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Harbhajan is again the hero as India pulls off a thrilling win
By S. Dinakar
CHENNAI, MARCH 22. An all-conquering side led by a formidable
leader, a team on the run under a beleaguered captain, a Test
series that was becoming decidedly one-sided, a longstanding
`Aussie dream' on the verge of being realised.
Then comes the astonishing turnaround, sparked by an epic
innings, provided the thrust by some sensational off-spin
bowling. The series was now on a razor's edge.
And the final act of the drama unfolded in the dramatic final
session on the eventful fifth day of the final Test at the M.A.
Chidambaram Stadium here on Thursday with India pulling off a
nail-biting two-wicket victory to script a 2-1 series triumph.
A great end to a remarkable series. The Border- Gavaskar Trophy
was regained by the Indians, who were greeted with rousing cheers
as they lapped the ground at the end of it all.
It was finally left to Harbhajan Singh, the Man of the Series
with 32 scalps, to deliver the decisive blow. This time the young
Sardar was wielding the willow on a dramatic day, when fortunes
swung one way, then the other.
Earlier in the day, he had returned his career best Test figures
of eight for 84, finishing with 15 wickets in the Test, and it
was only fitting that he was at the end to see India through.
Two runs to get, two wickets in hand. There was a hush in the
stadium as Glenn McGrath came thundering in. Could Harbhajan
complete the job?
The Punjab cricketer, under excruciating tension, coolly drove
the pace ace square off the wicket, and even as he completed his
second run, the Sardar exulted in sheer joy, debutant
wicketkeeper-batsman Sameer Dighe, who had endured a forgettable
time behind the stumps, sunk to his knees in celebration, the
crowd was delirious, even as the Aussies took their time to
recover from the shock.
The emotionally charged day in which passion and pride, skill and
temperament were very much on view, concluded with the Indian
team members running onto the ground to congratulate the unbeaten
heroes. Indeed, it was a sea of emotions out there on the ground.
The `Final Frontier' remained unconquered for Steve Waugh's men.
Sourav Ganguly's men had managed to upstage the world champions
in a truly memorable upset.
Dighe had played his part with a gutsy unbeaten 22 against the
demanding bowling, in a high-pressure situation, putting behind
the disappointments behind the stumps. True, there were some
streaky shots, but Dighe put a price on his wicket, displaying
character.
Skipper Steve Waugh played all his cards, switching the bowlers
around, moving the field, and his men responded. Paceman Jason
Gillespie sent down a red-hot burst - 12-1-40-2 - keeping the
pressure at one end, off-spinner Colin Miller caused a flutter
with three quick wickets in a spell of 5-1-16-3 from the
Wallahjah Road end, and India was ambushed...well almost.
Indeed, the home team was coasting at 101 for two, when
Gillespie, often looking up to the Aussie supporters for
inspiration, went round the wicket, and sent down a well-directed
short ball that flew off Sachin Tendulkar's gloves even as he
took evasive action for Mark Waugh to pouch the edge at second
slip.
Ganguly, seemed a man in a trance, edging Gillespie between
'keeper Gilchrist and Warne in the first slip, and succumbing to
the very next delivery, his airy drive being gobbled up by Mark
Waugh.
With an off-colour Shane Warne, taken apart by the elegant V.V.S.
Laxman, unable to keep the pressure from the other end, Steve
Waugh had two options, bring back McGrath from the Wallahjah Road
end or go in for the spin of Miller, who had been unimpressive in
the first spell. He chose the offie.
And there was immediate reward for the Aussie captain when new
man Dravid's ill-advised on-drive against the turn, only resulted
in the ball spooning up to mid-off, where the Aussie captain did
well to dive forward and snaffle the catch.
From 101 for two, India was now 122 for five. The Aussies went to
tea with their hopes renewed. The Indians still had a job on
their hands...and in a match where wickets had fallen in a
bizarre fashion, the heat was on the home team.
Laxman, who during the course of a majestic 66 had driven
Gillespie gloriously through the covers off the back-foot, had
the responsibility of seeing the side home, but saw his pull off
Miller being sensationally held by a diving Mark Waugh at mid-
wicket.
The Hyderabad batsman stood rooted to the crease, in a moment of
crushing disappointment and the Aussies converged on a smiling
Mark. The Test was becoming a thriller.
And things turned from bad to worse for India when the left-
handed Bahutule was consumed as much by pressure as by the off-
spin of Miller, Warne completing the job at slip. At 135 for
seven, the Aussies now had their noses ahead.
Gillespie, generating searing pace by now, beat the out-side edge
of Dighe's bat with well directed leg-cutters, without finding
the all-important nick.
At the other end, Steve knowing the value of another wicket,
invited Dighe for the cut against Miller on a turning wicket -
there was no third man or point.
Dighe got away edging the off-spinner to the third man fence even
as the crowd roared. Then, the Mumbai player unleashed a cheeky
back cut too in the same over, and the target was whittling down.
And then, with eight required, Dighe nicked Gillespie to the
third man fence, Steve Waugh looked at the skies, and India
needed just four now.
The Aussie captain knew he would have to attack from the other
end. Gillespie sent down a couple of bouncers to Dighe at one end
and then McGrath snared Zaheer - who had earlier survived a
vociferous shout for leg-before off the same bowler - outside the
off-stump, Warne again pouching the snick in the slip.
