Skipper Steven Smith once again turned out to be a
nemesis with a superb century on dodgy track helping Australia set a massive
target of 441 for India at lunch on the third day of the first cricket Test.
Australia were all-out for 285 in their second innings as their overall lead
swelled to a gigantic 440 runs courtesy Smith's 18th Test hundred.
The Australian skipper scored 109 off 202 balls with 11 boundaries, an innings
that will certainly be considered as one of the best by an overseas batsman on
a devilish Indian track which had sharp turn and bounce. It was his fifth
consecutive century against India in as many Tests.
If India manage to achieve the uphill target, it will be highest by any team in
the history of Test cricket. India's highest ever run-chase was 387 against
England in Chennai back in 2008 when Virender Sehwag played a blinder on the
fourth evening to set up the victory.
Australia today added 142 runs in the extended opening session in 41 overs
after commencing at the overnight score of 143 for 4 with Smith (59) and
Mitchell Marsh (21) at the crease. Smith curbed his natural attacking instincts
to slowly and steadily using his feet to good effect.
However, by the time of the visiting team's skipper departure at 246 the
Australian lead had gone well past the 400 mark – a huge one by any reckoning
that looks impregnable on this treacherous pitch.
Mitchell Starc, who made a whirlwind 61 in the first innings, later treated the
bowlers harshly by striking 3 sixes and 2 fours in a quick-fire 30 off 31 balls
before he was caught in the deep off Ravichandran Ashwin to give the off
spinner his first wicket of the day and fourth overall.
Jadeja sent back Marsh for 31 and Stephen O'Keefe for 6 to terminate the
innings and end up with innings figures of 3 for 65 while Ashwin's analysis
read 4 for 119. Umesh Yadav, the only other successful bowler, finished with 2
for 39 to add to his 4 for 32 in the first innings.
Shoulders of the Indian team members started to droop as the 27-year-old Smith
used the fielders' largesse and a few umpiring errors to inch his way to his
hundred. He looked unflappable even after being reprieved on quite a few
occasions before reaching the 18th hundred of his career, and fifth against
India, by striking a four and then taking a couple of runs off Ravindra Jadeja
in the left-arm tweaker's second spell of the day.
Smith's superb effort has effectively shut the door on the Indians in their
pursuit of taking a 1-0 lead in the four-game rubber. The butter-fingered
Indian fielders, who dropped Smith on 27 and 37 yesterday, continued to grass
him as Ajinkya Rahane failed to latch on to a sharp chance at leg slip when he
had added 7
runs to his overnight total. Off-spinner Ashwin, who was the bowler
to induce mistakes from Smith's blade on both occasions yesterday, was the
bowler to suffer again today and the ball also ran away to the boundary.
On 73, Smith again got a lucky break when umpire Richard Kettleborough of
England ruled him not out when he was trapped right in front of the stumps by
Ravindra Jadeja, to the chagrin of the hosts who had frittered away both their
reviews at this stage. This was soon after Jadeja had struck the first blow of
the morning when he removed the other overnight not out batsman Mitchell Marsh
who edged him to Wridhiman Saha behind the stumps after making 31 in 76 balls.
In fact Marsh was the more aggressive of the two overnight batsmen as he struck
Ashwin for three fours when the off spinner erred in line. His partnership with
Smith, that began last evening at the fall of Matt Renshaw at 113, was slow
going and increased the overall lead by 56 runs, a vital sum in the context of
the game.
A double change was introduced by captain Virat Kohli in bowling with Ashwin,
after a wicket less spell of 6 overs for 23 runs, giving way to Jayant Yadav
and Umesh Yadav, who was the pick of the bowlers with a four-wicket haul in the
first essay, replacing Jadeja after the bowler’s tight and successful spell of
7-2-12-1. Yadav broke the sixth wicket stand between Smith, crawling closer to
his first century in India and fifth against the same opposition, and wicket
keeper Matthew Wade through a catch at the wicket dismissal.
The left handed batsman had, in the same over, been given not out by umpire
Kettleborough who did not uphold a very confident appeal from the increasingly
frustrated and animated home team. But on the second occasion the batsman
walked. Wade's dismissal left the visitors on 204 for 6 for an overall lead of
359, already a formidable sum in Indian conditions and made more so by the
state of the track at the Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium on which 24
wickets had fallen on the first two days.
Smith reached his maiden ton in India in 187 balls to raise his hands in the
air in celebration, but was removed by Jadeja when he missed a pull shot and
was rapped on the pads. Umpire Nigel Llong raised his finger, Smith reviewed
the decision through TV replays which confirmed that the umpire was right in
declaring him out. Starc used the long handle again to strike big blows before
he was taken out by Ashwin through a catch in the deep, with 15 minutes left
for the closure of the session.
Umesh Yadav later trapped Nathan Lyon leg before as the session was extended
before Jadeja had O'Keefe caught behind and the innings ended signaling lunch.
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