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Tendulkar's diktats prove too much for the Aussies
By Vijay Lokapally
INDORE, MARCH 31. It was worth every penny they had spent, and
every blow they had earned from the cops to cram into the
stadium. The man they had come to cheer did not disappoint. And
that is what counted most on a day when India put it across
Australia, thanks mainly to Sachin Tendulkar.
There were others too who contributed towards India's thumping
118-run win but Tendulkar stood out. V.V.S. Laxman chipped in
handsomely, Harbhajan Singh continued his mesmerising spell over
the Aussies and even Ajit Agarkar got a few wickets. But none
could match Tendulkar's brilliance.
The batting giant scaled one more grand summit in compiling his
28th One-day century. If Sunil Gavaskar was the first batsman to
cross the 10,000-mark in Test cricket, Tendulkar achieved the
feat in One-day internationals. It took Tendulkar 266 matches and
a long, eventful journey which began 12 years ago with a tour to
Pakistan.
Everything else paled as Tendulkar's took charge, his desire to
excel sweeping the opposition off its feet. It may not have been
his most attractive effort but it was quite a memorable
demonstration of the man's commitment. He was fiercely determined
and nothing was going to affect his concentration once he had
made up his mind to make a mark on this match.
``A hundred is a hundred but this was one of the better ones. I
have no words to express but it feels very good,'' said
Tendulkar. ``It came at the right time and the team won and that
is what matters in the end,'' he commented even as skipper Sourav
Ganguly described it as a ``tremendous achievement,'' and added
``I am not surprised to see it happen.''
Australia caved in meekly after electing to field. The rotation
policy was set aside and Glenn McGrath drafted in by the
Australians to boost the attack. But nothing worked in their
favour and the Aussies were reduced to being passive spectators
as Tendulkar inspired the team to put in an all-round show.
With the series tied 1-1, the match was expected to produce some
fireworks, what with the rival camps encouraging acrimony on the
field. It was thus no wonder when one witnessed the ugly sight of
one captain indulging in a verbal assault against his counterpart
and leaving a sour taste to the well- crafted victory.
As Steve Waugh succumbed to a frustrated heave and began his
walk, he stopped and turned in his track, obviously disturbed by
the taunt which flew from Ganguly, the bowler. Waugh could do
little than resume his brisk walk to the dressing room but the
sight did little to redeem the reputation of the Indian skipper,
who had been jeered by the spectators after failing with the bat
earlier. ``I've hardly had a lean patch in five years. I've been
working hard to get out of it. But to me it is more important
that the team is winning,'' Ganguly said.
A tiff at the toss
The confusion over the toss this morning might have increased the
friction between Ganguly and Steve Waugh. The Indian skipper
thought he had won the toss even as the Australian contested.
Match Referee Cammie Smith had to intervene and rule in favour of
Steve Waugh.
Against the backdrop of all this came the refreshing act by
Tendulkar. He locked himself in a zone which is known only to
batsmen of his calibre. He played the ball on merit, and paced
his innings as only he would to carve an innings which spoke of
the man's hunger for runs. And his quest to set high standards
for himself.
This innings in particular was developed on a sound footing after
he walked out with Rahul Dravid as his new opening partner, an
arrangement prompted by Ganguly's miserable form. Not that Dravid
made much difference but the Indian vice-captain played some
rousing strokes before an impetuous stroke led to his downfall.
Even though they created a scare a few times with their erratic
running between the wickets, the pair of Tendulkar and Laxman
swung the match India's way with a partnership which effectively
decided the course of the contest. In putting on 199 runs, a
record for any wicket for India against Australia, the two raised
early visions of India's domination.
Laxman was happy to play the supporting role even though
Tendulkar encouraged his partner not to shed is natural game. A
few well-timed strokes from Laxman indicated the batsman's form
and the company of Tendulkar allowed him the freedom to indulge
in aggression too. But Laxman ran himself out for the second time
in succession, leaving the stage to Tendulkar.
The Indian innings could not maintain the tempo set by Tendulkar
and Laxman and the latter half wasted the advantage earned by
these two. Tendulkar had marked his bowlers and did not lose his
focus. He did not allow his 10,000th run to affect his resolve
but he did not hide his emotions on reaching the century - arms
raised in respect of his late father and a little nod in the
direction of the dressing room to confirm he was not going to
relent.
Aussies left hapless
We know the range of Tendulkar's strokes and the ease with which
he places them, times them, and paces them. But this day he
employed a few interesting shots to baffle the bowlers and leave
a mentally-strong man like Steve Waugh helpless. A few
uncharacteristic edges did irritate the Indian master but he
recovered his composure to play an outstanding knock in keeping
with his stature.
The sweep was a productive shot to counter the line adopted by
Andrew Symonds and Michael Bevan while he was too willing to grab
the chance to hit Glenn McGrath and Damien Fleming through the
line. Some of his shots, particularly the ones hit on the rise,
flew with lightening speed. He was severe on McGrath and smashed
the Aussie around, a straight drive being the pick.