Dighe showed faith in Harbhajan, taking a single, Harbhajan
himself stroked one to extra-cover for a run, and then arrived
his winning blow, even as the field was up.
Earlier in the day, the Aussies had been bowled out for 264,
which meant India had to score 155 to pocket the series,
Harbhajan picking up all three wickets, the crucial one being
that of the tenacious Steve, caught by Das at short-leg. The
Aussies had one last chance to have a crack at history; no team
had scored seven away series victories in a 10-year period.
At the beginning of the Indian innings, S.S. Das chose the wrong
ball to pull from McGrath, picking the ball from outside the off-
stump and the rangy paceman took a simple return catch.
However, the left-handed Ramesh, and the prolific V.V.S. Laxman
seized the initiative with some positive strokeplay raising 58,
before Ramesh set out for a single only to see Laxman, who had
initially set out of his crease, retracing his steps, and was
stranded as Ponting sent in his throw to the striker's end from
covers.
Harbhajan Singh was named the Man of the Series, while Matthew
Hayden and the off-spinner shared the Man of the Match award. The
BCCI president, Mr. A.C. Muthiah, who later announced a bonus of
Rs. 15 lakhs for the Indian team, gave away the prizes.
In the post-match press conference, India coach John Wright
revealed Laxman's knock in the second Test made a huge difference
to the Indian morale, noted Harbhajan Singh, a natural off-
spinner with turn and bounce, was bowling to a more effective
off-stump line these days, and said the Indians had displayed
character to fight their way back.
Skipper Sourav Ganguly admitted he was worried when India had
lost its seventh wicket, had a word of praise for Dighe, said he
did not anticipate the comeback even in his dreams after the
second day of the second Test, when India was in the doldrums,
and paid tribute to Harbhajan when he said ``he is a cut above
the rest.''
Harbhajan thanked his coach, captain, and team-mates for their
encouragement, and also remembered the role played by the injured
Indian spearhead, leggie Anil Kumble in guiding him before the
series.
Harbhajan has indeed taken wing against the Aussies. He is now in
a `rarefied' zone along with V.V.S. Laxman, another man who made
it possible.
AUSTRALIA - 1st innings: 391
INDIA - 1st innings: 501
AUSTRALIA - 2nd innings:
M. Hayden c Zaheer b Kulkarni 35
(76m, 40b, 3x4, 1x6)
M. Slater c Laxman b Harbhajan 48
(98m, 82b, 4x4, 2x6)
A. Gilchrist lbw b Harbhajan 1
(11m, 11b)
J. Langer c Laxman b Bahutule 21
(74m, 54b, 2x4, 1x6)
M. Waugh c Dravid b Harbhajan 57
(142m, 139b, 7x4)
S. Waugh c Das b Harbhajan 47
(166m, 125b, 5x4)
R. Ponting c Dravid b Harbhajan 11
(29m, 25b, 1x6)
S. Warne lbw b Harbhajan 11
(35m, 28b, 2x4)
J. Gillespie c Dravid b Harbhajan 2
(46m, 47b)
C. Miller lbw b Harbhajan 2
(42m, 22b)
G. McGrath (not out) 11
(19m, 11b, 1x4)
Extras (b-8, lb-6, nb-4) 18
---
Total (in 97.5 overs) 264
---
Fall of wickets: 1-82 (Hayden), 2-84 (Gilchrist), 3-93 (Slater),
4-141 (Langer), 5-193 (Mark Waugh), 6-211 (Ponting), 7-241
(Warne), 8-246 (Steve Waugh), 9-251 (Gillespie).
India bowling: Zaheer 4-0-13-0, Ganguly 1-0-8-0, Harbhajan 41.5-
20-84-8, Kulkarni 30-11-70-1, Tendulkar 12-0-43-0, Bahutule 9-0-
32-1.
INDIA - 2nd innings:
S.S. Das c & b McGrath 9
(35m, 17b, 2x4)
S. Ramesh (run out) 25
(98m, 53b, 3x4)
V.V.S. Laxman c M. Waugh b Miller 66
(135m, 82b, 12x4)
S. Tendulkar c M. Waugh b Gillespie 17
(27m, 17b, 3x4)
S. Ganguly c M. Waugh b Gillespie 4
(9m, 5b, 1x4)
R. Dravid c S. Waugh b Miller 4
(8m, 5b, 1x4)
S. Dighe (not out) 22
(73m, 48b, 3x4)
S. Bahutule c Warne b Miller 0
(2m, 3b)
Zaheer Khan c M. Waugh b McGrath 0
(31m, 14b)
Harbhajan Singh (not out) 3
(12m, 5b)
Extras (lb-3, nb-2) 5
---
Total (for eight wkts. in 41.1 overs) 155
---
Fall of wickets: 1-18 (Das), 2-76 (Ramesh), 3-101 (Tendulkar), 4-
117 (Ganguly), 5-122 (Dravid), 6-135 (Laxman), 7-135 (Bahutule),
8-151 (Zaheer).
Australia bowling: McGrath 11.1-3-21-2, Gillespie 15- 2-49-2,
Miller 9-1-41-3, Warne 6-0-41-0.
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