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Today folks was a day of riveting action. In fact the excitement started much before the players reached the field. Anil Kumble had been mentioning to the media that he would be taking a call on his participation in this Test on the morning of the game. The news was that he was not playing. That in itself was not great excitement for the public but his replacement was not R.P.Singh or Munaf Patel. In fact it was another legspinner - Amit Mishra.

And it was to be M.S.Dhoni to lead the Indians into this crucial encounter at Mohali. The pitch had been much spoken of prior to the encounter and the expectations were of a reasonably fast pitch with consistent carry and with that magically elusive 'something' for he faster bowlers. However, the Indian camp thought otherwise and decided to stick to their four bowler strategy. And not just the four bowler strategy but the same mix too - 2 spinners and 2 faster bowlers. The Australians went with almost the same team except for the change which was forced upon them - Peter Siddle came in for the injured Stuart Clark.

M.S.Dhoni won the toss and had no hesitation in choosing to bat first. It was interesting to hear him talk of Amit Mishra as somebody who flighted the ball more and turned it more, when asked about Kumble's replacement for the match. Sehwag and Gambhir strode in purposefully to face Lee and Co.

From the first over onwards it was apparent that while the bounce was even, the pitch was slightly sluggish and that it was going to be a batting beauty. Gambhir started things off with a lovely checked on drive and Sehwag soon followed - glancing and flicking and caressing the ball through the covers in beguilingly silken fashion. Gambhir was naturally the more reserved of the two but he too opened up with exquisite cover drives and even one raspin pull off the persevering Shane Watson later on in the day. But to start the proceedings, Ponting strangely trusted Lee and the debutant Siddle. Lee was strangely off colour today and did not look like taking a wicket for the most part. Peter Siddle though was always on the money. His very first ball - the first ball of the second over thudded into Gambhir's helmet. He is a bustling, energetic bowler who is always at the batsman. With all due respect, he is not the most talented of bowlers in terms of variety or imagination, but whatever he has he gives of it to the fullest possible extent - which is what any captain would want.

For the first 5-6 overs India went rollicking away with a run rate of close to 6 runs per over. Although things quietened down after Ponting resorted to defensive field placements quite early in the day, it was still around the 4.5 run mark till lunch. India had got to 79 without loss and Australia had come down to using its second rank seamers at India - headed by Mitchell Johnson. One wonders why Ponting prefers to give the new ball to anybody but Johnson. If I remember right, the lad took the new ball the last time he toured India and was quite successful. For all his past success and the rave reviews he gets, I view him as a basically limited bowler as he is now. He is right up there as far as pace is concerned. But he does not have the variety or the movement needed that distinguishes the good from the great. Things may change down the line, but at present he is pretty much a single dimensional bowler for the most part. However he does have a very good slower ball which he demonstrated which picking up the wickets of Sachin Tendulkar and Gambhir in the last match.

Today Johnson who was well into his spell had looked innocuous till then. He bowled a slightly short delivery coming near Sehwag's hips slightly wider of leg stump. In attempting to glance the ball finely, Sehwag got a healthy nick which was safely pouched by Haddin. It was a very sad way to get out and Sehwag was indeed very unlucky - as Johnson's sheepish expression showed. But he did have to walk out and make way for one of his illustrious countrymen, Rahul Dravid.

Now, to many of us, today's innings from Rahul Dravid would have been underlined by one word - fluent. He was extremely aggressive as far as mindset goes and managed to punish the bowlers by flicking/glancing/driving the ball to the legside if it was so much as anywhere near the line of the stumps. But it should also be noted that this innings did not see many shots at all through the offside from him.

