Muscat Daily

CLINICAL INDIA ROUTS PAKISTAN

Bhuvneshwa­r, Jadhav’s three-wicket hauls set up easy victory in Dubai

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Dubai, UAE - Having survived a banana peel against Hong Kong on Tuesday, India came back with a near-perfect bowling performanc­e to register its most comfortabl­e chase against arch-rival Pakistan: with 126 balls remaining on Wednesday.

Going through a patch of uninspirin­g performanc­es, the bowlers returned with a thorough show, exposing Pakistan's hardly-used middle order, which showed its lack of experience of batting through 50-over innings by going for big shots every time they were tied down.

Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar (3-15) returned to form after 35.2 wicketless overs in ODIs, and Kedar Jadhav's return to the side - that cushion of the sixth bowler - showed just what India missed in England. Between them, they took six wickets; Jadhav's three for 23 were his best figures in ODI cricket.

Bhuvneshwa­r, reunited with Jasprit Bumrah, who missed the England ODIs with a broken thumb and was rested in the Asia Cup opener, showed the worth of his experience. In the first five overs, there was not a single loose ball bowled. The left-hand openers were cramped for room, and knowing there was no movement to be had, the bowlers didn't bowl a single drive-able ball.

Imam-ul-Haq tried to break the shackles by giving Bhuvneshwa­r the charge, who shortened the length accordingl­y to draw an edge. Fakhar Zaman wasn't even given a ball he could pick a single off. Frustrated, he finally tried to pull but Bhuvneshwa­r managed to cramp him up, and forced the top edge to make it three for two.

In two swift blows, Bhuvneshwa­r had taken out the scorers of 53 per cent of the runs among this Pakistan squad.

One of the remaining batsmen, Shoaib Malik, had scored more runs and hit more boundaries than the rest of the XI put together. Captain Sarfraz Ahmed had been called upon to bat only ten times in its last 20 ODIs.

Arguably its best allround batsman, Babar Azam (47) completed the middle-order core that was now left to bat a major- ity of the innings before the bighitting allrounder­s could take over. Azam and Malik began promisingl­y enough, adding 82 for the third wicket, but even in this partnershi­p risks had to be taken.

India didn't allow them easy rotation of the strike. When eventually Kuldeep Yadav went past Azam's outside edge with a lovely wrong'un, the game was opened up once again. It didn't matter that Malik was reprieved twice - once by M S Dhoni and then by Bhuvneshwa­r in the deep.

It didn't matter that Hardik Pandya hurt himself so badly while bowling that he had to be stretchere­d off the field.

Pakistan's middle order just crumbled under the pressure, with the next four wickets falling for just 15 runs.

Pandya's replacemen­t, Jadhav managed to frustrate the batsmen with his shrewd changes of pace and trajectory before Sarfraz tried to hit him for a six wide of long-on.

This time, Pandya's replacemen­t in the field kicked into action.

Manish Pandey, no stranger to tough boundary catches, hared across to his right, took the catch, realised he was going to struggle to stay in the field of the play, lobbed the ball back in, stepped out and came back to take it, all the while making it look quite easy.

Malik made the next dismissal look easy as he was run out. Then, Jadhav first and the quicks later ran riot to not even let Pakistan bat its allotment of 50 overs.

Once the target was that low - 163 - it was clear India wasn't going to need its allotment itself.

Not with Shikhar Dhawan (46) carrying on from the hundred against Hong Kong and Rohit Sharma timing everything sweetly.

Rohit looked in absolute peach form, hitting three sixes during his 52 in an 86-run first-wicket stand. The one disappoint­ment for Rohit will be the return of his leg-spin troubles from the IPL: he fell to the first ball from Shadab Khan, a wrong'un.

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