Connect with us

Sports

Jadeja, Siraj wrap up India’s innings win inside three days

Published

on

Mohammed Siraj and Ravindra Jadeja get together

Ravindra Jadeja has been building a case to be one of the best allrounders in the game. A four-for to follow a hundred against West Indies to start the new home season was just the latest evidence he offered in favour of that argument. On the back of his 104 not out and 4 for 54, India completed an innings win with two-and-a-half days to spare.

A proud record stood tall between February 22, 2013 and October 25, 2024. It buckled 24 hours later. India lost a Test series on home soil for the first time in nearly 12 years. Many of the players who had contributed to that run are now retired, including Virat Kohli, R Ashwin and Cheteshwar Pujara. But Jadeja remains.

He was there when India began that run against Australia in Chennai. He was there when New Zealand broke them last year in Pune. And he was there once again, lifting them back up against West Indies now. At 36 years old, it is unclear how much cricket is left in him but it was poetic that in the first of 66 Tests that India had to play at home without R Ashwin, his old pal came up with a hundred and a four-for.

Alick Athanaze arried the West Indies flag, showing why he is rated as a good player of spin. He picked up length well. He was decisive going forward or back. And he remembered to put pressure back, two rock-solid reverse sweeps for four and one sumptuous cover drive for three highlighted his process. All of those scoring shots were against half-volleys that were well wide of the stumps. This is the judgment and the competence that convinced the coach Daren Sammy and the management to bring him back into the Test side.

India, though, kept placing new threats in front of Athanaze. Jasprit Bumrah hit him on the helmet. Washington Sundar tested him with the ball turning away. They were waiting for Athanaze to be just slightly off with his process and eventually, after 73 balls, he was, closing the face of the bat, baited by an offbreak that pitched on middle. Washington took a simple catch, which then led to a symbolic representation of West Indies’ batting in this Test.

Jomel Warrican tried to impose himself on Mohammed Siraj  swinging as hard as he could, only for his bat to fly out of his grip and land at square leg. The ball meanwhile settled in mid-off’s hands.

West Indies are a side still building its best batters. Ahead of this tour, they were shorn of two of their best bowlers. This informed the challenge they could pose. They are struggling to find a better opener than John Campbell, 32, who is the third-most experienced player in this XI. He has 23 caps and in all that time, he has no centuries. Even in first-class cricket, after 101 matches, he has only nine centuries. In Ahmedabad, he fell for 8 and 14. The only slightly younger Tagenarine Chanderpaul finished with 0 and 8. Top-order returns like that just won’t do.

Jadeja is sometimes accused of being that left-arm spinner who just fires the ball in and lets the pitch do its work. But he knows how to work batters out too. He saw Brandon King lunging forward to try and smother the turn and that helped him once. He hit a crisp cover drive for four. It also led to his downfall as Jadeja recalibrated his flight. It was still full so it triggered King’s instinct to get on the front foot. But he had no way of getting to the pitch of this one. Having committed to the shot, he ended up vulnerable to the turn and presented a straightforward catch to slip. All this happened in the space of two overs. In that small period of time, Jadeja turned what the batter thought was a strength into a weakness.

Siraj was the other bowler among the wickets, taking five or more over the course of a home Test for the first time.

West Indies lost 10 wickets in two sessions on the first day. They did it again on the third day. Only two players got into the 30s. Only two faced 50 or more balls. They have five days to address these problems before the start of the second game in Delhi. The wait to win a Test match against India in India, which is into its 31st year, continues.

Brief scores:
India 448 for 5 in 128 overs (Yashaswi Jaiswal 36, Dhruv Jurel 125, KL Rahul 100, Shubman Gill 50, Ravindra Jadeja 104*; Roston Chase 2-90) beatWest Indies 162 in 44.1 overs (Roston Chase 24, Shai Hope 26, Justin Greaves 32;  Mohammed Siraj 4-40, Jasprit Bumrah 3-42, Kuldeep Yadav 2-25) and146 in 45.1 overs (Alick Athanaze 38, Justin Greaves 25, Jayden Seales 22; Ravindra Jadeja 4-54, Mohammed Siraj 3-31, Kuldeep Yadav 2-23) by an innings and 140 runs

[Cricinfo]



Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

Sciver-Brunt’s maiden WPL ton lifts Mumbai Indians to second despite Ghosh heroics

Published

on

By

Nat Sciver-Brunt scored the first century in the Women's Premier League [BCCI]

The most prolific batter of the WPL and the ever-so reliable Nat Sciver Brunt has finally broken the century drought in the tournament, 1059 days and 82 matches since the league started in 2023. Even though the conditions continued to be slow in Vadodara, Sciver-Brunt switched gears after the powerplay with a 32-ball half-century to pick the gaps and middle the ball in unparalleled fashion.

