.

At tea on the third day, India reached 309 for 1 in 70 overs. Sehwag was unbeaten on a blazing 218 from just deliveries, inclusive of 34 boundaries and three sixes, while Dravid seemed in the opposite mode as he crawled to 10 from 56 balls.

Sehwag scored 108 runs of the 133 that India scored between lunch and tea in 24 overs. Interestingly, Dravid contributed just 10 in the 96-run second wicket stand.

It remains to be seen whether he can now bring up his triple century before the close of play. Right now, there is nothing in South Africa's bowling attack that can stop Sehwag from another blazing session.

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Sunday, March 2, 2008

Tendulkar ton helps India draw first blood in finals - CB Series Finals

Sachin Tendulkar scored his first one-day century on Australian soil as an inspired India spanked the World champions by six wickets in the first match of the best-of-three finals in the Commonwealth Bank tri-series in Sydney on Sunday.

After the Indian bowlers put up a disciplined performance to restrict Australia to 239 for eight, Tendulkar (117 not out) batted like a true champion. He not only notched his 42nd ODI century but also shouldered the responsibility of steering India home with 25 balls to spare.

The 34-year-old champion batsman, who hasn't been in the best of form in the tri-series, couldn't have found a better stage to make a statement with his bat and break the jinx of not scoring an ODI century on Australian soil.

Tendulkar, who defied a groin injury in the latter part of his innings, found an able ally in young Rohit Sharma (66) and the duo added 123 runs for the fourth wicket to pull India out of a spot of bother at 87 for three and put the team on course for a remarkable victory in a thrilling floodlit contest at the SGC.

It was a stunning exhibition of skill and composure by the Indians who relied on a heady mix of youth and experience to dominate the proceedings from the very first ball.

Captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni hit the winning runs, clobbering a boundary to trigger off scenes of wild celebrations among Indian fans in the galleries.

India's gamble to go in with two specialist spinners also paid off as Harbhajan Singh and Piyush Chawla bowled tidy spells to contain the run flow. Only Matthew Hayden (82), Michael Hussey (45) and Andrew Symonds (31) could make notable contributions for the Aussies.

The pressure will be on the home team when the teams square up for the second final in Brisbane on Tuesday. India are seeking a tri-series title for the first time in Australia.

Tendulkar provided the thrust from the very start as he laid a strong foundation with a 50-run association for the opening wicket with Robin Uthappa (17) and then stitched the valuable partnership with Rohit Sharma.

The master batsman reached the century with a dab to third man; the hundred came off 106 balls and contained eight fours. He was not out on 117 off 120 balls and 10 fours.

India suffered a usual stutter when they lost three wickets those of Uthappa, Gautam Gambhir (3) and Yuvraj Singh (10) in quick succession.

Uthappa had done his bit in providing India a decent platform before he pulled James Hopes straight into the hands of Mike Hussey, who took a brilliant diving catch on the run at the square leg fence.

Gambhir was a victim of misunderstanding when he hesitated momentarily on a call for second run from Tendulkar and found himself short of crease at the non-striker's end.

Yuvraj Singh played a brilliant flick off Mitchell Johnson before he failed to read a flipper from Brad Hogg and found his stumps in disarray.

Earlier, off-spinner Harbhajan Singh won the latest round of his feud with Australia's cricketers when he captured the vital wickets of Matthew Hayden and Andrew Symonds.

The combative Harbhajan dismissed Symonds for 31 and denied Hayden the chance of a century when he removed him for 82.

Australia made a slow start after Adam Gilchrist's final appearance in Sydney ended prematurely when he departed for seven, mistiming a short delivery from Praveen Kumar to Yuvraj Singh at mid-on.

Kumar bagged a second wicket in his opening spell when Australia captain Ricky Ponting played on for one and Ishant Sharma dismissed Michael Clarke for four, caught by wicketkeeper Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Replays suggested the batsmen had missed the ball.

Hayden and Symonds, both embroiled in recent disputes with Harbhajan, steadied the innings with a fourth-wicket partnership of 100 from 105 balls but the Indian had the last laugh.

Symonds, who accused of Harbhajan of racially abusing him during the Sydney Test, holed out to Kumar in the deep when he tried to smash him out of the ground.

Hayden, reprimanded on Friday after describing Harbhajan as an "obnoxious weed" and challenging Sharma to a fight, had looked to be in ominous form as he raced towards a hundred.

The left-hander struck 10 boundaries off 88 balls before he came unstuck when also fell to Harbhajan, caught by all-rounder Piyush Chawla.

Harbhajan, who described Hayden as one of the most disliked cricketers in the international game, cheekily celebrated his success by shadow boxing with his team mate Yuvraj.

The Australians were in deep trouble at 135 for five in the 28th over but recovered thanks to some lusty hitting by the middle order.

Mike Hussey led the fightback with a watchful 45 before he was run out and Brad Hogg (23 not out), Brett Lee (17) and James Hopes (15) all chipped in with valuable contributions.

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Saturday, March 1, 2008

CB Series - India vs Australia 1st Final - India, Australia return to battleground Sydney

India will seek to exploit the batting slump of some of Australia's middle-order batsmen when they clash with the world champions in the first of the best-of- three tri-series finals in Sydney on Sunday.

Australia's batting has been their Achilles' heels with their middle order, notably captain Ricky Ponting and Andrew Symonds, coming a cropper against the subcontinental rivals in the league stage.

Apart from the century he scored in the last game against India, Ponting has been out of form since the Test series while Symonds has notched up only one half century in eight matches.

Matthew Hayden, who was recently reprimanded by his Board for calling Harbhajan Singh a "little obnoxious weed" has also not fired at the top, having scored just one half century in the seven outings.

Never in the 30-year-old history of the triangular series have Indians managed even a solitary win in the finals against the hosts.

India's three previous experiences -- in 1985-86, 1991-92 and 2003-04 -- had resulted in straight drubbings but Australia's slipshod form this season promises a turn for the better for the Indians.

Ironically for all his unprecedented success, Tendulkar hasn't managed a hundred in 20 outings against Australia all these years; nor one against other teams in 38 matches in all he has played on Australian soil.

Numbers also have piled up for India not with bat, ball or in field alone. Indians also have been booked the most by match referees this summer. Four have been reported and three have been found guilty. Dhoni came close to being hauled up for using illegal wicketkeeping gloves before being let off with a reprimand alone.

The bad blood between the two teams has ensured that not a seat at the SCG would be vacant. Match referee Jeff Crowe, and the two umpires, would have to really strain hard to stop things getting out of hands in the middle.

Hayden is an automatic starter and his duel with the Indian bowlers, and fielders, would carry a spark of its own. Ponting and Symonds too should be subject to special attention in the field from the Indians, as it would be the likes of Harbhajan Singh and Sreesanth from the Australians.

The conditions at the SCG are likely to help the batsmen though the wicket was pretty damp to start with this afternoon. Hot blazing sun for the rest of the day is predicted which would allow the batsmen to come on to their own.

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