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India strike late as Ponting comes good with a ton

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Posted: Oct 09, 2008 at 1737 hrs IST
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Bangalore, October 9: Australian captain Ricky Ponting broke the jinx of a dismal track record on Indian soil by cracking a masterly 123 but India just about managed to restore the balance in the first cricket Test by two late scalps in Bangalore on Thursday.

Ponting, under enormous pressure to overcome the jinx of a poor average in India, notched up his maiden ton in India and his 36th overall to steer the visitors to 254 for four in their first innings at close on the opening day.

Electing to bat, the Australians suffered a huge jolt when they lost the dangerous Matthew Hayden (0) in the third all of the day off paceman Zaheer Khan but Ponting and Simon Katich (66) steadied the ship with a resolute 166-run second wicket stand.

The Australian captain dispelled all doubts about his ability to score runs on the slow tracks here with a solid batting exhibition which frustrated the home team on what seemed to be a good batting track at the Chinaswamy stadium.

Michael Hussey (46) was at the crease at stumps on the opening day which saw the Australians losing Michael Clarke (11) in the last over of the day to allow the Indians come back onto the game to some extent.

The visitors proved that the below-par peformance in the warm up game against Board President's XI in Hyderabad had no bearing on them as the batsmen negotiated the Indian attack with ease.

With just four specialist bowlers in their ranks, the hosts found the going tough in hot and humid conditions but the wickets of Ponting and Clarke late in the day came as a relief.

Ponting entered the match determined to make up for a poor record in India after starting the series with just 172 runs from eight Tests in the country.

He came into bat after just three balls but did not allow the early dismissal of Hayden to rattle him. He began on a rather sedate note and started playing his shots only after the post lunch session.

Ponting, whose previous best score in India of 60 came in Kolkata in 1998, looked the more aggressive in the partnership of 166 with Katich although Ishant Sharma struck his pads on a couple of occasions and forced a nasty inside edge while the Australian was on 78.

Ponting hit 13 boundaries during his 243-ball knock which formed the cornerstone of the Australian innings. Harbhajan Singh, who had claimed the wicket of the Australian captain on eight occasions, brought an end to Ponting's innings by trapping him leg before much to the delight of the Indians.

Paceman Zaheer then brought some cheer for the hosts by getting rid of Clarke in the last over of the day, trapping him in front of the wicket with an incoming delivery.

The Aussies owed their recovery to Ponting and Katich who came into the team in place of Phil Jaques and justified his selection with a solid knock.

Katich was cautious before lunch but started to unleash a few strokes after the lunch break and never really seemed troubled by the two Indian spinners Harbhajan and Kumble.

The Indians could not have asked for a better start to the four-match Test series with pace spearhead Zaheer Khan removing Hayden (0) in the very third ball of his opening spell.

Hayden, playing his first Test since a nagging Achilles tendon injury ruled him out of the West Indies tour in June, edged a fuller length delivery bowled close to off stump and Dhoni accepted a low catch in front of him.

But that turned out to be the only moment of success for the hosts as both Ponting and Katich ensured that there were no further setbacks with some sensible batting.

Ponting, who became the fourth batsman to play in 200 Test innings after Allan Border and Waugh twins, Steve and Mark, negotiated the Indian attack with Katich at the other end with a sense of purpose.

The two slowly but steadily put on a fifty partnership in 87 minutes and 104 balls as they negotiated the spinners with ease while Zaheer and Ishant restricted them at the outset.

Ponting was willing to play a wait-and-watch game and that proved fruitful on a wicket that appeared hard with hardly any grass.

India went into the Test with two spinners and two fast bowlers, a rather defensive ploy employed by skipper Anil Kumble. Australia preferred right hand batsman and leg break googly bowler Cameron White for off spinner Jason Krejza in their eleven making the latter their 12th man.

It turned out to be a dream debut for the 25-year-old White, the 402nd Test cricketer for Australia, five days after playing grade cricket in Australia and months after playing in the IPL for Bangalore-based Royal Challengers.

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Bowling by manish on 10 Oct 2008

Why is kumble not trying Ganguly and Sachin, changes are not a part of his planning???

INDIAN CRICKET AS USUAL by Ranjit on 10 Oct 2008

Look at the bowling analysis of Indians, Kumble bowled the highest overs with most runs given and the most expensive of averages among all the bowlers. HE NEVER WAS A SPINNER, NEVER WAS A TEST CALIBARE......HE BOWLED HUNDRED OF THOUSANDS OF BOWLS AND CALIMED 500 SO WICKETS BIG DEAL ANYONE CAN DO THAT IF THEY KEEP BOWLING..........HOW SILLY IT IS THAT LIKE IN A STREET CRICKET A LEADER/CAPTAIN WILL KEEP BOWLING HIMSELF...............THIS IS WHAT KUMBLE DOES EVEN AT TEST LEVEL............SPINNER, TEST CRICKETER AND NOW EVEN MADE CAPTAIN.................WHAT A JOKE THIS IS...........

