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Aus vs Ind | 2nd ODI: What Experts said as classic Smith shines in Aussie' series winning effort

Australia, led by brilliant knocks from Steve Smith and Glenn Maxwell, outdid India twice in three days at the Sydney Cricket Ground to clinch an unassailable 2-0 lead in the series. The Indian team found it hard to chase down an imposing target of 390 runs and never looked like achieving it as wickets fell on regular intervals. 

In the end, even after fighting half-centuries by KL Rahul and skipper Virat Kohli, the Men in Blue could manage to reach only 339 for 9 in their allotted 50 overs, thereby losing the game by a huge margin of 51 runs. 

Captains' Viewpoints

Speaking at the post-match presentation ceremony, victorious skipper Aaron Finch called it a perfect performance with the bat from his side. “Anytime you get in the high 300s, (it) is good. Very pleased to wrap it up in two wins." 

David Warner got injured while fielding and providing an update on his situation, Finch revealed that he didn’t have much idea about it but was sure that he would not be available for the next game. “No idea. We've got to reshuffle it around, I don't think he'll be available,” he informed. 

Finch, 33, also praised Warner’s quick innings, saying, “The way Davey played upfront was unbelievable." The captain of the winning team was full of admiration for Steve Smith as well. "Smithy played out of his skin for two matches in a row,” he added, lauding the man who now has five centuries vs India in ODIs, out of a total of 11. 

Talking about the bowling, Finch commented that their bowlers got an idea of how to bowl from Hardik Pandya’s slower ones. “Henriques bowled to a simple plan and changed his pace a lot. As Virat said, we probably got a blueprint with Hardik's bowling. He was really hard to hit with pace off deliveries." 

On the other hand, the Indian skipper Virat Kohli was seen ruing missed opportunities. Especially disappointing for him was the fact that he couldn’t bat till the 40th over alongside Rahul. 

“KL and I thought even 100 in the last ten overs with Hardik to come was achievable. If KL and I had stuck around till the 40th over, we could have put them under pressure. The wicket was beautiful to bat on,” Virat remarked. 

Agreeing that the Indian team was completely outplayed, the skipper reasoned that it was because as a bowling unit, they were unable to execute their plans.  

“I think with the ball, we were not that effective. Didn't hit the areas we wanted to consistently. They've got a strong batting lineup and know the angles. Their total was a bit too steep. If you see, we got 340 and still lost by 51 runs... With the areas they bowled, they were in a position to create chances, and with those chances taken, they were on top,” added Kohli, who scored an 87-ball 89 but couldn’t take the team home.  

Pandya bowled for the first time and Kohli said that he just casually asked the all-rounder whether he could bowl, in one of the mini team conferences, and he agreed. 

“I think he gave away a bit of a bowling plan on this pitch. A lot of them bowled cutters (smiles). His bowling was out of nowhere. I just asked him." 

Expert Opinion


The experts centered their commentary on four main issues including the over rate, Steve Smith's brilliance with the bat, Indian bowling not being able to execute the plans, and most importantly, the Indian batsmen losing the plot under pressure. Vikrant Gupta, a cricket journalist, though, summed up all in one tweet saying that signs are not good for Team India going ahead on the tour. 


On the other hand, a well-known journalist and cricket expert, Ayaz Memon put the blame on the bowlers. This is understandable as, in both the matches, Australian batsmen have taken their team well past the 350-mark quite easily. Also, in neither match, the Indian bowlers have been able to dismiss the Aussie openers in the powerplay.

 


Well-known commentator and one who is respected for his words, Harsha Bhogle, once again brought out a point that went unnoticed by many. He pointed out how the fifth bowler, a combination of Moises Henriques and Glenn Maxwell, a weak link in the Australian lineup, went for just 68 runs in 12 overs in a run chase of 390 runs. 


Gaurav Kalra, as always, was up with his wits, pointing out how Virat Kohli was doing well while others came and went. 



Kalra was once again in the business, this time though, with his commentary on the slow over-rate. Responding to the same tweet, former cricketer turned analyst and cricket pundit Aakash Chopra also got involved and discussed how slow over rates are turning out to be a big boon for the entire series. 


Another comment by Harsha Bhogle, this one on the way Steve Smith has batted throughout the series, was probably the best description attributed to his efforts so far. 



The series now moves on to Canberra with the final match scheduled to be played there. Team India would not only be playing for pride but also some much-needed momentum as well as crucial Cricket World Cup Super League points.

