Rohit, Virat fail again as India lose 4th Test in Melbourne by 184 runs
Chasing a near improbable target of 340, both Rohit and Kohli failed to battle their technical frailties as India lost 7 wickets for 34 runs in 20.4 overs to be all out for 155 in 79.1 overs.
PTI
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Australian captain Pat Cummins (3/28 in 18 overs) was superb as usual and Scott Boland was also magnificent (3/39 in 16 overs) in his every spell. PHOTO: PTI
Melbourne, 30 Dec
India slumped to a demoralising
184-run loss to Australia in the fourth Test here on Monday with contemporary
greats Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli failing to come good yet again, signalling
that their walk towards the exit door is not too far.
Chasing a near improbable target of
340, both Rohit (9 off 40 balls) and Kohli (5) failed to battle their technical
frailties and mental cobwebs as India lost seven wickets for 34 runs in just
20.4 overs in the final session to be all out for 155 in 79.1 overs.
Australian captain Pat Cummins
(3/28 in 18 overs) was superb as usual and Scott Boland was also magnificent
(3/39 in 16 overs) in his every spell. Nathan Lyon (2/37 in 20.1 overs) took
advantage of variable bounce while Mitchell Starc (1/25 in 16 overs) got the
prized scalp of Kohli.
This was after an 88-run
fourth-wicket stand between Yashasvi Jasiwal and Rishabh Pant. "Pretty
disappointing. We wanted to fight but we could not do it," a dejected
Rohit said in the post-match presentation. We tried everything but they fought
hard. We did not grab our chances," he conceded.
Australia now lead the series 2-1
and unless India draw level in Sydney, a third successive World Test
Championship final could become a distant dream. Even to retain the
Border-Gavaskar Trophy, India would need to post a win.
Save Jaiswal (84, 208 balls), whose
controversial caught-behind in which the third umpire overruled technology to
adjudge him out, none of the other batters performed well enough to save the
team. "They batted well in the middle session. We knew that we had to get
one breakthrough and anything can happen and that proved to be the case.
"We had plenty of runs to play
with, we had plenty of fielders with the helmet around," a beaming
Cummins, who was also adjudged player of the match for his haul of six wickets,
said in the presentation ceremony.
The art of saving Test matches has
slowly become extinct but India would have depended on their two senior-most
players, who are also fighting to save their legacy and reputation built over
nearly two decades.
In case of Rishabh Pant, it was one
bad shot too many after a full session in which he concentrated. He got a rank
long hop from Travis Head but after a 103-ball vigil, it all came to a naught.
Even Jaiswal's guts and grit
couldn't prevent a once highly-rated, but currently a trifle over-rated, Indian
batting line-up from implosion with over-the-hill seniors and young superstars
unable to handle the pressure.
The defeat could have severe
repercussions as there seems to be no light at the end of the tunnel for
skipper Rohit.
As for Kohli, despite all his
white-ball exploits, the problems outside the off-stump will stick out like a
sore thumb. For Rohit, his ultra-defensive approach in the opening slot, is
causing India to stare down the barrel with alarming regularity. Rohit did all
the hard work during the first hour before opposition skipper Cummins got his
bunny for the 10th time in Test matches.
Kohli could never control his urge
of playing the cover drive again and was caught at first slip after Mitchell
Starc pushed one across with the angle.
Rahul was out without troubling the
scorers after getting a second good ball in the game. Rohit's decision to bat
up the order backfired and it also tinkered with Rahul's mindset despite him
being perfectly fine opening the innings.
The captaincy was pedestrian as he
let the game drift on occasions and there were lot of phases that led to
India's defeat but none more telling than the final wicket partnership between
Scott Boland and Nathan Lyon where the target went out of reach on Sunday.
Save Jasprit Bumrah, who once again
toiled manfully for 50 overs and took nine wickets, and find-of-the-series
Nitish Reddy, who scored a gritty hundred, there are no positives to be taken
from this defeat.
The batting, save for the second
innings in the opening Perth Test, has been absolutely below par and India
won't be doing themselves any favours if they have walking wickets at the top
of the order. The team is going through a tough transition and it is now time
that their feisty head coach Gautam Gambhir shows some spark along with
chairman of selectors Ajit Agarkar.
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