Tendulkar's scalp - prize for Aussies (4 June 1999)
Australia knew from the moment Glenn McGrath trimmed Brian Lara's off-stump with his perfectly pitched off-cutter at Old Trafford on Sunday that their final, decisive first round World Cup match was theirs for the taking and they were into the final
01-Jan-1970
4 June 1999
Tendulkar's scalp - prize for Aussies
Tony Cozier in London
Australia knew from the moment Glenn McGrath trimmed Brian
Lara's off-stump with his perfectly pitched off-cutter at Old
Trafford on Sunday that their final, decisive first round World
Cup match was theirs for the taking and they were into the final
six.
For the same reasons, Sachin Tendulkar's wicket will mean as
much to them in the opening Super Sixes match against India at
the Oval here today, even if they won't be quite as confident of
eventual victory once they get it as they were with the West
Indies.
Lara and Tendulkar as the two wonder batsmen of their time and
the Australians have come to respect them above all others
through bitter experience.
Lara, the languid left-hander, virtually won two Tests against
them on his own in the Caribbean recently with his 218 in
Jamaica and his 153 not out in Barbados. He entered on Sunday at
seven for two and could have turned the match round. Instead, he
departed to his old nemesis, McGrath, at 20 for three.
With little else to offer, the West Indies limped to 110 all out
and Australia could win the match and advance to the Super Sixes
- even after deliberately decelerating their scoring to fix the
run-rates so as to keep the West Indies in and New Zealand out,
unsuccessfully as it turned out.
The last time the Australians confronted Tendulkar, in India and
in Sharjah just over a year ago, the solidly built right-hander
was in the same uncompromising mood as Lara was in March. He
reeled off two big hundreds in the three Tests and three more in
the last three One-Day Internationals.
The difference between Lara and Tendulkar is in the batsmen
around them.
Lara, short of practice because of a painful right wrist, seldom
looked here like the player he was in the Tests back home and
his highest score was a mere 36. Only Ridley Jacobs, the
underestimated left-handed wicket-keeper, consistently took up
the slack.
Tendulkar's Cup was disrupted by the death of his father in
Mumbai and he missed the defeat against Zimbabwe. When he
returned, he plundered poor Kenya with an unbeaten 140 off 101
balls but was out cheaply against South Africa, Sri Lanka and
England.
Unlike the West Indies, India had Saurav Ganguly, the elegant
left-hander, and Rahul Dravid, the classically correct
right-hander, to compensate.
They were the only two to aggregate over 300 in the first round
with hundred by Dravid against Kenya and Sri Lanka, Ganguly 97
against South Africa and 183 against Sri Lanka.
The upshot is that, while everyone else has struggled against
the white ball on fresh pitches India's totals have been
imposing - 253 for five against South Africa, 249 against
Zimbabwe, 329 for two against Kenya, 373 for six against Sri
Lanka and 232 for eight against England.
How well India bat today is likely to determine the outcome of
what, for both, is a virtual sudden death - and how well they
bat could depend, as so many matches have, on the toss.
London was drenched by thunderstorms in the early hours
Wednesday and by more rain again early yesterday. The sun broke
through in the afternoon but the forecast is for more rain
today.
The square at the Oval has been covered more than the
groundstaff would have wanted so that the team going in first is
likely to find batting tricky early on. That has been the case
at most venues, a disadvantage that several captains have
already complained about.
India's coach, the former Test batsman Anshuman Gaekwad, said
that whether Tendulkar would be reinstated as opening batsman
would depend on the weather, the look of the pitch and the toss.
Fearful of the effect of his early loss should be open, they
have dropped him down to No.4 since his return from India but he
would obviously be more effective with all 50 overs at his
disposal.
Neither Australia or India have carried forward any points from
the first round (Pakistan and Zimbabwe have four, New Zealand
and South Africa two each) so today's loser would almost
certainly have no chance to going through to the last four.
As they did in the one-day series in the West Indies, Australia
looked flat in losing to New Zealand in their opening match and
then gave away too many runs in their defeat by Pakistan. They
had to beat the West Indies to qualify - and they did.
"We've improved with every match and are gradually reaching our
peak," captain Steve Waugh said. "There's still room for
improvement but against the West Indies we showed what we can do
once the chips are down. The chips are down now because we have
got to basically win our next five matches to win the Cup and we
can do it."
So what about Tendulkar?
"We won't focus on him too much before the game," Waugh said.
"He's capable of nicking the ball like anyone else."
Teams:
Australia (from): Steve Waugh (captain), Mark Waugh, Adam
Gilchrist, Ricky Ponting, Darren Lehmann, Michael Bevan, Tom
Moody, Bendon Julian, Paul Reiffel, Shane Warne, Damien Fleming
and Glenn McGrath.
India (from): Mohammad Azharuddin (captain), Saurav Ganguly,
Sandigopan Ramesh, Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, Ajay Jadeja,
Robin Singh, Nayan Mongia, Javagal Srinath, Anil Kumble,
Venkatesh Prasad, Dabesesh Mohanty.
Umpires: Steve Bucknor (West Indies), Peter Willey (England).
TV umpire: Ian Robinson (Zimbabwe).
Match referee: Rajan Madugalle (Sri Lanka).
Weather forecast: Unsettled with a mixture of sunshine and
showers. Maximum temperature 18 degrees celsius.
Source :: The Barbados Nation (https://www.nationnews.com/)