India beat England by 15 runs in second ODI to wrap up series – as it happened
There's one distinct difference
in the captaincy transition that India are under in limited-overs cricket.
Unlike his predecessor's staid presence on the field, Virat Kohli's body
language is often a good indicator of India's fortunes on the field. Even in
defence of a mammoth 381, the new Indian captain's face took the full gamut of
human expression, ranging from hopelessness as he moved a fielder in the direction
where the previous ball went to the unbridled delight at the fall of almost
every England wicket or during the Yuvraj Singh-MS Dhoni partnership.
Eventually, that record 256-run
fourth-wicket association between the two senior-most members of his side
ensured India got the few extra runs that Eoin Morgan so dearly sought in Pune,
to complete a tense 15-run series-clinching win at the Barabati Stadium in
Cuttack in yet another bat-v-bat contest. In the process, that Kohli frown was
turned upside down once for all.
But that India nearly lost
despite scoring over 380 runs was because of a blinder from the England
captain, whose ninth ODI hundred almost eclipsed the virtuoso efforts of Dhoni
and Yuvraj. Morgan's 81 ball 102 dragged the equation down from 100 off
the final eight overs to a more gettable 33 off 12. Eventually, Morgan's
blinder reached an unfortunate end courtesy a run-out and the Indian seamers
heaved a collective sigh of relief after another unforgiving surface all but
gobbled them up.
For a second time in as many
games this series, India had to take the harder route to get a stranglehold of
the match, their top-order proving flaky yet again, this time after being put
in to bat. If it was 63 for 4 in Pune, here the hosts were reduced to 25 for 3
with Chris Woakes adding the prize wicket of Virat Kohli besides the two
under-fire openers in a fine display of outswing bowling.
In contrast, England got their
chase off to an earnest start despite the early loss of Alex Hales. Even though
the run-rate only barely hovered over the six-run mark, the in-form pair of
Jason Roy and Joe Root kept scoring a flurry of boundaries as India's seamers
failed to realise the folly of bowling short and wide outside off-stump. Not
until India introduced Ravindra Jadeja (1-45) did the run defence get a sense
of control. Then Ravichandran Ashwin came along with his wickets to put India
in the driver's seat through the middle phase.
Root, after scoring a seventh
half-century of the tour, miscued a slog sweep off Ashwin after the offie made
the crucial switch to bowling over the wicket. Jason Roy got 82 eye-catching
runs before getting bowled off an attempted run down. When Ben Stokes and Jos
Buttler fell to Ashwin, England were staring down the barrel at 206 for 5 in the
32nd over before Morgan, in the company of Moeen Ali, began a spirited
fightback.
The duo's 93-run stand,
fortuitous at times but mostly exhilarating, was instrumental in keeping the
run chase alive. Moeen survived a run-out and dropped chance to get to a
half-century but it was Morgan, who was particularly brilliant in picking his
moments - most notably deciding to play out Ashwin carefully while chancing his
arm against Hardik Pandya and Kedar Jadhav.
Even as Bumrah encountered
another off-day - conceding 81 runs from his nine overs for his two wickets -
India's decision to pick an additional death bowler in Bhuvneshwar Kumar (in
for Umesh Yadav) reaped rich benefits as the Uttar Pradesh seamer proved his
worth - bowling five overs for only 40 runs in the final 10 to help India
across the line. Earlier in the day, Yuvraj turned back the clock
with a scintillating career-best 150 and Dhoni followed suit with a century of
his own as India overcame the aforementioned early wobble to post a mammoth
total on the board. Yuvraj was at his regal best from the get go -
the drives and pulls reminiscent of a bygone era of India's ODI history.
For a second game in the series,
the teams were welcomed by a benign-looking pitch and with the possibility of
dew later in the evening, Morgan had little qualms in inviting India to take
first strike. The first ball of the innings - with KL Rahul cover-driving for
four - served as an eerie premonition of things to come even if England's
bowlers, Woakes in particular, did admirably well to win the first bout in the
opening powerplay.
Yuvraj stayed in his element
throughout, using his leverage to pull deliveries both in-front and behind
square with metronomic precision. England, who'd picked an extra seamer in Liam
Plunkett for Adil Rashid, overdid their use of the short delivery, particularly
on a ground with short square boundaries.
Yuvraj reached his
half-century off 56 deliveries while Dhoni took 67 for his feat. The duo picked
up pace through the middle phase of the innings, slamming his 150th six enroute
scoring his first ODI century since March 2011. The partnership chugged past
one milestone after another, eventually culminating at 256 - the highest
fourth-wicket stand against England in ODIs. After Yuvraj's dismissal,
Dhoni turned aggressor - eventually finishing with half a dozen sixes as India,
helped by smaller cameos from Kedar Jadhav and Hardik Pandya, added 120 in the
final 10. It was a total, as even Yuvraj envisioned at the half-way
stage was formidable but certainly not safe.
Brief Scores: India
381/6 in 50 overs (Yuvraj Singh 150, MS Dhoni 134; Chris Woakes 4-60) beat
England 366/8 in 50 overs (Eoin Morgan 102, Jason Roy 82; R Ashwin 3-65) by 15
runs.
No comments
Post a Comment