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As always with Mahendra Singh Dhoni the big shots were never far away
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As the ball soared into the sky and landed with a thud onto the concrete
stands behind long-on, you braced yourself for the explosion of noise that
usually accompanies any Mahendra Singh Dhoni big hit. Instead, there was
eerie near silence. With only a few reporters and a sprinkling of others
in attendance, there was no danger to eardrums from the Indian team's
practice match at the Chinnaswamy Stadium.
You've grown so accustomed to the hype and hoopla that follows these boys
around that the idea of them playing in front of the proverbial three men
and dog seemed out of the realms of fantasy. They seemed to enjoy it
though, especially Dhoni, who smacked 32 from 30 balls before one loft too
many against the offspin of Ramesh Powar. The match billed as Rahul
[Dravid] XI against [Ajit] Agarkar XI was more a straight contest between
bat and ball, though Irfan Pathan and Harbhajan Singh enacted both roles
before the 40 overs were completed.
Both sides had been given targets by the team management. The bowlers were
asked to choke off the runs, and look to concede less than 35 in 10 overs,
whereas the batsmen were to rattle along at 75 runs in the same period.
With Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid in fine fettle, that certainly
appeared a possibility. Tendulkar's ability to throw from the deep may be
a subject of debate, but there's nothing whatsoever inhibiting his
shotmaking ability. He drove and cut with élan during a cameo of 26 (24
balls) and it ended only with an outstanding catch on the run from Dinesh
Mongia at deep midwicket.
Not to be outdone, Dravid stroked 10 fours before retiring to make way for
Yuvraj Singh, and Virender Sehwag thumped 28 in even time before Sreesanth
got one to keep low and trap him in front. Yuvraj, whose form in the
one-day game was one of the features of India's resurgence last season,
crafted an elegant 41, and while he and Dhoni were in the middle, the big
shots were never too far away. Yuvraj played one superb sweep off
Harbhajan and then spanked one straight down the ground, but an attempt to
repeat the stroke ended up at long-on. Harbhajan, having won that little
battle of the Punjab, couldn't restrain his laughter.
With Ian Frazer and Greg King umpiring, and Greg Chappell watching from
the stands, Suresh Raina and Pathan didn't stay too long, leaving Mohammad
Kaif, very much the mid-innings anchor, and Harbhajan to see it through to
the close of play. By the time the players retreated to the shade and
lunch inside the National Cricket Academy premises, 242 runs had come from
40 overs, much nearer the batsmen's target than the bowlers.

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Mending shoulder and all: However, there was nothing inhibiting Sachin Tendulkar's shotmaking ability
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SM Yusuf, who has a special place in Indian cricket history for having
no-balled Anil Kumble's medium-pace - prompting the switch to legspin -
had scored the game, and was kind enough to provide a scorecard
afterwards. Pathan went for 42 from his five overs, and will be glad that
he won't have to come up against Tendulkar and Dravid every day, while
Dinesh Mongia, who went for 30 from four overs, was reminded that more
than a Persian Gulf separates these guys from those who are lions merely
in county cricket.
Ultimately though, it was a good outing for everyone, relaxed and with
plenty of banter and enough of an edge to make sure that it didn't descend
into farce. After lunch and a team meeting, it was back to the hotel and a
swim to cool down. Then perhaps, a few might just tune in to watch
highlights of Sri Lanka's remarkable win at the SSC, confirmation if any
was needed of the sterner tests that lie in wait.
Dileep Premachandran is features editor of Cricinfo