She powered Mumbai Indians (MI) to 199, the highest total on this ground this season, and the scoreboard pressure told on the Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) batters who collapsed to 35 for 5. They were given a late lift by Richa Ghosh’s bludgeoning 90 off just 50 balls that tried to rescue a sinking ship but the asking rate and lack of partners kept the task too stiff and they went down by only 15 runs in the end after her stunning assault.

Sciver-Brunt’s maiden T20 century could have hardly come at a better time for MI; they were fourth on the table after losing their last three games and needed to win this game to keep their knockouts fate in their own hands. They did it by taking down the table-toppers to go second and RCB have now lost two in a row after kicking off the season with five wins on the bounce that had taken them to the knockouts.

MI’s powerplay woes continued as S Sajana fell early to Lauren Bell’s swing for 7, and they trudged along against the moving ball to reach 38 for 1 in the powerplay, with just four fours and no sixes.

The experienced duo of Sciver-Brunt and Hayley Matthews then lifted MI with a rapid partnership that raced from 50 to 100 in just 21 balls. Sciver-Brunt was the first to cut loose when she made room against Nadine de Klerk to smash her down the ground. As the pitch again lacked pace, Sciver-Brunt and Matthews rocked onto the back foot to collect boundaries. Sciver-Brunt slapped two through the covers off Shreyanka Patil in the eighth over, Matthews went behind square off Arundhati Reddy for two more fours in the next, and the fifty stand was up.

Soon after she topped the run charts for this WPL, Sciver-Brunt increased RCB’s headaches by piercing the gaps all around the park. After smacking de Klerk for a six, she punished Shreyanka for three consecutive fours – the first two off sweeps that brought up her 32-ball fifty, her fourth of the season. Matthews ended the 18-run over with another boundary before Sciver-Brunt carved Radha Yadav for three fours in the next, bringing up their century stand off just 61 balls.

Matthews soon got to her 35-ball fifty – her first of this WPL – and the dominating partnership ended only when Bell returned and rattled Matthews’ stumps after the ball ricocheted off both pads. Harmanpreet Kaur lasted 12 balls for 20 runs before holing out to long-off, and Sciver-Brunt ended the 19th over by carving a wide yorker for four to move to 99, the highest individual score in the WPL until Monday.

She went past the barrier after holding the record for the most runs (8,883) and fifties (57) without a hundred in women’s T20s, across 348 innings. Shreyanka bowled a tidy last over for just five runs, keeping MI just short of 200.

After she missed the first few games with a shoulder niggle and then struggled for rhythm with both bat and ball, Matthews turned the tide against the best side of this WPL. Her offspin match-up worked instantly against Smriti Mandhana, who top-edged to backward square leg for 6, not long after Grace Harris had edged Shabnim Ismail behind. No. 3 Georgia Voll also handed a catch to the wicketkeeper when Matthews erred with her line down leg and Rahila Firdous took a sharp catch off the bottom edge.

Two balls later, Ismail hit the stumps off an almost-frozen Gautami Naik to reduce RCB to 31 for 4, which soon became 35 for 5 in the last over of the powerplay when Radha Yadav found long-on off Matthews.

Ghosh was the only bright spot for RCB, who had been bundled out for their lowest WPL score in their previous match. She made the most of getting two lives: the first was a tough chance for the keeper off a spinner, while the second was a sitter for Matthews, who put down a skier running in from long-off and covered her mouth in disbelief.

Ghosh also lost de Klerk in the 12th over but started to hit out even as RCB needed 120 from 48 with six wickets down. She dispatched anything with width or length and went after anyone who came her way. The big charge came in the 16th over when she clobbered three consecutive fours off Amelia Kerr. Amanjot Kaur fought back with a wicket in a six-run over next, but she was at the receiving end of a stunning assault in the 19th.

RCB needed 59 from 12, and Ghosh went 6, 6 and 6, starting by putting away a full toss before relying on brute force. When she managed only a single on the fourth ball, Shreyanka carved two fours to keep RCB in the game, with 32 needed from six.

Ghosh started the final over with a four, but Kerr bowled a dot next that virtually sealed MI’s victory unless there was an illegal delivery. Ghosh, however, executed an unbelievable six off the next ball when Kerr looped it well outside off; Ghosh came down the track, reached out, and sent it sailing over the covers before ending up flat on the ground. She miscued the last ball of the game and was finally caught, as MI breathed a sigh of relief.

