Wednesday, May 1, 2024
spot_img

India inch closer to maiden series win before bad weather stops play

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

Sydney: India closed in on their maiden Test series triumph in Australia before bad light and rain combined to delay the inevitable, adding more hours to a wait of 71 years.
Bad light stopped play in the final session of day three of the fourth Test as the hosts, responding to India’s mammoth first-innings total of 622 for seven declared, were reduced to 236 for six in 83.3 overs on Saturday.
With two full days play left in the game and Australia still 386 runs adrift of India’s score, the visitors will fancy their chances of winning the four-match rubber 3-1.
India first went Down Under back in 1947-48 under Lala Amarnath’s captaincy, and are yet to achieve series triumph there despite eleven attempts. At the Sydney Cricket Ground, the players went off with an hour’s play pending in the day as bad light hampered proceedings, before rain intervened and brought out an early stumps.
This was after Kuldeep Yadav (3-71) and Ravindra Jadeja (2-62) shared five wickets to put India in a commanding position. At stumps then, Australia were trailing by 386 runs, with Peter Handscomb (28 not out) and Pat Cummins (25 not out) at the crease.
Post tea, Yadav struck on the sixth ball as Tim Paine (5) was completely foxed by the turn he was getting. The spinner pitched the ball up and the batsman, going for a drive, failed to counter it and was bowled. Cummins and Handscomb then put on 38 runs for the seventh wicket. India requested for the second new ball after 81 overs but were denied owing to bad light.
They kept the batsmen in the middle for only a couple more overs before the umpires stopped play altogether owing to a thunderstorm in the vicinity.
Earlier, India struck four times in the middle session as Australia were reduced to 198 for five at tea. Post lunch, Australia made the worst start possible with Marcus Harris (79) getting out before he could settle in again.
In the third over after the restart, he played on off Jadeja. In the 49th over, the left-arm spinner made it a double blow six overs later as Shaun Marsh (8) was caught at slip. Australia barely managed to cross 150 in the 52nd over as India piled on the pressure.
Unlike in the first session, only 35 runs came in the first hour of play. The pace of scoring did improve in the second hour with 41 runs taken, but India again struck twice to peg them back. Ajinkya Rahane held a brilliant catch at short midwicket to send back Marnus Labuschagnge (38) off Mohammed Shami (1-54) soon after.
Travis Head (20) added 40 runs for the fifth wicket with Handscomb for the fifth wicket and brought some respite to the desperate Australian middle order.
But once again, as things looked settled down, they manufactured a wicket with Head hitting a full toss straight back at Yadav and was out caught.
However, Cummins and Handscomb ensured that the Australians lost no more wickets before the close of play.
On day one, Cheteshwar Pujara scored his 18th Test hundred, while Rishabh Pant scored his second Test century on day two as India had piled up a massive score. (PTI)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

Palestinian presidency blames US support for Israel’s possible Rafah attack

Ramallah, May 1: The Palestinian presidency has said that Israel would not dare to continue its assault in...

Nothing suspicious found so far, says Minister Atishi on bomb threat emails to Delhi schools

New Delhi, May 1: Following the bomb threat through email at several schools across the city on Wednesday,...

Bomb threat at schools: Delhi L-G seeks report from Police Commissioner

New Delhi, May 1:  Delhi Lieutenant Governor V K Saxena has sought a report from the Police Commissioner...

LS polls: CAPF deployment for 4th phase in Bengal to increase

Shillong, May 1: As many as 597 companies of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF) will be deployed...