India v West Indies, 2nd Test, Mumbai, 2nd day
Rohit, Pujara tons leave WI rattled
The Wankhede crowd gave Sachin Tendulkar a tremendous welcome on the second morning•BCCI
Tendulkar moved smoothly to a half-century in his final Test•BCCI
While the attention had been on Tendulkar, Cheteshwar Pujara batted with fluency•BCCI
Pujara's ability to convert was on display again as he went on to score his fifth Test century•BCCI
Though Rohit's progress was not quite flawless as he was caught by Narsingh Deonarine off a big no ball•BCCI
West Indies began their innings recklessly- Kieran Powell lofting R Ashwin to long-off•BCCI
He treated his fans to some sterling shots, such as his trademark punch through cover•BCCI
Suddenly, on 74, he edged to slip, where Darren Sammy silenced the crowd by taking a sharp catch•BCCI
Virat Kohli picked up the pace right away, and kept India well ahead in the Test•BCCI
Shillingford brought West Indies back with Pujara's wicket and recorded his fifth five-wicket haul in as many innings. Only Australia's Charlie Turner, with six in six, is ahead of him•BCCI
Rohit remained unbeaten on 111, becoming only the fifth player ever to score tons in his first two Test innings as India finished at 495•BCCI
Pragyan Ojha struck next, trapping the nightwatchman Tino Best lbw, before Ashwin dismissed Darren Bravo, to leave West Indies at 43 for 3, and 270 runs behind•BCCI
The thousands found their voices moments later and they roared Tendulkar off the field, probably for the final time•BCCI
But soon after reaching his fifty, Kohli edged to slips, giving Darren Sammy his third catch. He ended up with five, equaling the world record. •BCCI
Rohit Sharma kept up the charge for India as he and No. 11 Mohammed Shami put on 80 runs. Shami contributed only 11 of those•BCCI
With the possibility of West Indies succumbing to yet another innings-defeat, Sachin Tendulkar led the team out to the middle•BCCI