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From the publishers of THE HINDU VOL. 25 :: NO. 48 :: Nov. 30 - Dec. 06, 2002 |
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CRICKET/RAJKOT ONE-DAYER
Sehwag scintillates before spectators play spoilsportG. VISWANATHHAD things been normal, Virender Sehwag would have cornered all glory and taken India to a fine victory in the third one-day international of the TVS Cup at Rajkot. The well-planned and calculated onslaught by the Indian openers, Sourav Ganguly and Sehwag, on the West Indies bowling had put India on the road to victory before a plastic water bottle thrown at Vasbert Drakes resulted in the match being abandoned and thereafter awarded to India by the Match Referee, Mike Procter. The West Indies made 300 in 50 overs and India, in reply, had reached 200 for one in 27.1 overs. The Duckworth and Lewis formula, which is used to determine the winner in the event of matches being interrupted by rain and other factors, was taken into account to declare India the winner.
VIVEK BENDRE Procter explained that according to the Duckworth and Lewis formula, India's score at the end of 27 overs should have been 119 for one wicket. This would seem unfair to the West Indies because it had made a formidable total, straightaway setting a six-plus run rate per over task for the Indians. Since the formula gave weightage to the number of wickets lost, India's score of 200 was determined to be far superior at the time when play was stopped. India had lost fewer wickets, in fact only one, and hence was awarded the match (by 81 runs). India would have won the match 'by wickets' had it continued to dominate the West Indies bowling after the huge opening partnership of 196 in a little over two hours. "The Indians were deserving winners. They were cruising. They were miles ahead because of the fantastic partnership between Ganguly and Sehwag. One cannot penalise the players or teams for incidents for which they cannot be held responsible," said Procter. The West Indies, 2-0 up in the series, would have been extremely disappointed that it had to take recourse to an unpleasant act of walking out of the match without giving its bowlers the full opportunity to have a go at the Indian batsmen. But it would not have grudged an Indian win (by application of the Duckworth-Lewis formula), for the team itself was close to being awarded the match at Jamshedpur before the two teams resumed play and completed the match on the field. It was a similar situation as India was clearly in a commanding position to run away with the third one-day international, although it had to score another 105 runs in 137 balls with nine wickets in hand. The breezy efforts from Sehwag and Ganguly had made such an impact that there possibly could have been no other result, but an Indian victory. Some of the shots Ganguly played were typical of the Indian captain, but there were also shots which indicated the breadth in his repertoire. It was Ganguly (72, 83b, 9x4), who showed the first signs of aggression. The southpaw who has played over 200 one-day internationals and scored over 8000 runs knew how to call the shots, dominate proceedings even in the most adverse situation and outwit the manipulations of the rival team. He took on Dillon and Drakes, smashing seven fours off them in their first spell. He struck the ball hard, high and over and cut fiercely before he was out caught by an acrobatic Shivnarine Chanderpaul. At the other end Sehwag was in full flow. At the start he gave the impression that he was a determined man, staying away from the short deliveries aimed around his body by Drakes and Dillon. The West Indies' ploy to choke him, denying him room to play shots on the off side did not work. He made his intentions clear, thumping Dillon straight down the ground for his first four.
VIVEK BENDRE A booming start was required for India to approach the target of 301. Being the senior batsman and captain, Ganguly took up the challenge. Hitting the ball through the line seemed a safe option because the ball invariably came at the batsman straighter through the trajectory and off the pitch, too, at predictable bounce. It was a flat deck and the surface stayed so for the remaining part of the day and until more than 77 overs had been sent down. The West Indies had no answer to India's riposte. Even Dillon was not spared. He gave away 40 runs from six overs, Drakes 36 from six, Cameron Cuffy 41 from six, Mahendra Nagamootoo 43 from five and Marlon Samuels 16 from 3.1 overs. Chris Gayle proved to be the most expensive, giving away 18 off just one over. India raced to 100 in 13.2 overs and 150 in 20 overs before Ganguly departed at 196. The Indian bowlers too suffered at the hands of the West Indies batsmen. There were occasions when Javagal Srinath and Ashish Nehra looked good, but on this pitch it was difficult to contain the batsmen. Venkatsai Laxman took a smart catch to send back Wavell Hinds but Gayle, who was responsible for his team's win at Nagpur, drove powerfully from the crease and came up with a flurry of boundary shots.
VIVEK BENDRE Gayle nullified the breakthrough India made at 36. He was in total control, hitting the ball straight, through mid off and covers. Gayle looked sure and safe as long as he came down hard on the ball with a vertical swing, but the moment he decided to deviate from it, he invited disaster as he dragged the ball back onto his stumps. Pulling a ball of stump height is never considered safe; the chances of the batsman top-edging are more than getting plenty of wood on it. On this occasion Gayle played against the spin and under it to be bowled for 72 off 68 balls with 12 fours and two sixes. After Gayle's departure at 119 (21.2 overs), the two right-handers from Guyana, Ramnaresh Sarwan (84, 88b, 6x4, 2x6) and Shivnarine Chanderpaul (74, 77b, 8x4) - Hooper did not play this match because of a knee injury - took charge and forged a partnership of 149 which also turned out to be the best for all wickets at the venue before Ganguly and Sehwag made it the second best in the afternoon session. Chanderpaul was inclined to improvise shots, but Sarwan looked head and shoulders above the rest of the West Indies batsmen. The two sixes he hit off Harbhajan and Srinath were sweetly timed and the fielder at long field could only see the ball sail over his head. Both were dismissed when they tried to accelerate the score, but as stand-in captain Ridley Jacobs said after the match, the West Indies total of 300 might not have been enough.
VIVEK BENDRE India's captain Ganguly defended his bowlers saying: "You cannot blame them, the wicket was like that." After the match the National selectors, expectedly, dropped Ajit Agarkar, who gave away 63 runs in just six overs, for the fourth and fifth one-dayers. Anil Kumble, who did not play this match, too, was rested. The scores: West Indies: C. Gayle b Harbhajan 72; W. Hinds c Laxman b Srinath 10; M. Samuels c Dravid b Ganguly 16; R. Sarwan c Dravid b Nehra 84; S. Chanderpaul c Yadav b Harbhajan 74; R. Powell (not out) 19; R. Jacobs (not out) 9. Extras (lb-3, nb-4, w-9) 16. Total (for five wkts in 50 overs) 300. Fall of wickets: 1-36, 2-93, 3-119, 4-268, 5-272. India bowling: Srinath 9-0-46-1, Nehra 10-0-56-1, Agarkar 6-0-63-0,Yadav 2-0-14-0, Ganguly 7-0-30-1, Harbhajan 10-0-59-2, Sehwag 6-0-29-0. India: S. Ganguly c Chanderpaul b Drakes 72; V. Sehwag (not out) 114; V. V. S. Laxman (not out) 0. Extras (lb-6, nb-4, w-4) 14. Total (for one wkt in 27.1 overs) 200. Fall of wicket: 196. West Indies bowling: Dillon 6-0-40-0, Drakes 6-0-36-1, Cuffy 6-0-41-0, Gayle 1-0-18-0, Nagamootoo 5-0-43-0, Samuels 3.1-1-16-0.
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