Sports

India in control in Adelaide

Visitors lead by 166 runs

December 08, 2018
India's Cheteshwar Pujara (L) and skipper Virat Kohli run between the wickets on the third day of the opening cricket Test against Australia in Adelaide Saturday. — Reuters
India's Cheteshwar Pujara (L) and skipper Virat Kohli run between the wickets on the third day of the opening cricket Test against Australia in Adelaide Saturday. — Reuters



ADELAIDE — India built a 166-run lead over Australia on the third day of an absorbing opening Test here Saturday with dangerman Cheteshwar Pujara not out 40, although the late wicket of master batsman Virat Kohli gave the home team a glimmer of hope.

At stumps, the visitors were 151-3, adding to their first innings total of 250. Ajinkya Rahane was not out one, alongside Pujara who scored a gritty first innings century.

It was looking ominous for Australia with Kohli and Pujara compiling a 71-run third-wicket partnership, but spinner Nathan Lyon got a massive breakthrough when he snared the Indian skipper for 34 near the close of play.

“I think it’s slightly in our favor,” said Indian paceman Jasprit Bumrah.

“The late wicket was a good thing for them and the first session tomorrow will be very important. If we capitalize on that it will leave us in a very good place in this match.”

He added that Pujara was key.

“He’s showed a lot of patience and that is the key element in Test cricket. A great knock and hopefully he continues tomorrow.”

Australia was dismissed for 235 just before lunch, with Travis Head top scoring on 72 on a day hit by rain delays, leaving it 15 runs adrift.

Batting in front of his home crowd, Head said he was disappointed to not add more runs but believed the game was “evenly poised”.

“It’ll be a big first hour tomorrow, if we can get a couple of wickets and put them under pressure. I think the bowlers did a wonderful job to contain and continue to put pressure on them tonight.”

India got off to a solid start, with KL Rahul and Murali Vijay enjoying a 63-run partnership. Both failed to fire in the first innings and are battling for one opener’s spot once the injured Prithvi Shaw is fit again.

On a difficult batting track, Josh Hazlewood bowled four straight maidens to keep them contained before they began finding their range.

Rahul hit a big six off Pat Cummins as the pair grew in confidence and they were racing along before Mitchell Starc enticed Vijay into nicking an attempted drive to Peter Handscomb in the slips and he was out for 18.

Rahul played some audacious strokes before a loose shot to a Josh Hazlewood ball found a big edge and he was caught behind for 44 by Tim Paine.

The unflappable Pujara crucially survived two decisions by the umpire giving him out, with both reversed on review in a cruel blow to Australia.

In the first, he was initially dismissed caught behind off Lyon on eight, and in the second was adjudged out lbw, also to Lyon, on 17.

The prolific Kohli, who emerged to boos from a section of the crowd, shunned his trademark flamboyance to grind out runs before jabbing at a short ball from Lyon and Aaron Finch took an easy catch.

On the way, he reached another milestone, joining a select few Indians — including Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid — to score 1,000 Test runs in Australia.

Earlier, Australia added just 44 runs to their overnight 191-7 with Head’s dismissal signalling a quick end, with the final wicket falling next ball.

After two days of stifling hot weather, play began 45 minutes late in gloomy conditions, with the Adelaide Oval lights on.

It only lasted 3.4 overs before the drizzle began again and the umpires called them off after Starc was caught behind for 15 by Rishabh Pant, getting an edge to a Bumrah delivery.

Play resumed after an hour with Lyon accompanying Head, who looked on track to better his previous best Test score against Pakistan in October before prodding at a Mohammed Shami ball.

Hazlewood padded up but was gone for a golden duck, again to the Shami-Pant combination, leaving Lyon unbeaten on 24.

For India, Ravichandran Ashwin finished with 3-57 and Bumrah had 3-47. — AFP

Scoreboard

India (1st innings) 250

Australia (1st innings)

A. Finch b Sharma 00

M. Harris c Vijay b Ashwin 26

U. Khawaja c Pant b Ashwin 28

S. Marsh b Ashwin 02

P. Handscomb c Pant b Bumrah 34

T. Head c Pant b Shami 72

T. Paine c Pant b Sharma 05

P. Cummins lbw b Bumrah 10

M. Starc c Pant b Bumrah 15

N. Lyon not out 24

J. Hazlewood c Pant b Shami 00

Extras (lb10, b6, nb2, w1) 19

Total: (all out; 98.4 overs) 235

Falls: 1-0 (Finch), 2-45 (Harris), 3-59 (Marsh), 4-87 (Khawaja), 5-120 (Handscomb), 6-127 (Paine), 7-177 (Cummins), 8-204 (Starc), 9-235 (Head), 10-235 (Hazlewood).

Bowling: Sharma 20-6-47-2, Bumrah 24-9-47-3, Shami 16.4-6-58-2, Ashwin 34-9-57-3, Vijay 4-1-10-0.

India (2nd innings)

K.L. Rahul c Paine b Hazlewood 44

M. Vijay c Handscomb b Starc 18

C. Pujara not out 40

V. Kohli c Finch b Lyon 34

A. Rahane not out 01

Extras (b2, lb12) 14

Total: (3 wickets; 61 overs) 151

To bat: Rohit Sharma, Rishabh Pant, Ravi Ashwin, Mohammed Shami, Ishant Sharma, Jasprit Bumrah.

Falls: 1-63 (Vijay), 2-76 (Rahul), 3-147 (Kohli).

Bowling: Starc 10-3-18-1, Hazlewood 16-9-25-1, Cummins 11-4-33-0, Lyon 22-3-48-1, Head 2-0-13-0.


December 08, 2018
40 views
HIGHLIGHTS
Sports
3 days ago

Saudi Olympic team exits U-23 Cup in quarterfinals, loses Paris 2024 Olympics dream

Sports
3 days ago

Al Hilal triumphs over Al Fateh in a fierce 3-1 clash at Kingdom Arena

Sports
3 days ago

Al Shabab overpowers Al Ittihad with a 3-1 victory in Jeddah