Yes, it was an innings which was beautiful to watch and it served India's purpose of not losing momentum. However, it is worrying to watch a few flaws creeping into this technician's game. It is not that the Australians bowled wide of the stumps to Rahul Dravid. Shane Watson had already found some reverse swing and the effort seemed to be to get Dravid to drive uppishly and get caught at mid wicket just like in the previous Test. In that the Australians severely underestimated the skill and craft of Dravid. Here one must also comment on the falling standards of commentary in today's cricket telecasts. Laxman Sivaramakrishnan in the course of play today remarked that Rahul Dravid fell over while playing to the onside. He also remarked that Dravid flicked balls to fine leg for boundary. In the first instance, Siva was completely wrong. Dravid always had control over the movement of his head and upper body when he was guiding the ball through the off side. He was also able to retain his balance as also play straight as and when required - which a batsman falling over will find exceptionally hard to do. Finally if Siva wanted an example of a batsman who falls over when he plays to the legside, there is the Australian captain ready to give him a demonstration. It does work for some people better than most, to be honest, but Dravid does not belong to that category. And time and time again, we could hear about how Dravid flicked the ball to the boundary when all he did was glance it off his hips. It is sad that the commentators - including Mark Nicholas could not make out this basic difference.

To come back to the problem in Rahul Dravid's technique - in the years gone by, Dravid had a predominant shuffle of his back foot enabling him to get behind the line of the ball and to allow him to take extra time in executing the cut or the pull. Nowadays though, this initial movement has been changed. Now, he uses his front foot and moves it smartly forward in the direction of cover to start with. This allows him natural angle to turn deliveries onto the legside but naturally complicates his ability to play straight. The Dravid of today is compensating for this by squaring himself up when playing straight and also by getting his bat in such that the toe end of the bat is tilted ever so slightly towards the leg side. That is not the best way to approach things. And this more than anything else hampered his offside play. Given that the Australians did not bowl too many outside the offstump, whatever was there escaped punishment.

Naturally, even the delivery which got him out finally, was a short ball on the fifth stump or so on the off side. Dravid's forward movement carried him closer to the ball than he cared to and when he tried to play a cut shot, he could not as it was too close to his body and the resultant under edge, disturbed his leg stump. The Dravid of yore would have made his customary shuffle and stood tall on his off stump and used a straight and high elbow to execute a beautiful backfoot cover drive. It needs to be seen whether this changed approach is a result of the Australians' relentless legside attack or whether this has crept in to replace his original method.

After his fall, the stadium leapt onto its feet and roars reverberated. Sachin Tendulkar walked in - looking up into the Sun and looking very purposeful yet serene. He looked in good touch from the start. With the score being the same, Gambhir too fell to a lazy waft at another innocuous Mitchell Johnson delivery. This brought in Laxman to pair wth Tendulkar. It is interesting how this pair has not featured in more eye-catching partnerships, but that is the truth. Today too, this was not to be changed as Laxman gave Johnson another sheepish reason to celebrate by edging one through to the keeper down the legside. Unfortunate but nevertheless out.

These triple strikes meant that the momentum had swung the other way and that India would not quite be rushing along at the earlier rate. Ganguly started off very sedately but surely. As always he took extra time before facing the bowling, I am sure, causing ample frustration to Ponting and co.

Before dwelling on Sachin and Ganguly's batting, it is necessary to talk about Ponting's fluidity of tactics earlier in the day. The Australian attack was monotonous. It did not have the quality to initimidate the batsmen, neither did it have the guile to bamboozle. And this was not a responsive pitch. In such a state, Ponting forced the issue by placing two midwickets and asking his bowlers to consistently bowl at the wicket. That nobody got out at midwicket is not the pont. He was always doing something, he was always at the batsman and always seemed to have a plan. This has the effect of getting a batsman to try something silly like Rahul Dravid's square cut to a ball which was not wide enough. This was followed by Gambhir's lazy waft. Ponting also saw that Lee was not at his best and used him sparingly while entrusting the majority of the work to Siddle and Johnson - the work horses of the attack.