Tendulkar and Laxman's innings apart, and a cameo by Hemang
Badani which ended in a silly run out, there was little to talk
about the Indian batting but the decline of Shane Warne stood out
glaringly. He made no impression on the batsmen.
``I tried to hang around,'' Tendulkar said on his approach and
praised Laxman for his outstanding knock. ``I think Laxman showed
tremendous character. He has been shaping well and let's us enjoy
his batting,'' Tendulkar observed.
Adam Gilchrist did his best to make a match of it with some
stunning blows but the Australian middle order succumbed to the
pressure. ``It was a gettable target but losing five wickets in
six overs put us back. It is something we need to look into. We
could have batted better,'' said the Australian skipper.
Australia did not get the start it desired. After Damien Martyn
snicked Srinath, the Australians struggled right through. They
were unable to read Harbhajan Singh and Agarkar too made the most
of the situation by bowling a tidy line. The best phase of the
Australian innings was Gilchrist slamming Zaheer Khan for 22 runs
in one over before Harbhajan scalped him with a drifter. The
highly-rated Aussie batting line-up offered little resistance and
the end came earlier than expected.
The Australians could not have complained on any account. At
least not the umpiring by M/s. K. Hariharan and Vijay Chopra, who
were consistent in their rulings. To be fair to the Aussies, they
accepted the defeat gracefully.
The Indian coach John Wright was delighted but had very little to
comment except ``I think the boys executed the basics
correctly.''
Sarandeep replaces Joshi
Sunil Joshi was the lone exclusion from the team for the
remaining One-day matches against Australia at Vizag and Goa. He
has been replaced by Punjab off-spinner Sarandeep Singh.
Making the announcement here on Saturday, the Board Secretary,
Mr. J.Y. Lele said the same team would travel to Sharjah, with
Reetinder Singh Sodhi as the 15th member, provided the Government
clears the trip to the Gulf.
lThe team: Sourav Ganguly (Capt), Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid,
V.V.S. Laxman, Hemang Badani, Dinesh Mongia, Vijay Dahiya, Ajit
Agarkar, Zaheer Khan, Javagal Srinath, Harbhajan Singh, Sarandeep
Singh, Robin Singh and Yuveraj Singh.
SCOREBOARD
INDIA
Rahul Dravid c Gilchrist b Fleming 15
(34b, 3x4)
Sachin Tendulkar c Fleming b McGrath 139
(125b, 19x4)
V.V.S. Laxman (run out) 83
(88b, 6x4)
Sourav Ganguly c Bevan b Fleming 0
(3b)
Hemang Badani (run out) 23
(25b, 1x6, 1x4)
Dinesh Mongia c & b McGrath 4
(5b)
Ajit Agarkar lbw b Harvey 1
(5b)
Vijay Dahiya b McGrath 0
(4b)
Zaheer Khan (not out) 7
(7b)
Harbhajan Singh (not out) 9
(8b, 1x4)
Extras (lb-7, nb-4, w-7) 18
---
Total (for eight wkts. in 50 overs) 299
---
Fall of wickets: 1-32 (Dravid), 2-231 (Laxman), 3-231 (Ganguly),
4-268 (Badani), 5-279 (Tendulkar), 6-282 (Agarkar), 7-283
(Dahiya), 8-284 (Mongia).
Australia bowling: McGrath 10-0-52-3, Fleming 10-1-34- 2, Harvey
10-0-48-1, Warne 10-0-64-0, Martyn 4-0-34-0, Symonds 4-0-37-0,
Bevan 2-0-23-0.
AUSTRALIA
Adam Gilchrist c Ganguly b Harbhajan 63
(70b, 10x4, 1x6)
Damien Martyn c Dahiya b Srinath 19
(17b, 2x4)
Ricky Ponting c & b Agarkar 23
(32b, 4x4)
Michael Bevan b Harbhajan 6
(11b)
Steve Waugh c Tendulkar b Ganguly 23
(32b, 2x4)
Andrew Symonds c Dahiya b Agarkar 5
(6b)
Darren Lehmann c Badani b Agarkar 1
(2b)
Ian Harvey c & b Harbhajan 1
(7b)
Shane Warne (run out) 18
(32b, 2x4)
Damien Fleming c Dahiya b Srinath 9
(8b, 2x4)
Glenn McGrath (not out) 0
(1b)
Extras (lb-4, nb-3, w-6) 13
---
Total (in 35.5 overs) 181
---
Fall of wickets: 1-46 (Martyn), 2-102 (Gilchrist), 3-111
(Ponting), 4-122 (Bevan), 5-127 (Symonds), 6-128 (Lehmann), 7-136
(Harvey), 8-171 (Warne), 9-172 (Waugh).
India bowling: Srinath 8.5-1-34-2, Zaheer Khan 6-0-51- 0, Agarkar
8-0-38-3, Harbhajan 9-0-37-3, Ganguly 4-0-17-1.
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