New Zealand Academy nose ahead in battle of attrition
New Zealand Cricket Academy (NZCA) and Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) were slugging it out in a tense semifinal contest at the MA Chidambaram Stadium at Chepauk today
Sankhya Krishnan
29-Aug-2000
New Zealand Cricket Academy (NZCA) and Oil and Natural Gas Corporation
(ONGC) were slugging it out in a tense semifinal contest at the MA
Chidambaram Stadium at Chepauk today. The fall of opener Radhey Shyam
Gupte in the last over of the day may have just tilted the balance in
New Zealand's way. The oilmen closed out at 171/4, still 158 adrift
and with the cream of their batting back in the pavilion. Earlier a
combative unbeaten hundred from allrounder James Franklin and his 52
run last wicket association with Chris Martin lifted the visitors to
329. India seamer Amit Bhandari was the pick of the bowlers mopping up
two more wickets today to finish with a bag of six.
Resuming at 252/6, the Academy boys lost three wickets for 25 runs in
the morning. Bhandari scalped two in two balls taking out wicketkeeper
Martyn Sigley and Bruce Martin to leave NZCA at 270/8. Left arm
spinner Rahul Sanghvi then got into the act, upsetting Jeeten Patel's
stumps for four. Then came the 99 minute rearguard action from
Franklin, captain of the Kiwi side at the Under 19 World Cup in
January this year, and Martin. ONGC got rid of the latter in the 132nd
over, when he directed Sanghvi into the hands of Gupte at sillypoint.
The lefthanded Franklin was left high and dry on a magnificent 115
(272 balls, 12 fours). Bhandari (6/45) and Sanghvi (4/122) shared all
ten wickets between them.
ONGC commenced their reply shortly after lunch and with his fifth
ball, right arm quickie Chris Martin despatched Gagan Khoda for a
duck. The Rajasthan captain flicked him straight into the hands of an
agile Michael Papps at forward short leg. Radhey Shyam Gupte, who
replaced Ravi Sehgal for this match, and captain Gautam Vadhera then
steadied the innings with a patient stand of 82. Vadehra looked the
more enterprising of the two, tucking into left arm spinner Bruce
Martin with gusto. At the opposite end left arm quick Franklin was
getting the ball to land on a relentless off stump line as well as
dropping it on the perfect length to tempt the batsman into a reckless
waft outside off stump. Vadehra launched into one which went over the
head of point who stuck out his left hand but the ball refused to
stick.
Legspinner Aaron Redmond came on from the pavilion end and managed to
get a leg break to kick up which Gupte gloved just over the slip
cordon. It was Vadehra who departed first, slashing Martin straight
into James Marshall at gully for 32. Virender Shewag, the stockily
built Delhi strokemaker arrived in the middle and ondrove his first
ball, a full toss, through the legs of mid on for four. Gupte took the
cue from his partner, heaving Redmond over squareleg for the first six
off the innings. NZCA captain Jacob Oram gave Chris Martin a well
deserved break after an extended spell and brought himself on from the
Indian Oil end. Shewag set the innings alight with back to back
boundaries. The first a flick to backward squareleg that brought up
the 100 and the second a delectable dab past gully to the backward
point fence.
Oram decided enough was enough and introduced off spinner Jeeten Patel
into the firing line. It was Redmond though who broke through, Shewag
rocking back and indiscreetly forcing him uppishly into the off side.
Chris Martin completed the low catch at deep point to leave the oilmen
at 117/3. Jeeten Patel may be a brilliant bowler but not on the
evidence of his showing today. Oram kept him on a shade too long and
both Gupte and Rizwan Shamshad gleefully waded into him, taking the
aerial route to midwicket and straight down the ground for boundaries.
Gupte had settled down to play a disciplined knock after some early
jitters but he let his guard down in the last over of the day from
Redmond. The second ball was sliced into second slip's midriff but the
fielder agonisingly failed to close his hands over the ball. Two balls
later Gupte went forward and tried to smother the spin. The ball
popped up into the safe hands of Lou Vincent at silly point to deal a
definitive blow to ONGC's aspirations.