Sachin played as only he could - nudging and nurdling the singles and doubles, and at times exploding into brilliance with a crashing square drive or a copy book cover drive. Most of the time today, it was the master's glance and flick shots which were called into action. One such shot off a 143 kmph ball from Johnson was ample evidence that the man was not done yet with cricket. When on 13 runs, Sachin opened the face of his blade and guided one to 3rd man and took 3 runs - which got him the record of the highest scorer in Test cricket ever. Amidst endless cracker bursts and announcements on the giant screen, all the Australians went out of their way to congratulate him on his monumental achievement - starting with Ricky Ponting. This was a grand gesture from one of the most bitterly criticized teams in the world - as far as sportsmanship is concerned. Today they could not be faulted.

Sachin was not done yet today and he scored at a fair clip to get into 80s before giving his wicket away to another debutant - Siddle - nicking behind. This was very near to the end of day's play. Instead of the captain walking in himself, we were treated to the scene of the lanky Ishant Sharma walking in as nightwatchman. There were still close to 4-5 overs of play left and this did not seem to be the brightest move. Ishant, thankfully, does have a good defense. He held his own and also faced most of the bowling thereby shielding Saurav Ganguly too. Ganguly himself, crossed the 7000 run mark in Test cricket and was looking pretty after a well played half century. Trade mark cover drives and languide eases through the covers were still part of his repertoire as he showed early on in his innings.

At the end of the first day's play it is advantage India at 311 for 5. However a lot depends on Ganguly and Dhoni to see if India can make this advantage count and get to a score past 400 tomorrow. The pitch could speed up as play goes on but will never be anything other than a batting beauty for the most part of this match. So, other than batting well to make this advantage count, India will also need to make use of its spin attack to eke out the Australian wickets with wile and guile. Here too the advantage lies with India as it will be bowling last in this Test match. So, everything is set for a riveting Test match and one which hopefully is headed towards a result.
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Of Ishant Magic and Dull wickets

October 10th 2008 08:32

I watched a magic moment which I wanted to share with you folks. The day was dull and dreary, the sun was beating down and the Aussie pair of Hussey and Haddin seemed to have been cemented to the crease. There were singles for almost every ball that they touched with the bat and there were misfields galore from Ganguly and Zaheer which were painful to watch. The total was slowly but surely swelling almost beyond the 350 mark and the spinners could not make any sort of impression. (I will come back with my thoughts on this aspect at the end)

Kumble had turned for some inspiration to the dynamic duo of Harbhajan and Ishant. Harbhajan was tight but not penetrative. The batsmen were not thrashing him but neither were they having a problem defending or milking him. But it was a different matter with Ishant. They were alert, nervous and diffident when facing him. Backlifts shortened, feet moved faster but did not necessarily get into the correct position and strokes were hurried. That the pitch had vagaries in bounce (well, the ball stayed low) did not help.

After bowling in the high 130s almost through all of yesterday and today (till then), Ishant pounded in and bowled the slow off cutter. The way he does it, the ball lands fuller than most and he actually imparts some spin through his index finger. The result is that the ball lands closer than almost all of his normal deliveries. This gets the batsmen to smack their lips, widen their eyes and launch into a drive. Only one problem - their bat got to the drive before the ball got to the seemingly agreed upon rendezvous. The bat comes to a painful halt and a sickening plop sound results when the ball makes contact. Haddin watches as the ball lobs almost higher than the tall Laxman at short cover. But the tall graceful Hyderabadi stretches and pouches the catch easily. Laxman always has the knack of making it look easy, but that catch was tricky indeed - given that Laxman was at full stretch and the ball was not going too fast. Sometimes these slow balls are tricky because the fielder too gets there beforehand. Not so this time.

Celebrations allround - the biggest cheers of course were for Ishant who not only had the vision to bowl this ball but he also had the skills to get the execution spot on. But spare a thought also for the persevering captain Kumble who had the sense to have a short cover and to also find a good, smart catcher for that position, Laxman - who completed a job well begun.

