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March 15, 2013
Australia 273 for 7 (Cowan 86, Warner 71, Smith 58*, Jadeja 3-56) v India
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
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Features : Mohali pitch presents alternative reality
Matches:
India v Australia at Mohali
Series/Tournaments:
Australia tour of India
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Australia's batsmen did their homework, fought hard and showed the right attitude. Yet they found themselves nursing a manifestly inadequate first-innings total for the third Test in a row, a tally of 273 for 7 at the close looking all too anaemic on the best surface of the series in Mohali.
For most of the second day, which served as the first due to a wash out on Thursday, India's bowlers toiled without much effect. David Warner and Ed Cowan fashioned an intelligent opening stand, the recalled Steven Smith demonstrated considerable poise at No. 5, and even the flown-in Brad Haddin started his punchy innings with a straight six.
But there were too many moments of familiar inattention to allow the tourists to gain a proper toehold. All this despite the suspension of four players designed to focus the minds and actions of the squad. The captain Michael Clarke skipped presumptuously down the pitch first ball after promoting himself to No. 3, Phillip Hughes maintained his unabated Indian nightmare with a pained 31-ball stay for 2, and Cowan found similarly terminal quicksand in the 80s.
R Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja and the recalled Pragyan Ojha all had their moments, and on a pitch offering him the merest extra ration of pace Ishant Sharma joined them with an important old-ball spell as the shadows lengthened around a near-deserted PCA Stadium. Some quick wickets on the third morning and India will have the better part of two days to bat Australia out of the series.
Ojha's inclusion for Harbhajan Singh was one of two alterations to the Indian team victorious in Hyderabad, Virender Sehwag also dropped for the left-hand batsman Shikhar Dhawan to debut. The visitors' changes had been largely forced by the suspension of four players plus an ankle injury to Matthew Wade, leaving Haddin to come in as the wicketkeeper while Smith slotted into the top six and Mitchell Starc and Nathan Lyon were recalled.
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Warner and Cowan walked to the middle for the earlier 9am start time, and swiftly found the pitch to be mild-mannered. Warner punched a pair of boundaries from the opening over, and regular runs were collected against a new ball that did not swing, seam or bounce to any uncomfortable degree.
The most nervous moment of the morning arrived when Warner chopped Bhuvneshwar Kumar past leg stump and to the fine leg rope, though he also mistimed a drive at Ishant Sharma that lobbed narrowly out of the tall fast man's reach and scooted to the straight boundary.
Ashwin's first over betrayed the fact that there was nothing too treacherous about the spin on offer, though Warner contrived to play and miss at three deliveries and snick another past gully. Shortly before lunch a Cowan cut, then a Warner drive, both flashed past slip, but Virat Kohli's surprised reactions reflected how safely Australia's openers had played.
They ambled on into the afternoon, playing conservatively but ticking the runs over sensibly enough, until Jadeja's move around the wicket brought a misjudgement of flight by Warner and a bat-pad catch for MS Dhoni. Clarke had conveyed his intention to take greater responsibility for guiding the innings following the Hyderabad debacle, and so walked in at the fall of the first wicket.
His body language was alert and positive, but his footwork and reading of length were found immediately wanting by Jadeja, who coaxed a dance down the pitch that resulted in a stumping for a delighted Dhoni. Hughes then scratched and scraped as though filled with dread, in an innings that only took place because Usman Khawaja had been deemed ineligible.
Hughes' exit, tentatively fiddling at a leg-side delivery from Ojha, was as unsurprising as it was dispiriting. The contrast with Smith, playing his first Test since the final match of the 2010-11 Ashes, was acute. He did not meet every ball with the middle of the bat, but showed the right combination of aggression and resolve.
At the other end Cowan fought bravely, not always looking secure but challenging India's bowlers to find something extra to dismiss him. It was the sort of dogged innings played all too rarely by Australia over the first two Tests.
The evening resumption had both batsmen struggling somewhat for rhythm, Cowan offering a chance to silly point off the face of the bat and Smith not finding the boundaries he sought. With the stand at 47 it was Cowan who succumbed, snicking a nicely pitched off break from Ashwin to slip, and cursing his inability to go on to a century after five hours of application.
Haddin announced himself by launching brazenly down the ground, and with Smith delivered a busy stand that briefly threatened to lift Australia to more certain ground. However Ishant found a modicum of old-ball movement on a ground where he and Zaheer Khan had tormented the visitors in the past, prompting Haddin to drag onto the stumps then perforating Moises Henriques' nervy forward prod.
