Sports

What A Match!

India prove their run-chase handicap once again despite spirited defiance from Agarkar, Ganguly, Kaif and a great start from the openers.

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What A Match!
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DELHI

It could be said that the main business of one-day cricket is to produce anexciting finish. This was a classic of its kind by that reckoning as thependulum of fortune swung first one way and then the other. The teams, andindividual players, alternated between ecstasy and despondency and back again asEngland kept alive their hopes of squaring the series, winning by a mere tworuns. That bald statistic, however, conceals a wealth of drama.

Put in after a delayed start on a misty Delhi morning, England appeared tohave opted for an entirely different strategy in their innings. The openers didnot throw everything into a heady pursuit – some might say reckless pursuit– of a large total.

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The Indian attack allowed few liberties to be taken and, unlike other startsfrom both sides in the series, Nick Knight and Marcus Trescothick could not takethe rate much above four an over. The total stood at 51 in the 12th over whenTrescothick drove Ajit Agarkar in the air towards mid-off where Sarandeep Singh,making his debut, just clasped the catch as it died on him.

Nasser Hussain announced himself with a majestic cover drive for a boundary.Although he did not appear totally at ease – he was breathing heavilythroughout his innings – he stuck to the task in company with Knight as thepair registered the first century partnership for England in the series.

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Sachin Tendulkar had been brought into the attack to take the pace off theball and, not only did he achieve that objective, he also took the wicket of theEngland captain. A shortish ball out side the off stump saw Hussain playing afavourite dab and Ajay Ratra took a smart catch with Hussain one short of hisfifty.

Andrew Flintoff waited for his second ball before clubbing it to the coverboundary and, unlike other times on the tour, went on to build an innings. And arollicking knock it was. He took 13 off a Tendulkar over to see him out of theattack, and the same off Javagal Srinath when he came back to the bowlingcrease.

Knight had not been his usual cavalier self, even if his steady innings waspriceless for England, and he reached his hundred from 126 balls with sevenfours. He was run out shortly afterwards thanks to a moment's hesitation andslick fielding between Agarkar and Srinath. The partnership with Flintoff hadproduced 80 runs in ten overs as the pace picked up to the required level.

Flintoff reached his fifty from just 36 balls with six fours and a six. Hedid not last for long after that, being caught at long-off, but he had been athis destructive best to lift England to what was considered to be about a parscore in the conditions. The closeness of the finish confirmed that assessment.

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India got off to a flyer. Andrew Caddick had been out of internationalcricket for some time and must have wondered if he should have bothered toreturn as the first ball of the innings crashed into the extra-cover boundaryvia the middle of Virender Sehwag's bat. With another of the same, ten runs camefrom the first wayward over.

Knight put down a difficult chance off Flintoff at slip when Sehwag edged inthe second over, before the batsman picked up another boundary. The first threeovers produced 26 and by the end of the fourth the total stood at 32. And thebatsmen were not even slogging.

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Tendulkar had been the quieter of the two and he was first to go. He fencedat a lifting ball outside the off stump from Caddick for James Foster to takethe catch. Sehwag responded to the fall of his partner by bludgeoning 14 fromthe next over.

At this point, England began to rein the batsmen in. Caddick produced thefirst maiden of the match, and then he and his old mate Darren Gough eachconceded a single run off the next two overs. Sourav Ganguly took 13 balls toget off the mark, which he did with a straight four off Gough.

The Indian captain should have been out when he had 14. Michael Vaughan hadbeen doing a splendid job as a spinner, luring Ganguly down the pitch, beatinghim, only to see Foster fluff the take. Although the wicket-keeper got the ballback onto the stumps, the third umpire reckoned Ganguly had grounded his bat.Confidence in that official, however, had evaporated when he gave Flintoff notout in similar circumstances with his foot clearly not grounded.

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Foster did take a regulation catch to dismiss Dinesh Mongia off Flintoff toreduce India to 100 for 3 in the 22nd over, but he could do nothing but watch asGanguly lifted his side right back into contention. He and Mohammad Kaif broughtup the century partnership in 95 balls.

Kaif was impressive but not chanceless. Foster put down a dab outside the offstump when Kaif got a face of the bat onto the ball. Vaughan failed to get ahand onto a simple chance despite moving well within reach in the covers. Itlooked as if those errors would cost England the game, but there were a few moretwists to come.

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The pair had put on 111 in 19 overs when Ganguly lifted Ashley Giles tolong-off. Giles had retired from the attack with figures of 4-0-32-0, but hereturned now in spectacular fashion with five wickets in six overs.

Kaif followed his captain two balls later after chipping into the covers.Giles accepted a caught and bowled from Hemang Badani. Foster, to his evidentrelief, found that he could still effect a stumping to dismiss Ratra, and thenGiles bowled Anil Kumble. India 239 for 8 in the 47th over. Game over? Not achance!

Agarkar is dangerous with a short boundary. Sarandeep offered staunchsupport. Agarkar was particularly effective, hitting the ball cleanly to theboundary four times in his stay of 24 balls that left him undefeated on 36.

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They gnawed away at the total and England's nerves so that nine were neededoff the last over to be bowled by Gough. Summoning up all the experience of onehundred such matches, Gough delivered a dot followed by four singles. Five runswere needed off the last ball – it was no time to overstep or go wide – butthe courageous Agarkar could manage no more than a couple. England had won bythe narrowest of margins to set up a grand finale in Mumbai on Sunday.

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