I am not sure how significant a ball this is in terms of this match, but this was a beautiful piece of cricket action. I would like to call to the attention of the readers a similar sort of bowling exhibition from Ishant in the Irani Trophy match where he picked up Dhoni (is it a coincidence that he got two wicket keepers in similar fashion?). And that too was very much against the run of the play.

Kudos too to Venkatesh Prasad on inculcating the confidence required for such bowling.

I almost forgot to add that piece about the wickets. Bangalore, I believe, has a pitch specialist from New Zealand on call. Lets think about this. What has this external help done as far as helping us in producing better cricket as also giving us a home advantage. Nothing. By infusing soil from New Zealand or wherever it is they are outsourced from, we are only diluting the inherent nature of the wickets here - which is dryness, some brittleness and lots of spin. Now, why would anyone in the right mind do it?

Just like expatriates outside who know not whether they belong to their native country or to the country they are living in, such pitches with help from external experts cannot seem to decide whether they have to behave in typical Indian fashion or to assist bounce and seam. Consequently they end up somewhere in the middle - resulting in stale cricket.

It is time that this madness is put an end to.
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Irani Trophy 2008 - Day 3

September 26th 2008 12:55

Today's cricket featured some high octane action in the first half or even three quarters of the day before it fizzled off tamely. Even though Jaffer left early today, Dravid was in one of his bloodyminded moods where it is his bat, his pad, his sweat and his sinew behind every ball. He managed to outlast Ishant Sharma's outstanding spell which consumed Badrinath as well as Kaif. Kafi, unfortunately got too good a ball first up. Not too much he could have done with that. Badri, though was beaten for pace as well as unexpected bounce. Credit though must go to Ishant for hustling batsmen.

Laxman walked in and in no time the scoring started picking up and we saw many quick singles and yes even threes (no jokes, guys). The supposed leg spinner Chetanya Nanda came into the attack and the batsmen started relaxing. This was after Laxman had opened up with a sterling cover drive off Pradeep Sangwan. Laxman played an immensely poor shot when he tried to take a ball outside off stump towards the onside and he got a big leading edge which ballooned right into the point fielder's hands. And Nanda had his first breakthrough against the run of play.

That right there though was to mark Sehwag's inspiring run at captaincy. All his decisions from hereon were questionable and really even seemed senseless. Dhoni walked in with some pressure after his inadequate showing in the first innings. Sangwan was actually operating from the other end when Dhoni walked in, but what does Sehwag do? He takes Sangwan off (the man who dismissed Dhoni in the first innings) and brought himself on for an extended spell. And Dhoni all but murdered Sehwag. He cut him, swept him, launched him over mid on and mid wicket and ruthlessly reverse swept him. It was callous and effective treatment through and through. The question needs to be asked as to why Sehwag was bent on bowling himself over such an extended spell, provided that he was getting hammered.

But to give credit where credit is due, Dhoni again showed how good a player he is of spin in the subcontinent. He put Chetanya Nanda in his rightful place while showing part time spinner Sehwag a thing or two about attacking batsmanship. While Dhoni raced to his half century, Dravd at the other end had just about reached his 50 run mark - but what was more important was his vigil of over 170 balls which bought the middle order and late order players more respite from Ishant Sharma. He too left soon in a moment of madness - late on a cut off Nanda to be caught at slip.

And finally, when I was convinced that Sehwag was intent on seeing how fast Dhoni would get to a century, he brought back Nehra and Ishant. And results, gentlemen, were almost automatic. Dhoni edged one off Nehra which flew over the slip cordon, survived a torrid first over from Ishant and then was completely fooled by a slower one from the same bowler in the succeeding over to hand over his wicket. Sehwag and co walked in to congratulate each other with sheepish smiles.

