Arab Times

Thakur, Sundar revive India’s hopes

Australia reach stumps at 21 without loss, overall lead of 54

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BRISBANE, Australia, Jan 17, (AP): Test rookies Shardul Thakur and Washington Sundar combined for a rearguard century stand that frustrated Australia’s bowling attack and lifted India from a precarious position Sunday into almost first-innings parity in the series-deciding match.

The partnershi­p formed with India in serious trouble at 186-6 in reply to Australia’s 369, and with no more recognized batters in the pavilion, and added 123 runs - an Indian record for the seventh wicket at the Gabba.

Thakur, in his second Test, got off the mark with a six and raised his maiden Test half century with another six off Nathan Lyon and topped India’s scoring with a 115-ball 67. Sundar posted 62 from 144 deliveries in his debut test innings. In between the boundaries, the lower middle-order batters dodged, ducked and were hit by short balls peppered at them by the Australian fast bowlers.

The pair had been elevated to the starting lineup for the fourth Test and took three wickets each over the first two days after a string of injuries to India’s bowling stocks culminated in pace spearhead Jasprit Bumrah and leading spinner Ravichandr­an Ashwin being ruled out of the match in Brisbane.

When Australian paceman Josh Hazlewood (5-57) completed a fivewicket haul by clean bowling a wildlyswin­ging Mohammed Siraj for 13, India were all out for 336 late on day three - just a 33-run first-innings deficit.

Australia reached stumps at 21 without loss, an overall lead of 54. David Warner was unbeaten on 20.

The series is level at 1-1 with two days remaining and it appears that India are on track to at least force a draw that would ensure they retain the Border-Gavaskar trophy.

Thakur acknowledg­ed the situation was difficult when he went into bat, facing up to the crowd, the Australian pace bowlers, a batting partner he’d rarely played with and India in a tough position. But he said he was confident he and Sundar had the temperamen­t for Test cricket and were capable of digging in.

And he recalled some advice India coach Ravi Shastri.

“I remember Ravi Shastri telling me ‘if you perform in this country you will be rewarded and people are going to love you for your performanc­es’,” Thakur said. “Keeping those things in my mind, I just kept playing. I was just hoping for a turnaround, and it happened.”

Hazlewood praised Thakur and Sundar for the way they took on the game and admitted the Australian­s “just let a few moments slip.”

“Credit to those two guys, batted beautifull­y,” he said, but Australia “probably let pressure off at certain times across the day. There were a few half-chances there we could have grabbed, may have made a difference.”

Hazlewood was the pick of the Australian bowlers and was rewarded for his tight line with a ninth five-wicket haul in a Test innings.

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Hazlewood

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