Impossible is possible

by hawkeyes | January 19, 2008 at 03:55 am
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Impossible is possible

Impossible is possible

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Very few teams come to the Western Australian capital and inflict heavy
defeat on the Australians. The West Indies did that, 16 years ago, when Curtly
Ambrose' inspired spell of 7 wickets for 1 run destroyed the Aussies. But, that
was a different era. India, came into this match with a big point to prove.
Bruised and battered in the previous two Test matches in the series, they left
the baggage of controversy behind and moved on to Freemantle territory to put up
a spirited performance in the Third Test and clinch a historic victory by 72
runs.

The Indians had a single digit number in the minds as they took the field in
the morning - 8 i.e. the number of wickets needed to claim victory. And eight,
they got after some inspired captaincy decisions by Kumble, superb bowling by
the quicks and luck. Their charge to victory came to a pause, when the ninth
wicket partnership between Stuart Clark and Mitchell Johnson had other
intentions for a while, but it only looked as though they were delaying the
inevitable.

Of patience and perseverance

The Aussies were chasing something they tried six years ago and faltered
against the same opposition. This time, there were larger stakes in the
consecutive-Test wins record, and that looked to have got the better of the
hosts. They got off to a confident start, thanks to Ricky Ponting's early flurry
of boundaries, but intertwined among those were moments where the Australian
skipper looked all at sea against a young, lanky paceman from India - Ishant
Sharma. His footwork was tested severely as the Sharma constantly resorted to
big inswingers to unsettle Ponting. He kept pegging away, till he got his prey
finally for 46. That, was a moment of inspiration as Sharma had toiled hard for
six overs going wicketless. In the mid-over conference, Sehwag made his point
clear to Kumble asking the young man to put one last effort. That worked
instantly, as Sharma produced an edge to first slip which Dravid made no mistake
to pouch safely.

Hussey kept going in his usual pace - rotating the strike and stroking the
odd boundary. Michael Clarke joined him after Ponting's fall and looked like a
man with points to prove, after taking flak for his dip in form. He began on a
positive note, displaying nimble footwork to Kumble as much as putting loose
deliveries from the pacers. He and Hussey strung together a good partnership,
before RP Singh produced another one to send the left-hander back. That perhaps
set the ball rolling for the Indians as the Aussies lost their set batsman.
Andrew Symonds walked into bat, in an untested territory - a pressure cooker
scenario in the second innings, and set off on his usual bludgeoning style - a
six and a four. But, that was all he could achieve as Billy Bowden took off his
fingers in a flash. Life came a full circle for Symonds, as replays showed there
was an inside edge as the ball thudded into his pads.

A moment of sheer inspiration

There was a short partnership mushrooming between Michael Clarke and Adam
Gilchrist - but it took nothing short of an inspired chess-like move by Anil
Kumble to set India going. He brought on Virender Sehwag for what turned out to
be a massive period of play - with the man castling the dangerous Adam Gilchrist
round his legs in his very first over. Then, the next over, one became two - as
Sehwag snapped up Lee, Laxman holding on to a short-low catch at silly point.
Australia jolted in the middle-order. Australia from 227/5 to 229/7.

Clarke then steered the lower-order with some handy shots, but couldn't do
much as he ran out of partners. He kept scoring from one end, scoring a defiant
fifty. Mitchell Johnson showed why he is no mug with the bat as he used the good
old slog to grand effect. Clarke departed the scene for a superb 81 though in
vain, as he was stumped by Dhoni off one that turned away from the
right-hander.

A sting in the tail

India were flirting with a growing reputation of not being able to finish off
the tail and that came to haunt them back again. As much as them, the Aussie
tail has had its own image of strong tail-wagging since Ashes 2005. And it was
one of those days when they almost lived up to that image. Stuart Clark and
Mitchell Johnson came into bat with only one thing in their minds - defeat. But,
what we saw was the bowlers having fun - going for every delivery, with an
intention of clearing the ropes. They added a superb 73-run partnership to just
about shake-up India's hopes. Johnson raced to a brilliant fifty filled with
chancy-strokes and some stellar drives. Clark's stay in the middle came to an
end when he edged one from Pathan to Dhoni and it came to an end at 31.

The finishing act

Just as everyone around was asking, "Whatever happened to the good old yorker
!", RP Singh produced a nasty one to produce the moment for the visitors. It
beats the bat totally and zoomed into middle and off-stump. What looked
impossible and unlikely before four days, finally came true as India wrapped up
the Test by 72 runs. Irfan Pathan, was quite righteously named the man of the
match for his stellar all-round effort, that first ensured India removed the
openers early twice - contributed some significant runs lower-down and as
"nightwatchman" and just as the tail started wagging around, took that important
wicket of Clark to seal the victory for the visitors.

All in all, a historic win for India - much in the mould of Johannesburg
2006. The Aussies, conscious of their image looked like playing as saints - and
it wasn't just that the bully image was missing, but also Ricky Ponting's long
lived ambitions to achieve the 17-consecutive Test wins. Now, the cricket
bandwagon moves to Adelaide, where the Aussies will look to bounce back from
this defeat, while India must be all keyed up to drag the momentum into the
fourth Test and level the series 2-2.

 

reddy2007 

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Jordan Yerman
Jordan Yerman
flagged this story as Needs Improvement

at 08:32 on January 19th, 2008

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