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AUS vs IND | 2nd ODI: Steve Smith, Australia overpower Virat Kohli, India at SCG

Australia defeated India by runs and won the ODI series 2-0 with a match remaining to be played in Canberra on December 02. Virat Kohli led by other teammates in the middle order tried their best to keep India in with the chance of chasing a massive target of 390 runs but fell short as sparks of brilliance ended promising innings one after another for India. The chase started well for the men in blue with Mayank Agarwal finding the best of his timing from the word go as Micthell Starc who was punished for being too full in the first over in search of swing. Dhawan too came to the part as he opened his account with a drive on the up in his signature style through the cover. But, in the end, Josh Hazlewood proved to be too accurate for Dhawan’s search of too many boundaries in the powerplay while Agarwal was undone by a beauty off Cummins that left him from the line outside the off stump. Both Agarwal and Dhawan would be disappointed for not converting their aggressive starts into something bigger and substantive for the team. A focused Virat Kohli followed Dhawan’s departure of Dhawan and he was soon joined by Shreyas Iyer at the crease and both started steadying the ship with chipping in at the required rate with a handful of boundaries at regular intervals. After gifting his wicket in a so uncharacteristic ultra-aggressive manner, Kohli made sure that he did not commit any mistake of over attacking the bowlers while Iyer kept on teasing the boundary riders more frequently than his captain. The level of Kohli’s focus on the big prize of chasing the mountain of 390 runs could be assessed in the manner he turned around to adjust his gloves in signature style after completing a fifty without acknowledging it. He was proactive as a batsman while being very flexible in his shot-making. He was not getting his usual flat batted drives on to the offside against the leg spinner Zampa and gave up on the shot after a point and took him on over the extra cover, stepping out to the crease of the ball. Virat Kohli, the batsman was well on course to help his team in pursuit of the big chase but his inning was cut short in the manner of an unlucky captain of a team for whom nothing is going in their favour. He was not at his fluent best, but Starc provided him with the option of showing what his best may look like when he flicked his half volley pitched outside leg stump way over the long-leg boundary. It was similar to the one he had played in the last game off Pat Cummins. KL Rahul proved his worth lower down the order as he unleashed his range of strokes and belted all bowlers over the boundaries. He was especially severe against the short ball and was smart enough to pick the shorter side of the ground to attempt his big shots. Hardik Pandya had an anti-climax kind of day as he struggled for timing as the required run-rate kept on climbing and his continuous failure to get the run rate going saw KL Rahul attempting big shorts invariably ever ball and ultimately Zampa used the advantage of shooting required rate and to beat Rahul in the game of patience. Earlier, Australian captain Aaron Finch won the toss and elected to bat first. In a completely familiar script to the one in the first match. Both him and David Warner waited for a brief spell to see off the initial overs of Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Sami before teeing off. There was a slight bit of difference today as Warner was the dominant force while Finch took his time more than the left-hander. All Indian bowlers looked flat both in attitude and bowling while their inability to strike through or even control the flow of the game was once again exposed as the Aussie batsmen started taking the game away from them. Right from the start, it all looked like the first game where the openers tired down the pacers and then the long batting lineup of Steve Smith, and Glenn Maxwell made full use of their inaccuracies. Bumrah’s problems to not find a wicket along with Shami’s struggle to find the suitable lengths were continued on a pitch as flat as a highway. Highly promising Navdeep Saini was not able to deliver even half of what he had promised before the tour so far and at once was conceding runs in excess of 10 runs per over. Finch was taken away by Shami but only after he and Warner had put Australia on a perfect track to better their score in the last match. Before Virat Kohli and his bowlers could start afresh to checkback their momentum, Steve Smith started from where had left in the last match and denied men in blue any chance to even think of coming back to control a passage of play. He was aggressive from the outset, and unlike the last match, did not take too many balls to settle down before climbing onto the bowlers. He showed the kind of form he was batting in when Shami overpitched a delivery near his pads on the stump line and Smith responded with a classical straight drive as it gets in the ODIs. Warner was soon gone after his arrival but he was not lost of partners who could match his shot makings as Marnus Labuschagne played a second fiddle inning at the start to aptly support the audacious and extravagant stroke-making of Smith. From Bumrah to Shami and Chahal to Jadeja, every bowler was put to the sword as Smith scored a masterful century in one ball less than the last century two days back. Labuschagne and Maxwell reaped all the benefits out of a bowling attack depleted by the onslaught from the Australian top three and guided the Kangaroos that put the Indian batting lineup out of the game pushing against the wall even before they walked out to bat. Such was the dominance of the Smith- Labuschagne-Maxwell trio that Australia could score a massive 2020 runs from the last 20 overs and it was always an uphill task for the men in blue who are without the best opening batsman Rohit Sharma. If being outplayed in both the batting and bowling departments were not enough, the Indian team was outplayed in the fielding too. While the catch dropping spree of the Virat Kohli's men that started in the last game was unstoppable in the second as well, Aussies were up to the task as two blinders took two consecutive wickets of Shreyas Iyer and Virat Kohli when both of them were looking settled for a big inning. While the Aussies would have celebrated Kohli’s wicket more widely, Steve Smith who is yet to set a foot wrong in the series so far dived valiantly to cling onto a shot nailed by Iyer at the short mid-wicket position. Iyer’s wicket clogged the momentum of the batting after the duo had started putting balls into the gaps and were batting with a risk-free approach. Virat Kohli and his men can hold their head high as they have been able to put on a strong batting performance but at the same time, lacklustre fielding efforts in two consecutive games along with undiscerning bowling throughout the 50 overs and especially with the new balls would leave them embarrassed. To be fair to the Indian pacers, their Australian counterparts, too, did not get any amount of swing in the air or help from the pitch but the fact that they extracted more bounce and took the help of everything that the pitch offered by bowling slower bouncers and cutters would make the Indian bowlers soul searching as the ODI series as slipped out of hands before they head to Canberra for the final and inconsequential match of the three-match series.

