Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

In a first, India win 1st Test in Oz

- HTC and Agencies letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEWDELHI/ADELAIDE: India walked off the scene of heartbreak on their last Test tour of Australia with their heads held high on Monday.

The dramatic, nailbiting 31-run win was only their sixth Test victory in Australia over 70 years, and their first ever in the opening match of a series. It ended when off spinner R Ashwin got last man Josh Hazlewood caught at slip off the penultimat­e delivery of the extended middle session on the final day. The team first rushed to him in celebratio­n and then to collect the stumps as souvenirs, joy and relief in equal measure, after Australia’s lower order batsmen had raised hopes of an improbable fightback chasing a record 323.

At the Adelaide Oval in 2014-15, centuries in both innings from skipper Virat Kohli weren’t enough as the visitors fell agonisingl­y short after a heroic fourth-innings run chase at the start of a cricket series they eventually lost 2-0. This time, India harked back to another glorious Adelaide evening from 2003, when the team — fuelled by a double century from Rahul Dravid and boosted by a spell of pace bowling from Ajit Agarkar — defeated the hosts by four wickets to win the second Test of what was finally a 1-1 series.

Cheteshwar Pujara, a player in the Dravid mould, struck obdurate knocks in both innings, top-scoring with 123 and 71 to be named man-of-the-match. Kohli hailed Pujara’s contributi­on as “priceless” . “His grit and determinat­ion brought us back in it. We did not let up for four days,” the skipper said.

But it was a team effort, with the four-man attack picking up the 20 wickets needed for victory. Over the two innings, the pace trio of Ishant Sharma (3/95), Jasprit Bumrah (6/115) and Mohammed Shami (5/123) shared the spoils, and Ashwin never eased the pressure on the Australian batsmen.

Young wicketkeep­er Rishabh Pant was another bright spot, claiming 11 catches to equal the world record by a stumper in a Test match that was jointly held by England’s Jack Russell and South Africa’s AB de Villiers until now. Going 1-0 up in the four-Test series is a huge boost for Kohli’s side after defeats in the opening Tests in South Africa and England led to 1-2 and 1-4 series defeats respective­ly. India are now firm favourites to win its first Test series in Australia in the absence of the banned Steve Smith and David Warner following a ball-tampering scandal early this year. The second Test starts in Perth on Friday.

GOING 1-0 UP IN THE FOURTEST SERIES IS A HUGE BOOST FOR KOHLI’S SIDE AFTER DEFEATS IN THE OPENING TESTS IN SOUTH AFRICA AND ENGLAND LED TO 1-2 AND 1-4 SERIES DEFEATS RESPECTIVE­LY

 ?? REUTERS ?? ▪ Virat Kohli celebratin­g India’s victory over Australia.
REUTERS ▪ Virat Kohli celebratin­g India’s victory over Australia.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India