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Indian top order makes merry
By Vijay Lokapally
HARARE, JUNE 2. The atmosphere was festive. A weekend carnival at
the Country Club. The tennis courts were packed and the golf
course dotted with amateurs. Cricket was thrown in as an added
attraction and it made up for a splendid day under the sun.
The weather was most pleasant as the Indians relaxed, even as
some of them helped themselves to some useful practice before the
first Test. The batsmen, those lucky ones high in the batting
order, made merry while those outside too had their priorities
sorted out by coach John Wright, who had a training schedule for
each.
The CFX Academy also had its task cut out, what with the Indian
openers, S. Ramesh and Shiv Sunder Das, making the most after
skipper Sourav Ganguly elected to bat. The outfield may have been
slow, matching the playing surface, but the Indians concentrated
on spending time in the middle and refrained from making any
silly errors that would cut short their stay. The focus was on
feasting on the average attack.
Das and Ramesh had not been convincing in the last match at
Mutare and were under some pressure to get runs against their
name here. The opportunities came their way aplenty and the man
who thrived to make the best impression was Das as the Indians
finished the first day of the three-day match against CFX Academy
XI at 370 for three.
It was not that Ramesh did not get into his rhythm but the
quality of bowling did not demand the best of concentration from
him. He is a big match player and that is what his skipper
expects him to remember everytime he walks to the middle. ``It's
all in the mind. I'll get runs in the Test,'' remarked Ramesh.
The century by Das was a reminder of the affable Oriya's
potential to adapt. He had been slow on his feet at Mutare
initially and when he appeared to have got his game going, a bad
decision had ended his stay. He did not allow any such liberties
to the opposition this day as he batted perfectly in the company
of an unusually subdued Ramesh.
Not much need be made of this contest given the nature of the CFX
Academy composition. Most of the boys were playing their first
competitive match and that was one reason why coach Dave Houghton
was not unduly perturbed at some of the basic mistakes they would
have committed.
The slow outfield may have helped the fielding side but it also
meant that the Indians had to be innovative. Das was the more
aggressive of the two and gave a splendid display of attacking
batsmanship. His form may have pleased Wright, who surely would
have some worries regarding the injury to Rahul Dravid - a
dislocated finger which now needs more attention than was
visualised last evening.
Some of the shots Das played were timed so well that it was hard
to believe he was in need of runs against his name to boost his
confidence. His 13th first-class century was just the preparation
he would have wanted.
It was an innings which had everything that makes Das a batsman
to look forward to. The lack of bite in the attack might well
have been tempting for Das or Ramesh to bat rashly but there was
reason to believe that both had instructions to follow as they
cut out the frills.
Ramesh was once caught in the slips off a no-ball but he
continued to play within his limitations this day. Occupying the
crease for some time was his resolve and he was close to a half-
century when the umpire judged him caught down the leg side. The
batsman was distinctly unhappy but he had to make way for Laxman,
who had been eagerly awaiting his turn to get going.
Das and Ramesh added 86 runs for the opening wicket in 24.2 overs
while Laxman helped Das continue in the same spirit. Das duly
completed his century and retired since Wright was keen on as
many batsmen as possible getting in a knock. ``It was not an easy
wicket initially because the ball was stopping but it gradually
eased out and I could hit a few shots in front of the wicket,''
said the Indian opener. Das' innings, which lasted 186 balls,
contained 13 fours.
Laxman played some rousing strokes, the kind the CFX Academy lads
may not have seen. Effortless drives and some rasping cuts
dominated his innings as he entertained the audience with his
stylish batsmanship. His essay lasted 132 balls with 15 fours
adorning his performance.
``Obviously it's important as it came before the Test match. I
had told myself that I'd occupy the crease to make amends for the
failure in the last match,'' said Laxman on his 29th first-class
century.
For Tamil Nadu left-hander Hemang Badani, it was a much welcome
outing as he too showed a wide range of strokes. Quick on
anything short, he was a delight to watch with his strokeplay
square of the wicket. The shot of the day came from his willow
when he swiveled to pull seamer Campbell McMillan for a six.
Badani (69 off 101 balls with seven fours) and Ganguly (26 off 75
balls) batted well to maintain the trend for the day.
The CFX Academy lads put up a shoddy fielding display and
conceded too many easy runs. But it hardly bothered the Indians.
They had all the reasons to be satisfied with the performance,
the pedestrian bowling attack of the CFX Academy
nothwithstanding.
The scores:
Indians - 1st innings: S.S. Das (retd. out) 110, S. Ramesh c
Ciziba b Soma 42, V.V.S. Laxman (retd. out) 100, Hemang Badani
(batting) 69, Sourav Ganguly (batting) 26, Extras (b-4, lb-6, nb-
4, w-9) 23, Total (for three wkts. in 97 overs) 370.
Fall of wickets: 1-86, 2-248, 3-287.
CFX Academy XI bowling: Campbell McMillan 17-3-52-0, Mluleki
Nkala 13-0-67-0, Leon Soma 10-0-38-1, Gary Brent 20-5-56-0, Ian
Coulson 11-1-70-0, Sean Irvine 15-2-46- 0, Barney Rogers 11-2-31-
0.
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