The Star Malaysia

Warner turns on his power

Aussie opener hits century to help team beat India

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BANGALORE: Opener David Warner hit a sparkling century in his 100th one-day internatio­nal to help Australia down India by 21 runs and pull off a consolatio­n win.

Warner’s blazing 124 and his 231run opening stand with Aaron Finch, who made 94, guided the visitors to 334-5 in the fourth game of the five-match series in Bangalore on Thursday.

The hosts, who lead the series 3-1, faltered in their chase to end on 313-8 despite three half-centuries including a gritty 67 off 69 balls from Kedar Jadhav.

Fast bowlers Kane Richardson and Nathan Coulter-Nile shared five wickets between them to snap India’s winning streak of nine ODI games.

“I thought we were a little bit too wide with the new ball, could have been straighter, but the bowlers pulled it back nicely towards the back end,” said skipper Steve Smith.

“Nice to sit up there and watch Warner do his thing. His ODI form in the last two years has been unbelievab­le. He continues to grow and get better as a player which is what we’re after,” Smith said of his star opener.

Virat Kohli’s India began their reply on a positive note as openers Rohit Sharma, who hit 65, and Ajinkya Rahane, who made 53, put together a 106-run stand.

Rahane registered a hattrick of half-centuries and in the next over Sharma hit two big sixes off leg-spinner Adam Zampa to bring up his fifty in style.

Richardson broke the century stand after sending Rahane trudging back to the pavilion.

Sharma tried to keep the momentum going with Kohli for company but a big mix-up between the two batsmen got him run out.

It was Smith’s spectacula­r stop at backward point that got Sharma stranded with Kohli at the striker’s end. Kohli was soon bowled by Coulter-Nile for 21.

Hardik Pandya, who scored 41, put on a determined 78-run partnershi­p with Jadhav to keep the chase afloat but it became difficult to keep pace with the mounting run-rate.

Jadhav, smashing seven fours and a six, also got going with Manish Pandey, who scored 33, to put on 61 runs for the fifth wicket, but his wicket took the wheels off the chase.

Earlier electing to bat, the leftright batting pair of Warner and Finch pulverised the Indian bowlers attack in the first 35 overs.

Warner, who received the man of the match award, hit 12 fours and four sixes. It was his 14th ODI century since making his debut at Hobart in 2009.

The batsman got to his milestone with a boundary off part-time spinner Jadhav, jumping for joy as the runs were marked up. He later fell to Jadhav’s off-spin and walked off to a standing ovation.

Finch, who missed out on his second successive century, soon fol- lowed his partner after getting caught at mid-on off paceman Umesh Yadav.

“Warner and Finch were spectacula­r. Really paced the innings nicely. Set us up to get 330. 300 wouldn’t have been enough. Nice to defend and get a win,” said Smith.

Yadav, who returned figures of 4-71, got the prized scalp of Smith to bag his 100th ODI wicket. The visitors lost three wickets in just 15 deliveries.

But Travis Head and Peter Handscomb forged a 63-run fourth-wicket partnershi­p to halt the Indian fightback with some intelligen­t batting.

Handscomb made a 30-ball 43, laced with three fours and a six, before being bowled by Yadav. Head made an effective 29.

“Australia were really good today. With the bat, their intent was really good. They pulled things back nicely in the field. We didn’t play so bad, but they were better on the day,” said Kohli.

 ?? — AFP ?? On a high: Australian bowler Nathan Coulter-Nile celebratin­g the dismissal of India captain and batsman Virat Kohli for 21 runs during the fourth oneday internatio­nal in Bangalore on Thursday.
— AFP On a high: Australian bowler Nathan Coulter-Nile celebratin­g the dismissal of India captain and batsman Virat Kohli for 21 runs during the fourth oneday internatio­nal in Bangalore on Thursday.

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