India managed its first century of the series, but, like an
appropriately self-absorbed actor, it arrived too late; and unlike said
actor, it didn't have enough attendants.
Late as it may have been — India's seventh Test innings of the tour —
the hundred did have a redeeming quality. It mightn't have come from the
prodigious blade of Sachin Tendulkar, who a lot of the record crowd had
come to see score his elusive 100th. But it did come from the
promisingly talented bat of Virat Kohli.
Kohli had batted magnificently at Perth, looking as if he belonged on a
quick, bouncy wicket first-timers usually struggle on. Here at the
Adelaide Oval on Thursday, the third day of the fourth Test, the
23-year-old showed he will be a major piece in the jigsaw of India's
Test future. His two knocks in Perth, which followed failures in
Melbourne and Sydney, offered a measure of the man; his first Test
hundred was corroboration.
When Kohli walked to the middle, Peter Siddle had just removed Sachin
Tendulkar and Gautam Gambhir in the day's first hour. Siddle, whose work
hasn't earned the rich rewards it has deserved, would eventually finish
with a five-wicket haul, but his second and third wickets showed why he
is such a fine bowler on an unresponsive pitch.
Tendulkar falls
Tendulkar was undone by the combination of line and length. Australia's
bowlers had largely bowled well to the great man. Siddle came on, and,
as he has so often this series, found an early wicket.
Tendulkar attempted to reposition his front-foot after his initial
reaction to the delivery, realising he needed to reach further forward;
the ball caught him on the move, taking the stabbed edge low to second
slip.
Gambhir, surprised by a bouncer from Siddle, tried to ride the lifter.
But it kept climbing on him; the line cramped him — in combination with
the element of surprise, it coerced him to respond in a manner most
unsafe. The batsman tried mitigating the damage by removing his
bottom-hand, softening, as far as possible, the fend. But it still
lobbed. From gully, Michael Hussey made ground on his feet before timing
his dive expertly.
With V.V.S. Laxman touching an intended cut to the ‘keeper off Nathan
Lyon's off-spin, India was in familiar danger of being bowled out for
fewer than 200. But Kohli found in wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha, a
batsman willing to absorb punches before throwing one of his own.
Together, the pair set about batting time, tiring Australia's seamers so
they could make capital when the bowling flagged. Given the flatness of
the wicket and the dry heat of Adelaide, it was sound thinking. All it
needed was execution.
Although it's an invitingly easy assumption, it can be said without
significant loss in accuracy that Kohli is the quintessential modern
Indian batsman. In him reside both the past — the wristwork, the hands —
and the present — the inclination and the ability as he showed when
batting with the tail to flog an attack — but he adds to these
influences the impress of his personality: feistiness, self-awareness, a
rakish intelligence.
His batting on Thursday was well organised. He played many of his
defensive strokes off the back foot; he rarely went searching for
deliveries.
He wrist-flicked those on the stumps in the arc between square-leg and
mid-on, adjusting his stroke on occasion, for Siddle got the odd ball to
cut to leg. Perhaps Australia could have tested him more with the short
ball, but he pulled firmly and decisively, getting into good positions.
Kohli has had trouble in the past with hands tending to force themselves
at the ball, the stroke being made outside the body's periphery instead
of under the head. This he was in control of. He also proved he has an
innate understanding of the nuts and bolts of innings-building.
His knock contained 32 singles and 14 twos, many of them run with Saha,
who was keen to do much of the same himself.
Kohli attacked the spin of Lyon and Michael Clarke, something his senior
colleagues appeared loath to do. The only time he didn't seem in charge
was when Saha departed, bowled, shouldering arms, by an in-ducker, and
R. Ashwin and Zaheer Khan didn't stay long. After the 114-run
partnership, India lost three wickets for five runs, the last two to
Siddle for his five-wicket bag.
Verbal tiff
But Ishant, who should be batting above the reckless and feckless Zaheer
(the batsman), provided Kohli the time he needed to bring up his maiden
century.
It didn't come easy: there were plays and misses on 97 and 99, a near
run-out, a verbal tiff with the Australians in which Ricky Ponting (!)
played the peace-maker, pulling Kohli away.
But the moment finally came, an aerial stroke through the off-side, a
two punctuated in the middle and at the end by a typically belligerent
celebration. Kohli was the last man out, incorrectly adjudged
leg-before-wicket, and Australia, unsurprisingly, chose not to enforce
the follow-on.
Its best chance of winning was to rest its bowlers while giving the
pitch time to deteriorate, which it showed signs of doing in the
evening.
India ended well, clever, skilful bowling from Zaheer and Ashwin
reducing Australia to 40 for three. (Shaun Marsh was unlucky to be given
‘lbw').
By stumps, India trailed by 382, with Australia's first innings
double-centurions together for Friday.
Scoreboard
Australia: 604/7 decl
India 1st innings:
Gautham Gambhir c Hussey b Siddle 34
Virender Sehwag c and b Siddle 18
Rahul Dravid b Hilfenhaus 1
Sachin Tendulkar c Ponting b Siddle 25
V.V.S. Laxman c Haddin b Lyon 18
Virat Kohli lbw b Hilfenhaus 116
Wriddhiman Saha b Harris 35
Ravichandran Ashwin lbw Siddle 5
Zaheer Khan c Haddin b Siddle 0
Ishant Sharma b Hilfenhaus 16
Umesh Yadav not out 0
Extras- (1b, 1w, 2nb) 4
TOTAL- 272 all out
Fall of wickets- 1—26, 2—31, 3—78, 4—87, 5—111, 6—225, 7—230,
8—230, 9—263, 10—272.
Overs- 95.1. Batting time- 378 minutes.
Bowling- Ryan Harris 25—7—71—1, Ben Hilfenhaus 22.1—5—62—3 (2nb,
1w), Peter Siddle 15—2—49—5, Nathan Lyon 21—5—48—1, Michael Clarke
6—1—23—0, Michael Hussey 6—0—18—0.
Australia 2nd innings:
David Warner c and b Ashwin 28
Ed Cowan lbw b Ashwin 10
Shaun Marsh lbw Khan 0
Ricky Ponting not out 1
Michael Clarke not out 9
Extras (2lb) 2
TOTAL- (for three wickets) 50
Fall of wickets- 1—39, 2—40, 3—40.
Overs- 14. Batting time- 60 minutes.
Bowling- Zaheer Khan 7—0—24—1, Ravichandran Ashwin 7—1—24—2.
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