Guardian Angle by naresh on 10 Oct 2008

Fortunately for India Steve Bucknor is not officiating this test. If the Australian winning record is challenged it will be seen Steve Bucknor was their guardian angle (not angel).

Gangully retired by Dinesh on 09 Oct 2008

Dada has been an excellent bat but off late his performances were not of that calibur. Whatever reasons he gave of being hounded out but his performances in Lanka and his recent scores of 16 and 5 against ordinary Newzealand A team forced him to retire. He may say that he made this decision after being dropped from Irani trophy but the fact is his decision came only after a very poor showing against mediocar Newzealand A team. Dada saw writings on the wall. Now his out burst is nothing but politics and to gather sympathy in case he fails against OZ again. My gut feeling is that he will fail again and his poor fielding was aparent in Banglore on Day 1.Indian greats do not retire gracefully rather they go screaming like kids being dragged out of candy store. It is pathetic display on Dada's part.

Kumble and the wickets by Dinesh on 09 Oct 2008

Although Kumble failed to get the wickets of deasoned batsmen, Kumble will get the wickets of tailenders. He has been consistently doing that since a few years from now. That keeps him in contention. Carry on Kumble.

Go INDIA by Rahul Gupta on 09 Oct 2008

The performance was not upto the mark from the Indians, I still believe they are lacking the sting. But I firmly believe in their ability. They have to go a long way to win this test match and the series in the end. I just wanna remind the Indian team

Hayden's misfortune by Gary McKenzie on 09 Oct 2008

So, Mathew Hayden got a very poor decision and had to "walk". Not much comment from the India critics of the Aussie sense of fair play about this one... where are you all? I suppose Hayden was cheated out of the game, but let me know what you all think of it.

Hayden's misfortune by Ram on 10 Oct 2008

Well said Gary. Even the press did not mention a word about the quality of the decision. Come to think of it, I thought there were few blatant bad decisions in Perth that went against Aussies!! Not a word was spoken, jusgt shows how matured majority of Indians are and the level of sportsmenship.. Appalling?

one decision and u r already whining! by Sujeet Ramanna on 09 Oct 2008

well if one decision going against u has caused u so much hurt, then i guess sehwag was right in calling the australian team cheats during the sydney test, though i did not think it was appropriate then. because of the sheer number of decisions that went against india in that test. ponting said it was the best test match that he had won in his lifetime, trying to rub it in after the sheer controversies that test was surrounded in, one would have expected better behavior from an captain of a national team, but then he is ricky ponting, now isnt he! Well if you think hayden was cheated off in this test, india was on the brink of a famous victory in sydney unless for some 'sporting gestures' of the 'magic' catching they displayed in that test and the score should be 2-1 in india's favor, mate!

Sujeet Ramanna - One decision by Ram on 10 Oct 2008

Hi SujeetWhy dont you guys talk about the poor decisions of the Perth Test that India won?? Unless we get the habit of appreciating all that is good (imagine Viv Richards batting in India - entire stadium will mourn if he gets a hundred, compare this to the welcome Tendulkar gets in Oz!). It even gets to the regional level in India I thought. You would do well to watch the Perth test DVD or whatever, that is, if you have not seen it once before

Whining and hurt... by Gary McKenzie on 10 Oct 2008

Come off it Sujeet, surely you could see my tongue pushing out the side of my cheek. I am not "whining", nor am I "hurt". I just wish you would realise the shortcomings of the game (ie, umpiring decisions) and stop all the nonsense about people being "cheats" when it is the umpires who have made the errors. It is all due to the modern technology, which was not available in the past to show up wrong decisions. Let me remind you that Saurav Ganguly famously claimed a grassed catch in the World Cup not so long ago. All I can say is that if they are going to show us (the viewing public) replays which prove a person was or wasn't out, then they should use it to help in decision-making as well. Otherwise, don't show us (the public) what happened all the time. It just spoils the game and encourages team supporters to feel "cheated". I love India, Sujeet, that's why I live here with my wife and son. Frankly, I don't care if India wins, even if I prefer the Aussies to win. It is a game, not open warfare. But, let me pose a question for you: if my son plays international cricket, which team should he join, considering his mum is Indian and his dad is Australian? My own feeling is that he would make a hell of a good umpire. What do you think, Sujeet?

India strike late.. by Ashok on 09 Oct 2008

India got some poor decisions in Sydney test but let us not carried away. Many times in the past we have benifited from poor decisions and won matches, especially at home. Unfortunately our cricket journalists keep mum when India benefits form poor umpiring decisions. Of all the cricket playing nations, Australia has the best record in all forms of game, we should not be poor sport by trying to suggest that Ausralians owe their success due to cheating, such attitude will eventually come to haunt us.

Aussies will win by Kartar Singh on 09 Oct 2008

Australia will win this test.

Aussies will win... by Gary McKenzie on 09 Oct 2008

Come on, Kartar, what kind of assessment is that? The game has only been on for a few hours and you've already conceded. The Aussies could easily collapse and India win. Don't give up so easily.

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