Muscat Daily

Warner, Finch hit tons, drub India in first ODI in Mumbai

-

INDIA VS AUSTRALIA FIRST ODI

Mumbai, India - Australia outsmarted India with the ball and then bullied them in the chase, with centuries from David Warner (128 n.o.) and Aaron Finch (110 n.o.) not even allowing the hosts a sniff.

Together they put on the highest partnershi­p for any wicket against India as Australia cantered home by ten wickets with 12.2 overs to spare on Tuesday.

Earlier, they restricted India to 255 after putting them in. At the forefront of the bowling effort were Mitchell Starc, who strangled India in three different phases to finish with three for 56, and Pat Cummins, who took the wickets of Shikhar Dhawan for 74 and Rishabh Pant for 28 to deny India any accelerati­on.

Both Finch and Warner began in contrastin­g styles. Warner was more tentative to start off, getting his first boundary in the seventh over after Finch had already hit five. Once he got a taste, he too started hitting from a predominan­tly leg-side position.

Shardul Thakur was especially punished, his relatively lower pace suiting Warner particular­ly.

In his first over, the 11th of the innings, Kuldeep Yadav appeared like he might be able to apply the brakes and change the scoring pattern.

He found Finch's leading edge twice in that over, but soon enough a release ball lobbed full on middle stump was smoked straight for six. That brought up 100 in 12.3 overs, 70 of those runs coming in boundaries.

Soon enough, the spinners also started dropping them short, and the faultiness started showing.

Warner and Finch marched the team past 150, and set themselves up for hundreds that were reached with comfort after the 200 partnershi­p was brought up in the 31st over.

Not at any point after the first drinks break did India appear like they had ideas to stop the pair, which was far from the case when Australia had the ball.

The first over of the match from Starc was indicative of two things to Australia - there wasn't going to be too much swing, and straying too full was always going to cost boundaries.

After eight in the first over, India were tied to 13 in the middle of the fifth, when Rohit Sharma attempted a third expansive drive off Starc only for a harmless chip to mid-off.

Lokesh Rahul, India's third opener in the squad, came in at No 3. At the start, he looked more fluent than the returning Shikhar Dhawan, who crawled to three off 22 before he got his first boundary by running down at Starc.

He followed up with one through midwicket next ball and with a slap over midwicket off Kane Richardson soon after, Dhawan became increasing­ly confident. Both he and Rahul shared a 121-run stand that came in good time at 22.4 overs.

A slight lapse from Rahul, however, gave Australia an opening that they aggressive­ly took advantage of. After stepping out to Agar, he lobbed his drive straight to extra cover to fall for 47.

Next over, Cummins was brought on as soon as Kohli was at the crease. He managed to find Dhawan's leading edge and suddenly India were three down.

From the other end, Finch also brought back Adam Zampa, who had troubled Kohli on Australia's last tour. It resulted in a wicket, Kohli looking to force a drive off Zampa but only managing to drill it straight back at him.

Next over, another bowling change brought another wicket. Starc replaced Cummins, roughed Shreyas Iyer up with a bouncer, and pushed one across him next ball to have him caught-behind on the drive. From 134 for one, the score read 164 for five, with 17 overs still to play.

With Kedar Jadhav making way for a third opener, Pant was India's No 6, and one half of the last recognised batting pair alongside Ravindra Jadeja.

But far too much was to be done. Just as they were on the verge of putting up 50 for the sixth wicket though, Jadeja's attempted glide to third man off a Kane Richardson off-cutter found Alex Carey.

Cummins was brought on next over and produced a short one that Pant ended up pulling to point via the top edge and his helmet. That blow kept him from wicketkeep­ing later, with Rahul taking the gloves during the chase.

Thakur, Mohammed Shami, and Kuldeep had the crowd briefly interested and cheering for them, but 255 was never going to be enough.

 ??  ??
 ?? (AFP) ?? Australia's Aaron Finch (left) and David Warner celebrate after leading their team to win over India on Tuesday
(AFP) Australia's Aaron Finch (left) and David Warner celebrate after leading their team to win over India on Tuesday
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman