New day, same story: 'King' Kohli fails again; India collapse to 185
Virat Kohli (17 off 69 balls), whose form and technical weaknesses are also under the scanner, was for the seventh time dismissed in the corridor of uncertainty in the tour
PTI
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In the morning KL Rahul and Yashasvi Jaiswal came in to open the innings but didn't last long and the saga of first innings failures continued. PHOTO: PTI
Sydney, 3 Jan
Rohit Sharma "opted to
rest" in the team's interest but the same old script unfolded on a new day
for Indian batters as they surrendered meekly for a paltry 185 in the face of
some hostile seam bowling from Australia on the opening day of the fifth and
final Test here.
Virat Kohli (17 off 69 balls),
whose form and technical weaknesses are also under the scanner, was for the
seventh time dismissed in the corridor of uncertainty in the tour, a problem
that seems incurable at the moment.
At stumps, Australia were 9 for 1
with stand-in skipper Jasprit Bumrah sending the woefully out-of-form Usman
Khawaja (2) back in the hut. Teenage sensation Sam Konstas was unbeaten at 7
after hitting Bumrah for a first-ball four. The 19-year-old also had an
animated exchange with the Indian star.
Bumrah opted to bat under overcast
conditions and the ultra-defensive approach by Indian batters only compounded
their problems with Scott Boland's (20-8-31-4) immaculate length and tremendous
discipline leaving them in a disarray. Mitchell Starc (18-5-49-3) and Pat
Cummins (15.2-4-37-2) were equally relentless giving the Indians no room for
release shots.
Rishabh Pant top-scored for the
visitors with a 98-ball 40, going against his grain to battle it out, taking
painful blows to his body in the process.
If Rohit's decision to
"rest" was a forward thinking move, the persistence with Kohli is
proving to be detrimental and the celebrated batter might just have one more
Test innings left to save his place in the traditional format. "I wouldn't
say it's a par score but still a competitive score," said Pant, admitting
that the pitch is not easy to bat on.
If one takes away the second
innings hundred at Perth out of his last 20 Test innings, Kohli has managed an
average of 17.57. He could have been out off Boland's first delivery but tried
to battle hard. However, it has always been that one moment in which his hands
and the willow magnetically follow a delivery in the corridor of uncertainty.
Pant curbs natural instincts for a session
Having copped criticism from all
quarters for his bizarre shot selection in Melbourne, Pant, for a change,
copped body blows, trying to curb his natural game. The big-hitter in him came
out only on a couple of occasions with one of them fetching him a straight six
off Beau Webster.
Pant put his head down and endured
nasty blows on his bicep, helmet and twice in the sensitive abdominal area. He
and the dogged Ravindra Jadeja (26 off 95 balls) defended dourly as they added
48 off 151 deliveries for the fifth wicket.
Only 50 runs were scored in the
second session and trying not to be adventurous proved counter-productive with
most batters retreating in a shell letting Boland and company dictate the terms
of play. Finally, Pant's patience ran out and one pull shot too many became his
undoing.
India realised they haven't scored
enough runs and lost a lot of wickets. The defensive tactic in the second
session when the ball got old ended up costing them dearly.
There wasn't much swing on offer
despite cloudy conditions but a decent grass cover ensured that Boland's
back-of-length deliveries proved enough. As far as Pant was concerned, the
"honest conversations" with head coach Gautam Gambhir seemed to have
worked with the southpaw respecting the game situation for most part.
If Pant was disciplined, Shubman
Gill's judgement on the last delivery before lunch did cause trouble for India.
Gill (20 off 64 balls) did all the hard work for close to couple of hours before
stepping out to Nathan Lyon on the last ball of the session only to be caught
at first slip.
In the morning KL Rahul and Yashasvi Jaiswal came in to open the innings but didn't last long and the saga of first innings failures continued.
Also Read | Rohit, Virat fail again as India lose 4th Test in Melbourne by 184 runs
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