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West Indies settle for tame high-scoring draw in practice game

West Indies Test team would have been upbeat after piling up 571 in their first innings of the practice match against New Zealand A. However, the latter side ensured that the visitors won't get any further encouragement by scoring 440/8 in their own innings as the four-day match ended in a tame draw. The New Zealand A side benefitted from two centuries, one from 28-year old right-hander Will Young and the other by their skipper Cole McConchie, also 28. For the Windies team, up and coming pacer Chemar Holder was the leading wicket-taker with figures of 3/100 in 28 overs while Kraigg Braithwaite followed up his highest first-class score with decent figures of 2/66 in 28 overs. Captain Jason Holder picked up a solitary wicket in his 19 overs while conceding 45 runs while Alzarri Joseph went wicketless in his 18 overs. The only frontline spinner in West Indies line up, Rahkeem Cornwall, also got just one wicket in return for 34 runs off 15 overs. All-rounder Raymon Reifer remained without any scalps. One wicket was taken by part-timer Jason Campbell. While conceding such a big score is not ideal for the West Indies team, it is quite possible that the pacers bowled within themselves and didn't exert much after discovering the flat nature of the wicket. The likes of Jason Holder and Alzarri Joseph are quite likely to benefit from the swing-friendly conditions of New Zealand when the Test series start. Earlier in the match, West Indian opener Kraigg Braithwaite scored 248, his highest score in first-class cricket. His effort, along with 93 from the returning Darren Bravo and 53 from Jermaine Blackwood, took the visitors to an impressive 571. Braithwaite had a tough time in West Indies' last Test series in England. His big score would please the West Indies team and the selectors. However, the spotlight would be on his opening partner Campbell who hasn't got a good score for some time. The 93 by Bravo is also crucial due to the importance of the left-hander in the West Indies team. With Shai Hope out of the team due to lack of runs, Bravo's role becomes greater. The two-match Test series begins on December 3 at Hamilton. Second Test takes place from December 11 at Wellington.

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VVS Laxman’s five names who could be groomed to solve sixth bowler problem

Former India batsman VVS Laxman, commenting on the need to have a sixth bowling option for Team India, suggested five names who could be groomed to fill in that much-required place. "An old bugbear continued to haunt India. Their make-up has been such that they have only pure batsmen or pure bowlers, with the exception of Ravindra Jadeja. That means Virat's hands are severely tied,” Laxman, 48, wrote in his column in The Times of India. India indeed missed the sixth bowler and in both the games, although in the second game, an underfit Hardik Pandya bowled four overs to pick up one wicket and bowl an economical spell, considering the way other bowlers were butchered. “Going forward, India must have a sixth bowling option, even if at the expense of a specialist batsman,” suggested the former wristy batsman. He further said that the best sides in the world always have 1-2 additional bowling resources apart from four or five main bowlers. He then names those cricketers who could be groomed for that role. “I can think of five names that can slot in as the extra all-rounder, given Hardik isn't bowling these days. There is the spin trio of Washington Sundar, Axar Patel, and Krunal Pandya, as well as the medium-paced duo of Vijay Shankar and Shivam Dube,” said the Sunrisers Hyderabad mentor. Adding that these players need to be included in the squad as soon as possible, Laxman said, “Get anyone or two of them into the squad, give them game-time, and groom them for the battles ahead.” In the second game too, Indian bowlers were taken to the cleaners and the team was set a total of 390 to chase. The top-order disappointed once again as apart from Kohli nobody really showed the application to play the long haul. At the time of writing the news, KL Rahul and Hardik Pandya were batting at the crease with India still needing 146 runs in 71 balls.