Gutsy Reddy's maiden ton keeps India afloat
Reddy's unbeaten 105 took India to 358 for nine, still 116 runs short of Australia's first innings score of 474 as rain brought an early end to the third day's play
PTI
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Reddy, easily India's 'find of the series', played a pivotal role in visitors' fightback. PHOTO: PTI
Melbourne, 28 Dec
Nitish Reddy, an unknown entity in
red ball cricket before the start of Border-Gavaskar series, virtually bailed
India out with his dogged maiden Test century here on Saturday, severely
denting Australia's hopes of winning the Boxing Day contest.
Reddy's unbeaten 105 took India to
358 for nine, still 116 runs short of Australia's first innings score of 474 as
rain brought an early end to the third day's play.
With the flat MCG deck not offering
much to the bowlers, saving the Test match shouldn't be a big deal for India.
Reddy, easily India's 'find of the series', played a pivotal role in visitors'
fightback. Reddy's combative spirit and the invaluable 127-run stand he shared
with Washington Sundar (50 off 162 balls) proved to be the turning point for
the hosts.
Reddy's innings was termed as one
of greatest Test knocks by the legendary Sunil Gavaskar given the situation as
India were in a precarious position after Rishab Pant's dismissal courtesy a
rash shot had left India tottering at 191 for six.
The young Andhra batter could have
been stranded on 99 when Jasprit Bumrah got dismissed, leaving Reddy with
last-man in Mohammed Siraj, who walked in to another round of boos and faced
three deliveries from home skipper Pat Cummins. Both Reddy and his father
Muthyala's expressions changed with each ball but Siraj survived to allow Reddy
savour the moment he must have dreamt a thousand times.
A picture-perfect straight drive
off Scott Boland was the moment of the series for India as Reddy balanced his
helmet with the bat and took a knee, expressing his gratitude towards the
Indian dug-out which gave him a standing ovation. The 21-year-had struck the
'Pushpa' pose after completing his fifty and aced the dramatic 'Bahubali' pose
to celebrate the century.
A decade back, when his father
Muthyala left a secured job to open a micro-finance (lending) business and
incurred losses, the Reddy family was advised not to give wings to young
Reddy's cricketing dreams but they were unrelenting. Sitting in the stands near
the boundary, Reddy's father broke down when his son achieved the milestone.
As Indian fans clicked selfies with
him it must have reminded of the day when his son received the best U-16
cricketer award from the BCCI in 2017, and an impressionable Reddy was seen
clicking selfie with his idol Virat Kohli and his wife Anushka Sharma while
leaving the hotel premises.
Reddy's batting was based on stable
core, playing the ball late and only going for the drive when the ball was
pitched up. He wasn’t defending unnecessarily and 10 fours and a six was a
testimony to that.
If the morning was more about Rishabh
Pant's inexplicable shot selection, the afternoon session belonged to Reddy,
whose attacking game put the pressure right back on Australia. There were
plenty of boundaries and a six off Nathan Lyon but none more gorgeous than the
off-drive off Cummins. Reddy has been by far India's most consistent batter in
the series and the maiden Test century couldn't have come at a more opportune
time and that too at an iconic venue.
Washington, at the other end, grew
in confidence and trusted his defence apart from punishing the loose
deliveries. It did help that the drop-in surface at the MCG has got better for
batting as the match progressed.
The second new ball did very little
for Australian bowlers and the Indian duo ran very well between the wickets.
With Mitchell Starc's back acting up a little, the two batters looked to reduce
the deficit further. In the morning it was all about Pant's shot selection that
hurt India.
The third day's MCG track is
perhaps the best to bat on with green grass making way for a brownish tinge and
an old Kookaburra hardly doing anything.
Had Pant stuck around, there was no
way he wouldn't have scored big. Pant did start well and got a few boundaries
but then the urge to play the falling lap pull over long-leg brought about his
dismissal. When he tried it for the first time off Scott Boland, who came round
the wicket, Pant was hit in the naval area and seemed to be in pain.
He got up but didn't realise that
Cummins had placed one fielder at deep fine-leg and one at deep third man for
both the conventional and reverse lap shot.
Without learning his lessons or
caring about success percentage, Pant tried a similar shot but the extra bounce
meant that the top edge flew to third man for a regulation catch. "If
there was a word called 'worstest', then this was one such shot," former
India skipper Sunil Gavaskar said on air.
But Reddy showed steely resolve as
he started with a punchy off-drive off Lyon and also jumped down the track to
loft him over for a straight six during a splendid recovery act.
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