Now, lets cut over to the Delhi chase or what passed for it. Sehwag promoted himself up the order in a show of force partnering Gambhir. That he had dispensed with any nominal caution was reflected in his almightly swipe that he tried against R.P.Singh's first ball. All it met was air. And in the next over, the newly crowned lynchpin of the Indian pace attack, the now-canny Zaheer Khan, pitched a delivery right on the stumps and brought it back a notch to trap Sehwag absolutely in front. The opener need not even have waited for the verdict - so plumb was it. From thereon it looked like the Delhi blokes were in a great hurry. Gambhir tried different ways of getting out by jumping out of his crease but alas he could not succeed. At the end of the day he was still there - playing slightly better than what he started out with. But the batsmen at the other end did not seem to have any great wherewithal. Virat Kohli had an aggressive welcome and soon departed LBW to the same man - Zaheer Khan. In fact Zaheer should have had Rajat Bhatia too but the umpire for some reason did not give that one out.

All in all a good day's cricket and the Rest of India team look ready to clinch this. There is only Gambhir standing between them and victory now.
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Irani Trophy 2008 - Day 2

September 25th 2008 10:44

OK, I had an eyeful of the action today morning and was very glad that I caught sight of it. Akash Chopra is in prime touch. He looked magnificient carting around all the Rest of India bowlers - especially R.P.Singh without batting an eyelid. There are two people in the Rest of India squad who are moving strategically on the ladder of progress. There is R.P.Singh who is climbing down as fast as possible and then there is Munaf Patel who is climbing up at the same speed.

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Irani Trophy 2008 Day 1

September 25th 2008 10:42

Long time no see folks. But lets see if we can make up for some lost time together.

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Of heroes and vultures

August 4th 2008 12:57

Fantastic win by India to square the series. The archtect of this victory was Virender Sehwag. Without his swashbuckling and magnificient unbeaten innings, we could have even been looking at a series loss.

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That was as fine a 30 I have ever seen. Tendulkar's 30 runs may not be too many and he may have fell to an old indiscretion outside the offstump. But it summed up his class, potential and the boundless skill he stands for.

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The IPL 2008 - Grand Finale

June 2nd 2008 14:46

After two damp squibs of semifinals back to back, great things were expected from the finals. And did it offer that and more! It was a heart stopper, a gut wrencher, the seat edge thriller that haunts our dreams.

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This matchup was eagerly expected for more reasons than one. The earlier semifinal turned out to be a damp squib when Warne's team summarily squished the Delhi Daredevils while barely breaking out a sweat. And this was also the matchup where the present Indian national team's ODI captain clashed with the vice captain of the same team. Two big hitters. Two hugely influential batsman in the shorter format of the game.

And the verdict is out. We know who is the captain and why he is the captain. Mahendra Snigh Dhoni - ladies and gentlemen, in no small measure proved that he was by far the better man for the mantle of leadership of a cricket team. Where Yuvraj looked lost and hapless and completely out of ideas, Dhoni never made a wrong move. Every move that he made was well thought out and what is more - the Yellows seemed to be jumping effervescently to grab the opportunities on offer. No pressure. No panic. Simple, no nonsense cricket.

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The first semifinal of the IPL was a total damp squib. For all the presence of political bigwigs like Sharad Pawar and Laloo Prasad Yadav, there was not the spiced battle that we expected from two of the top 4 teams in the league.

Amendment - there were indications of a spiced battle until Delhi took guard. Then it all went haywire and all semblance of a contest between the two teams was abandoned about halfway through the second innings.

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The Chennai Super Kings were trounced, mauled and summarily annihilated. All this not by an opposing team. No, sir - the Mumbai Indians needed just one man, the marauder from Matara to decimate the Chennai team.

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People talk about how winning generates momentum and it helps your spirit and bolsters you for future contests. In much the similar way, I think losing too generates its own momentum. Except that it is force applied in the opposite direction. If winning is accerlation then losing is like braking force.

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Surface Tension

April 18th 2008 12:15
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Debacle at Motera, Ahmedabad

April 7th 2008 15:20

Ahmedabad was a debacle. Nothing short of that.

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