Sydney Test heads for exciting finish after Pant's breathtaking fifty
It was largely due to Pant's breathtaking knock that India finished the second day at 141 for 6 for an overall lead of 145
PTI
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Pant entrained the packed SCG with four monstrous sixes and six boundaries. PHOTO: PTI
Sydney, 4 Jan
Staying true to his aggressive
style of play, generational talent Rishabh Pant conjured up a spectacular
33-ball-61 to somehow keep India afloat even as Australia remained in driver's
seat in the fifth Test, which is poised for an intriguing finish.
It was largely due to Pant's
breathtaking knock that India finished the second day at 141 for 6 for an
overall lead of 145. Pant entrained the packed SCG with four monstrous sixes
and six boundaries. His back-to-back sixes off Mitchell Starc into the heritage
Ladies Members Stands were for posterity. Pant's knock prevented Indian second
innings from falling apart with the visitors top and lower order struggling to
negotiate Aussie attack on a track that was aided seam and bounce.
This was after unheralded bowling
duo of Prasidh Krishna (3/42) and Nitish Reddy (2/32) complemented Mohammed
Siraj (3/51) and Jasprit Bumrah (2/33) to shoot Australia out for 181.
On a difficult track, Virat Kohli
(6) and his top-order colleagues found Scott Boland (3/38) too hot to handle. Kohli
lost his wicket on outside the off stump line for the eighth successive time in
this series.
The match is certain to end on the
third day but if India will be able to defend the total will very much depend
on whether skipper Jasprit Bumrah is fit to bowl full tilt. Bumrah underwent
precautionary scans for an unspecified injury after he left the field in the
post-lunch session in which he bowled just one over.
If even a half-fit Bumrah bowls, it
won't be easy for Australia to chase even a 175-run target on a track with
variable bounce and widening cracks.
Pant Power
Having curbed his natural instinct to attack during a sedate 40 in the first essay after being torn to shreds by the most important member of the Indian coaching staff for indiscreet shot selection at the MCG, Pant perhaps cleared his mind about what he needed to do.
He came in at a time when not just
Boland but even debutant Beau Webster was getting the ball to move a proverbial
mile off the deck. There was steep bounce available at the Randwick End (far
end) where Kohli got out. Boland pitched it on hard length and got both seam
and bounce. The result was a now familiar dab towards slips as Kohli's future
beyond 123 Tests looks doubtful. This was after both KL Rahul and Yashasvi
Jaiswal got a couple of rippers.
However once Pant came out, he was
a man-on-a-mission as the first ball disappeared into the long-on stand. The
fallen pull shot also came out of the closet. It was exhilarating stuff.
Pant rode on bounce and hit Webster
over point but the two sixes off Starc do take the cake. It was understood that
Pant was mentally not in frame due to unsolicited sermons from a coaching staff
member, who despite knowing the dashing southpaw's game told him to play
otherwise.
At one point, a clueless Pat
Cummins was forced to put six fielders near the boundary ropes. The skipper
himself who saw the back of Pant, inducing edge from a ball that rose. Indian
and Australian fans gave a standing ovation to the diminutive southpaw.
Third pacer steps up
In the post lunch session, Prasidh and Reddy more than made up for skipper Bumrah’s absence as India took 51 overs to bowl out the hosts.
Steve Smith’s (33) dismissal off
Prasidh just before lunch disturbed Australia’s rhythm. Post lunch, Prasidh
came from round the wicket from the Paddington End and removed Alex Carey (21)
with an angled-in delivery. Carey was looking good but once Karnataka speedster
found his length, he was literally unplayable.
Debutant Webster (57) justified his
selection with a half-century but it was Reddy, coming for his second spell,
sparked a collapse with wickets of Cummins and Mitchell Starc, both done in by
subtle movement off the surface.
The final blow was dealt by
Prasidh. He used the uneven bounce and cracks off the surface to get one bounce
awkwardly at Webster and Jaiswal snaffled the catch.
Siraj was menacing during his first
spell, grabbing two wickets with perfectly pitched outswingers before Prasidh
sent back in-form Smith after he was involved in a nice little 57-run stand for
the fifth wicket with Webster.
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