Gulf News

India scent win as Aussie batting flops

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ll-rounder Ravindra Jadeja starred with both bat and ball on the third day of the fourth Test yesterday to put India on course for a series-clinching victory against Australia in Dharamsala.

The left-hander top-scored with 63 to help India surpass Australia’s first-innings total of 300 and then snared three wickets with his spin bowling as the visitors crumbled.

India’s pacemen did the early damage, with Umesh Yadav picking up two wickets and Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar dismissing the in-form Australian skipper Steve Smith for 17 to leave the Aussies reeling on 31-3 inside 10 overs.

A short ball from Kumar hit the bottom edge of Smith’s bat before crashing onto the stumps in spectacula­r fashion.

Smith ended the four-Test series with 499 runs including three centuries, only the sixth visiting batsman to have scored so many hundreds in a series in India.

The spinners then got down to business on a lively track that offered plenty of bounce, with Ravichandr­an Ashwin also grabbing three wickets to help his side skittle out Australia for just 137 in the final session.

At stumps the top-ranked home side were 19-0, needing 87 more to win the match and clinch the Border-Gavaskar trophy with a 2-1 series scoreline.

With two days of play remaining and all their wickets intact, India appear all set to seal a memorable win, capping weeks of controvers­ies and verbal volleys between the top sides.

Day three also had its share of drama when Murali Vijay claimed a catch off Josh Hazlewood at the fag end of the Australian innings. Replays however showed the ball had spilt onto the grass.

Camera drama

TV cameras then showed Smith fuming in the dressing room and appearing to mumble angrily at Vijay’s attempt to claim the catch.

Australian batting coach Graeme Hick sought to play down the incident after the day’s play.

“We were watching it on our own little pads and the ball definitely touched the ground,” Hick said.

“Having fielded in slips myself, sometimes you’re not 100 per cent sure. He would have felt that go into his fingers and felt it was a clean catch.

“At times this series has been heated but this game has been played in very good spirit.”

India got their first breakthrou­gh when Yadav had David Warner caught behind cheaply for six, just after the opener had been dropped in the slips by Karun Nair.

Nair had also dropped the same batsman in the first innings.

Warner ended the four-Test series with an average of 24.12

 ?? PTI ?? India’s Umesh Yadav celebrates the wicket of Australia’s Nathan Lyon during the third day of the fourth Test at HPCA Stadium in Dharamsala yesterday.
PTI India’s Umesh Yadav celebrates the wicket of Australia’s Nathan Lyon during the third day of the fourth Test at HPCA Stadium in Dharamsala yesterday.
 ?? AP ?? India’s Ravindra Jadeja celebrates his half century during the third day of the fourth Test against Australia in Dharamsala.
AP India’s Ravindra Jadeja celebrates his half century during the third day of the fourth Test against Australia in Dharamsala.
 ?? Reuters ?? Australia’s Glenn Maxwell toiled hard to score a gritty 45 as the visitors could muster only 137 in their second innings.
Reuters Australia’s Glenn Maxwell toiled hard to score a gritty 45 as the visitors could muster only 137 in their second innings.

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