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Yuvraj Singh showed just how to approach a target as he's done through the series
© AFP
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Even with the series win safely stashed away, Indian cricket's modern-day
Casanovas couldn't bridle their lust for the chase. This 13th successive
romp while pursuing a total put them within a game of equalling the record
set by the nearly invincible West Indian side of the mid-'80s, and once
again emphasised just how much of a force they have become in the
limited-overs format. Pakistan, who have scaled a few one-day peaks of
their own under Inzamam-ul-Haq and Bob Woolmer weren't merely beaten in
the last four games. They were made to look like two-bit amateurs, despite
twice having totalled in excess of 285.
At the halfway stage of their innings, India had made sedate progress to
114 for 1, and the asking rate had climbed up to seven-an-over. When
Mahendra Singh Dhoni joined Yuvraj Singh in the middle, the equation at
one stage was a challenging 92 from 67 balls. Even then though, you never
sensed that it might be Pakistan's game, and the fact that the finishing
touches were applied with 19 balls to spare, and Yuvraj hobbling around on
one leg, said much about how facile this triumph was.
Pakistan's fielding, exemplified by the normally reliable Mohammad Sami
and Shoaib Malik, was such a shambles that a target of 287 appeared
infinitely smaller. The last thing you need with batsmen of the quality of
Yuvraj and Dhoni coming at you is to make their task easier by dropping
catches and fumbling the ball like it was a bar of soap. Between them,
Yuvraj and Dhoni piled up 563 runs in the ODI series for four times out,
and Pakistan's bowlers had absolutely no answer to their crisp hitting and
unflappability in every situation.
Rahul Dravid's tranquil 50 established a platform, and Yuvraj ticked along
at a run a ball to ensure that panic - a stranger to this Indian ODI side
in recent times - never set in. Pakistan's seamers bowled with great
discipline early on, but line-and-length basics alone offer no answer to
the threat posed by Yuvraj and Dhoni. Their century stand in the crucial
match at Lahore had been compiled at hectic pace, but this association
outdid even that, with 146 runs pounded from just 99 balls. The last 46 of
those took just 20 deliveries, and each massive biff from Dhoni seemed to
scream of a desire to clear the immense stands at the National Stadium.
He failed to do so, but the little fusillade of shots provided a
rollicking end to a match that rarely rose above the mundane.
With Dhoni and Yuvraj already recognised as match-winners, the greatest
source of satisfaction for the team management was Sreesanth's spell at
first-change in the morning. Having been entrusted with the new ball in
previous outings, Sreesanth was "challenged" - to echo Dravid's words at
the press conference - to perform a different task, and he emerged with
his reputation considerably enhanced. Given the sameness of the left-arm
pace attack that cost India the Test series here, change is surely in the
offing ahead of Nagpur, and this spell and a couple that preceded it have
surely pushed Sreesanth to the front of the queue.
Though he picked up only one wicket today, Rudra Pratap Singh was just as
impressive, in a bowling line-up that stuck to its task admirably but for
the 14 wides that were conceded. India's much-maligned bowlers picked up
45 wickets to Pakistan's 25, bowling out the opposition thrice, and were
largely responsible for the momentum shift that transformed this series
after the bad-light-interrupted thriller at Peshawar. Of course, it helped
that they were backed up by some stunning fielding - the dropped catches
at Lahore were an aberration - where their Pakistani counterparts had to
cope with fielding support that rarely rose above the mediocre.
There might have been no last Karachi hurrah for Sachin Tendulkar, but his
237 runs played just as pivotal a role in a 4-1 triumph that was every bit
as resounding as it appears. For all the controversies and hullabaloo that
have followed this team everywhere in recent times, you simply can't argue
with Dravid's captaincy record - 12 wins from 16 against three
highly-rated teams - since being appointed before the Sri Lanka series in
October. The staleness and mediocrity of the past two seasons is now a
distant memory, and no praise can be too high for a team that scraped the
barrel of despair at Karachi less than three weeks ago only to fight back
with the spirit of champions. And boy, can they chase.
Dileep Premachandran is features editor of Cricinfo