Sports

Aussies closing in on overdue victory

December 17, 2018
Australia’s players celebrate the dismissal of India’s captain Virat Kohli (R) on day four of the second Test match at Perth Stadium Monday. — Reuters
Australia’s players celebrate the dismissal of India’s captain Virat Kohli (R) on day four of the second Test match at Perth Stadium Monday. — Reuters

PERTH — Australia is poised for their first Test match win since the ball-tampering scandal after spinner Nathan Lyon claimed the prized wicket of Indian captain Virat Kohli in the second Test in Perth Monday.

Set 287 to win on an unpredictable pitch, India was reduced to 112 for five at stumps on the fourth day.

Hanuma Vihari was 24 not out and Rishabh Pant was on nine.

The visitors still needed 175 to win with just five wickets in hand as Australia seek to level the four-Test series and claim its first Test win since beating South Africa at St George’s Park in March.

It was during the following Test at Newlands that Cameron Bancroft was caught using sandpaper to alter the ball.

The scandal led to lengthy suspensions from Cricket Australia for Bancroft, captain Steve Smith and opener David Warner.

Australian paceman Josh Hazlewood said the home team were excited by the chance of an overdue victory on the fifth day.

“It has been a bit of a long time between wins,” he said.

“We’re pretty excited to come back tomorrow.

“There is still a bit of work to be done, there is obviously enough there in the wicket and we just have to hit the right areas.”

India leads 1-0 after victory in Adelaide, but has never won a Test series in Australia. The loss of Kohli appeared a fatal blow to its chances of a famous win.

Lyon dismissed Kohli for the seventh time in Test cricket, two more than any other bowler, when he had him caught at slip by Usman Khawaja for 17.

Kohli was unable to repeat the heroics of his first innings century, the ball catching the outside edge as he probed forward defensively.

His departure was the cause of great delight for Australian captain Tim Paine, after the pair had exchanged words at the conclusion of the third day.

The Australian wicketkeeper, looking for his first win as skipper in five Tests since taking over from the disgraced Steve Smith, celebrated the dismissal with a cheeky comment to not out batsman Murali Vijay.

“Murali, I know he’s your captain, but you can’t seriously like him as a bloke,” Paine said, in comments picked up by microphone.

Just two overs later Vijay was also on his way back to the pavilion, bowled off an inside edge by Lyon, who took two for 30.

The pair of wickets continued a fine match for Lyon, who picked up five in the Indian first innings to move into the top 25 all-time Test wicket-takers, currently on 333.

After Australia lost its last six wickets for 51 runs to be dismissed for 243, with Mohammed Shami claiming a career-best 6-56, India made a disastrous start to their run chase just before tea.

Opener KL Rahul didn’t survive long, falling to the fourth ball of the innings from Mitchell Starc for a duck.

Rahul attempted to pull the bat away and only succeeded in getting an inside edge onto his stumps.

Cheteshwar Pujara then feathered a short delivery from Josh Hazlewood on four, as India slumped to 13 for two.

Across the two teams, eight wickets fell for 68 runs between lunch and tea, as batting appeared to become very difficult due to variable bounce.

Australian No. 8 Pat Cummins was the chief victim of the pitch gremlins after lunch, when he was clean bowled for one by a Jasprit Bumrah delivery that kept very low off the wicket.

The home team had resumed at 190 for four after lunch, but Shami cleaned up the tail, removing Khawaja for 72 and Paine, on 37, with sharply rising deliveries. — AFP

Scoreboard

Australia (1st innings) 326

India (1st innings) 283

Australia (2nd innings)

M. Harris b Bumrah 20

A. Finch c Pant b Shami 25

U. Khawaja c Pant b Shami 72

S. Marsh c Pant b Shami 05

P. Handscomb lbw Sharma 13

T. Head c Sharma b Shami 19

T. Paine c Kohli b Shami 37

P. Cummins b Bumrah 01

M. Starc b Bumrah 14

N. Lyon c Vihari b Shami 05

J. Hazlewood not out 17

Extras (b8, lb3, w4) 15

Total (all out, 93.2 overs) 243

Falls: 1-59 (Harris), 2-64 (Marsh), 3-85 (Handscomb), 4-120 (Head), 5-192 (Paine), 6-192 (Finch), 7-198 (Khawaja), 8-198 (Cummins), 9-207 (Lyon), 10-243 (Starc).

Bowling: Sharma 16-1-45-1, Bumrah 25.2-10-39-3, Shami 24-8-56-6 (2w), Yadav 14-0-61-0 (2w), Vihari 14-4-31-0.

India (2nd innings)

KL Rahul b Starc 00

M. Vijay b Lyon 20

C. Pujara c Paine b Hazlewood 04

V. Kohli c Khawaja b Lyon 17

A. Rahane c Head b Hazlewood 30

H. Vihari not out 24

R. Pant not out 09

Extras (b6, w2) 08

Total (5 wickets; 41 overs) 112

Falls: 1-0 (Rahul), 2-13 (Pujara), 3-48 (Kohli), 4-55 (Vijay), 5-98 (Rahane).

Bowling: Starc 10-2-28-1 (1w), Hazlewood 11-3-24-2, Cummins 8-0-24-0 (1w) , Lyon 12-2-30-2.


December 17, 2018
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