Calculated aggression
When Steve Waugh said Australia would come hard at India, he wasn't kidding
When Steve Waugh said Australia would come hard at India, he wasn't kidding. A team scoring 400 for 5 in a single day was not something the Adelaide Oval had experienced before. Australia went on a run-riot and overtook the 387 they scored against West Indies on the second day of the fourth Test of the Frank Worrell Trophy in 1968-69.
A closer look at the scoring pattern lets slip an interesting ploy.
Session
|
Runs
|
Overs
|
Runrate
|
Morning session |
135
|
27
|
5
|
Afternoon session |
106
|
24
|
4.42
|
Evening session |
159
|
39
|
4.08
|
Australia played to put India on the defensive as soon as the game began, and once the pressure was on, the batsmen could step off the gas, play a relatively safer game, and still end up with a huge total on the first day.
Batsman | Strike rates |
Langer |
80.6
|
Hayden |
80.0
|
Ponting |
71.5
|
Martyn |
76.9
|
Waugh |
56.6
|
Katich |
68.8
|
Gilchrist |
90.0
|
Ricky Ponting was unbeaten at the day's end, with a score of 176 in 246 balls with 24 boundaries. His strike rate of 71.5% suggests a poor bowling performance, but on closer inspection, it was Ponting's frame of mind and the pitch's true bounce that attributed more to his final score. Ponting had an in-control percentage of 87.4, compared to the team total of 84%. His back-foot strokeplay was authoritative, and the number of runs he scored off the front foot reveals how consistent the bounce was.
Front foot
|
Back foot
|
|
Runs scored |
99
|
62
|
Balls faced |
169
|
60
|
When Ponting reached his hundred, he achieved the rare distinction of scoring all 16 of his boundaries on the offside. It had a lot to do with the line the Indians bowled.
Percentage of deliveries bowled to Ponting on the offside | |
Bowler
|
% offside
|
Agarkar |
100
|
Pathan |
88.2
|
Nehra |
91.8
|
Kumble |
82.4
|
For a large part of the day, India bowled a good length, and just short of a good length. The arrival of Steve Waugh, unsurprisingly, brought a change in tactics. Of the nine bouncers bowled in the day, five were directed at Waugh. Ironically, it took a half-volley - just the delivery the bowlers were trying to avoid - from Ashish Nehra to dismiss him.
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