Peter Siddle also succumbed for a duck, given lbw by the umpire Richard Kettleborough in response to a beseeching appeal by Jadeja. Though Mitchell Starc hit out typically and Smith remained composed, their hopes of driving Australia towards the kind of total merited by the pitch appear remote.
Daniel Brettig is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. He tweets here
© ESPN EMEA Ltd.
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Assistant editor Daniel Brettig had been a journalist for eight years when he joined ESPNcricinfo, but his fascination with cricket dates back to the early 1990s, when his dad helped him sneak into the family lounge room to watch the end of day-night World Series matches well past bedtime. Unapologetically passionate about indie music and the South Australian Redbacks, Daniel's chief cricketing achievement was to dismiss Wisden Almanack editor Lawrence Booth in the 2010 Ashes press match in Perth - a rare Australian victory that summer.
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The second session is actually a testimony of good thoughtful captaincy by Dhoni, where he has not only put brakes on the aussie run scoring but also picked up 3 wickets. Jadeja, has been the surprise star this series with his left arm spin bowling. While he may not have as many wickets as Ashwin, he has been equally menacing especially getting Clarke out on 3 times in this series already. Classic example of how well to take your chances. One person, who is definately on borrowed time is Phil Hughes. He has been miserable against the spinners and no confidence, his efforts are going no where. Needs time out and needs to sort out his technique. Never been a great fan of him but aussie pundits rate him highly. Time for him to repay for all this faith. Two good selections - Haddin & Starc. Good quality operators and should be able to make their mark in this match
Interestingly enough, although dictated by non-playing factors, the changes in the Australian line-up have produced a better, more balanced side; Haddin and Starc, in particular, should have been there from the start. The loss of the first day makes a result unlikely, but that means Oz can use this match as consolidation - Warner is already looking more like the player we all knew he could be now he's been forced to understand that this is serious cricket with no place for airheaded strokeplay.
Excellent batting by Dhawan!! This is what I have been talking about for so long on these boards. There's no shortage of talent in India. It makes no sense to continue with out of form Viru, Gauti and old man 10dulkar in the hope that they will perform some day. Those people caused us 2 back to back whitewashes and 1 series loss at home. It makes sense to play youngsters who are already in-form. Viru and Gauti can always go back to Ranji Trophy and regain their form. We don't have to keep losing because of some out of form seniors.
Posted by Nish_US on (March 16, 2013, 7:56 GMT)Congrats Dhavan on the 50 on debut.. nice looking shots... keep up the good work and develop some good defence as well..
Posted by Thefakebook on (March 16, 2013, 6:21 GMT)What inning for Starc he'll get a ton one day but hopes he gets plenty of wickets!
Posted byStarc, Smith, Cowan & Warner.....Good Inning by Aussies....
Posted by MTA_Mounties on (March 16, 2013, 5:21 GMT)Question 1: Why did Indie/Aussie Test get replaced by a no-name-no-one-cares Bangladesh SRI test on Cricketplus channel???? Questiion 2 why are Aussies getting hell beat out of them in India given the Australia tour thumping administered last year? And before y'all yap I am a Canadian who lived and breathed Oz cricket living in Canberra for two years.
Posted by Nish_US on (March 16, 2013, 5:09 GMT)Cpt.Meanster I disagree on the following 1.) Jadeja cannot spearhead the spinning dept, which Ojha can definitely do. Jadeja can only be a support spinner or the container. 2.) If ashwin is off colors, then there is little that Jadeja can do, if only they two were playing 3.) Dhoni will do everything in his control to take JADEJA to SA and other overseas series
One thing I do agree, Ojha needs to have little more control, for a frontline spinner, but he needs support from his captain...he is still a bowler in the making.
I hope this competition between aswin, jadeja and ojha will definitely bring about the best in them and will do India a lot of good, just need DHONI to be impartial in offering his support.
Posted byAustralia need to develop some spin bowlers with suspect actions. Sri Lanka got away with it and it now seems India and NZ now have spinners that have actions that would not have been legal 20 years ago.
Just as well Australia, Sth Africa and England still adhere to the laws of cricket!!
Posted by Nish_US on (March 16, 2013, 4:45 GMT)Classic spinner's dismissal - Ojha luring Steve Smith onto front foot just enough to get him out of the crease... something very difficult for a stump to stump bowler...