The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Special feeling’ for Kohli

FIRST TEST: INDIA ONE UP IN SERIES AFTER 31-RUN WIN

- Adelaide

Visitors head for Perth believing they can create history.

Virat Kohli said yesterday it was “very special” to captain India to their first Test win in Australia for a decade and gave his side crucial momentum in their bid for a maiden series victory in the country.

The visitors won a tightly-contested opening Test in Adelaide by 31 runs on the fifth day after setting Australia a target of 323, which would have been a record run chase at the ground.

It was a big breakthrou­gh for Kohli’s men, with their last triumph on Australian soil at the Waca Ground in Perth in 2008. In Adelaide, their sole previous win was in 2003.

“Obviously it’s a great feeling. We’ve never taken a lead in a series in Australia, something that for us is a huge boost,” he said.

“And it’s given us the right momentum that we needed to play a big series like this and it’s something that we’ve had to work hard for.

“Any Test victory is special because you work hard over five days, and when the physical and the mental toil and the emotion of it all comes together in a result is a very special feeling.”

Kohli, who has long led India’s batting charge with admirable consistenc­y across all three formats but failed to fire in Adelaide, said he believed his team collective­ly were better than Australia and deserved to win.

The victory was built on Cheteshwar Pujara’s first-innings 123 and his second innings 71, while wicketkeep­er Rishabh Pant took a world record-equalling 11 catches.

“It was priceless from Pujara, we were down and out at lunch on day one. His grit and determinat­ion brought us back in it,” said Kohli.

“We always knew that runs on the board would make the home side tentative. Any lead was gold and we got 15. In the second innings again, he and Rahane batted well.”

Asked if he thought 323 would be enough to win, Kohli said his middle and lower order could have done better after a 5/25 collapse in the second innings.

“We could have added another 30-35 runs more which could have taken the game totally beyond Australia,” he said.

“So these are things we have to think about going to Perth, but if someone had told me before the series that I would be 1-0 up as soon as we started the series, I would have taken it with both hands.”

The second Test starts on Friday in Perth, with Melbourne and Sydney to follow.

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 ?? Picture: AFP ?? EUPHORIC. Indian captain Virat Kohli celebrates after beating Australia on the final day of the first Test in Adelaide yesterday.
Picture: AFP EUPHORIC. Indian captain Virat Kohli celebrates after beating Australia on the final day of the first Test in Adelaide yesterday.

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