Brief scores:
Mumbai Indians Women 199 for 4 in 20 overs (Nat Sciver-Brunt 100*, Hayley Matthews 56, Harmanpreet Kaur 20; Lauren Bell 2-21, Nadine de Klerk 1-40, Shreyanka Patil 1-34) beat Royal Challengers Bengaluru Women  184 for 9 in 20 overs (Grace Harris 15, Richa Ghosh 90, Nadine de Klerk 2, Arundhati Reddy 14, Shreyanka Patil 12*; Shabnim Ismail 2-25, Hayley Matthews 3-10, Amanjot Kaur 1-51, Amelia Kerr 2-37) by 15 runs

[Cricinfo]

Continue Reading

Latest News

U19 World Cup: Adnit ton powers USA to seven wicket win

Published

on

By

Adnit Jhamb hit an unbeaten 116 off just 93 balls [Cricinfo]
Adnit Jhamb produced an excellent, unbeaten century as USA romped to a comprehensive seven-wicket victory over Scotland in the 16th place playoff at the Harare Sports Club. Chasing 237, Jhamb’s masterful 116 off 93 balls, studded with 17 boundaries and a six, steered his side home with 68 balls to spare.

Earlier, Scotland posted 236 after electing to bat, with opener Theo Robinson top-scoring with a patient 83 off 101 deliveries. Robinson found support from Manu Saraswat (41) as the pair added crucial runs in the middle overs. However, USA’s bowling attack, led by Ritvik Appidi’s four-wicket haul, kept chipping away at regular intervals. Jake Woodhouse’s late cameo of 28 off 21 balls provided some late impetus, but Scotland were eventually bundled out in the final over.

The chase began steadily with openers Amrinder Gill (35) and Sahil Garg (16) putting on 39. Jhamb entered at 96 for 2, who built on the foundations and steered USA on the path of victory. He found an able ally in captain Utkarsh Srivastava (52 off 52), and the duo stitched together a match-winning 129-run partnership for the third wicket. Scotland’s bowlers had no answers as Jhamb continued his onslaught, with Ollie Jones’ twin strikes proving mere consolations.

Brief scores:
Scotland Under 19s 
236 in 50 overs (Theo Robinson 83, Manu Saraswat 41; Ritvik Appidi 4-54) lost to USA Under 19s 239/3 in 38.4 overs (Adnit Jhamb 116*, Utkarsh Srivastava 52; Ollie Jones 2-46) by seven wickets

[Cricbuzz]

Continue Reading

Latest News

U19 World Cup: Sri Lanka keep semifinal aspirations alive with four wicket win

Published

on

By

Dimantha Mahavithana gave Sri Lanka a steady start in their chase [Cricbuzz]
Sri Lanka kept their semifinal aspirations alive with a nervy four-wicket victory over Afghanistan in a low-scoring Super Sixes contest at the Namibia Cricket Ground in Windhoek. Chasing a modest 194, the Islanders wobbled at regular intervals before Chamika Heenatigala’s composed unbeaten 22 guided them across the line with 19 balls remaining.

Afghanistan, electing to bat first, laboured to 193 all out in 49.5 overs on a challenging surface. Opener Osman Sadat anchored the innings with a gritty 61 off 107 balls, but lacked support as wickets tumbled at the other end. Azizullah Miakhil’s 43 and a blistering cameo from Roohullah Arab (22 off 13) provided some late momentum. Sri Lanka’s bowling was disciplined throughout, with Kugathas Mathulan, and Viran Chamuditha claiming two wickets apiece to restrict Afghanistan’s total.

The chase began disastrously as Chamuditha fell for one in the first over, but Dimantha Mahavithana (37) and Senuja Wekunagoda (43) steadied the ship with a 55-run partnership. However, Afghanistan’s spinners struck back, with Roohullah Arab’s economical spell (2 for 23) keeping the pressure on. When Wekunagoda departed at 130/5, Sri Lanka still needed 64 runs with five wickets in hand.

Enter Heenatigala and Dulnith Sigera, who added a crucial 52-run stand to swing the momentum decisively. Sigera’s 30 off 45 balls eased the pressure before he holed out with 12 runs still required. Heenatigala, the Player of the Match who earlier claimed 1 for 19 with the ball, remained unbeaten to seal a vital victory.

Brief scores:
Afghanistan Under 19s  193 in 49.5 overs (Osman Sadat 61; Viran Chamuditha 2-20, Kugathas Mathulan 2-62) lost to Sri Lanka Under 19s 194/6 in 46.5 overs (Senuja Wekunagoda 43, Dimantha Mahavithana 37; Roohullah Arab 2-23) by four wickets

Continue Reading

Trending