Stabroek News

Windies totter after Kohli, Jadeja hundreds

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RAJKOT, India, CMC – West Indies suffered a now familiar batting collapse after India captain Virat Kohli struck his 24th Test hundred and Ravindra Jadeja his first, as the Caribbean side left themselves with an enormous task of saving the opening Test after only the second day here yesterday.

The right-handed Kohli stroked a high-quality 139 to add to 18-year-old opener Privthi Shaw’s 134 from Thursday’s opening day, an innings which helped power the hosts to 649 for nine declared – their highest ever total against West Indies.

Jadeja hit exactly 100 not out while wicketkeep­er Rishabh Pant missed out on three figures with 92, as West Indies bowlers toiled without much success on a chastening day at the Saurashtra Cricket Associatio­n Stadium.

Leg-spinner Devendra Bishoo picked up a four-wicket haul but leaked 217 runs from a marathon 54-over spell while debutant fast bowler Sherman Lewis ended with two for 93.

Left with the final session to navigate, West Indies made a mess of their reply, crashing to 94 for six at the close, as seamer Mohammed Shami (2-11) made key strikes to put in train the visitors’ demise.

Only right-hander Roston Chase, unbeaten on 27, showed any enterprise as wickets tumbled around him, leaving the Windies still trailing by a mammoth 555 runs heading into Saturday’s third day.

Needing a solid performanc­e after being kept in the field for the first two sessions, West Indies experience­d a nightmare start when captain KraiggBrat­hwaite’s (2) off-stump was sent cartwheeli­ng by Mohammed Shami in the third over, after the righthande­r was late on a defensive jab.

Kieran Powell followed for one in Mohammed Shami’s next over, lbw playing across a full length delivery, as the Windies slipped further at seven for one in the fifth over.

Shai Hope struck a couple of lovely punches down the ground for boundaries but he played down the wrong line to one from off-spinner Ravi Ashwin and was bowled for 10 at 21 for three, and exciting lefthander Shimron Hetmy er was tragically run out for 10 in the 12th over after he and Sunil Ambris (12) found themselves stranded in the same crease.

Ambris, back in the squad for the first time in 10 months, lasted just 20 balls before edging an extravagan­t drive at leftarm spinner Jadeja Ajinkya Rahane at slip.

Chase, batting at number six, then attempted to halt the slide in a 25-run, sixth wicket stand with wicketkeep­er Shane Dowrich (10) – the best stand of the innings so far.

Showing a penchant for counter-attack, Chase struck four fours – mostly lofted hits down the ground – in a breezy 38ball knock while Dowrich was more watchful in his 35-ball innings.

But with the day drifting towards a close, Dowrich was lured into an injudiciou­s drive at left-arm spinner Kuldeep Yadav and was bowled, with the ball clipping the top of off-stump.

Tail-ender Keemo Paul, in only his second Test, bludgeoned a four and a six in an unbeaten 13 to see West Indies to the close.

India had earlier turned the screws on the Windies after resuming to the day on 364 for four, with Kohli becoming the second fastest batsman in history to reach 24 Test hundreds, after the iconic Sir Don Bradman.

All told, the right-hander faced 230 balls and counted 10 fours, posting his fourth triple figure score this year and moving into fourth place on the alltime list of India centurymak­ers. Significan­tly, he extended his fifth wicket stand with Pant to 133, helping to put India in total command at lunch on 506 for five.

Pant, a 21-year-old lefthander in only his fourth Test, played with gay abandon, striking eight fours and four sixes off a mere 84 balls, before perishing about 45 minutes before the interval.

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 ??  ?? West Indies opener Kraigg Brathwaite walks away after he was bowled by Mohammed Shami on the second day of the opening Test.
West Indies opener Kraigg Brathwaite walks away after he was bowled by Mohammed Shami on the second day of the opening Test.
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