Virat Kohli's ton in vain as New Zealand clinch series with Indore win
Shreyas Iyer and KL Rahul failed to provide support, departing cheaply as India slipped to 71 for four.
PTI
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Virat Kohli hit a record-extending 54th century in the third ODI against New Zealand (PTI)
Indore, 18 Jan
Virat Kohli’s magnificent, combative
century, forged with trademark resolve under mounting pressure, proved
heartbreakingly insufficient as India slumped to their first-ever bilateral ODI
series defeat at home against New Zealand, losing the decider by 41 runs at the
Holkar Stadium here on Sunday.
Kohli’s 124 off 108 balls was a study in
controlled aggression and steely temperament. The chase master shouldered the
responsibility almost single-handedly, counter-punching a disciplined New
Zealand attack with crisp drives, well-judged pulls and calculated risks over
the ropes.
As wickets tumbled regularly at the other
end, Kohli dug in, refusing to let the chase drift away, but once he fell late
in the innings, India’s resistance finally collapsed at 296 in 46 overs while
chasing a stiff 338.
The defeat not only handed New Zealand a
2-1 series win but also marked a historic first -- India had never before lost
a home ODI series to the Kiwis.
It was a sobering evening for the hosts,
made more poignant by the fact that one of their finest modern-day batters had
delivered a near-perfect response to adversity.
Earlier, Daryl Mitchell's second
consecutive hundred and Glenn Phillips' blistering century powered New Zealand
to a competitive 337 for eight despite early jolts from India’s pace attack.
Mitchell (137) and Phillips (106) stitched
together a 219-run partnership for the fourth wicket that turned the innings on
its head.
Calm and authoritative, Mitchell anchored
the stand while Phillips provided the momentum, allowing New Zealand to shift
gears after a cautious start.
India were controlling the innings at one
stage, having reduced the visitors to 58 for three but Mitchell and Phillips
made it a contest.
Left-arm pacer Arshdeep Singh, brought in
for Prasidh Krishna, made an immediate impact by removing Henry Nicholls (0)
with a beauty in the opening over.
Coming closer to the off-stump, Arshdeep
(3/63) shaped the ball away to perfection as Nicholls, caught in two minds,
withdrew his bat late and saw the delivery take the inside edge and crash into
the leg-stump.
Arshdeep and fellow seamer Harshit Rana
(3/84) hit the deck hard and extracted just enough movement to keep the New
Zealand batters under check early on.
The visitors managed only 47 runs in the
first 10 overs, losing both openers cheaply. Harshit dismissed Devon Conway (5)
for the third straight time, inducing an edge with a back-of-a-length delivery
that was safely taken in the slips.
Will Young (30) attempted to break the
shackles with a six over deep backward point off Harshit but the bowler had the
last laugh.
Harshit broke the 53-run stand between
Young and Mitchell when the former cut firmly to the right of Ravindra Jadeja
at backward point, where the Indian all-rounder took a comfortable catch.
Mitchell once again set the tone for New
Zealand’s recovery by taking on Kuldeep Yadav early, launching the left-arm
wrist-spinner for a towering six.
In reply, India’s chase began shakily.
Rohit Sharma fell early for 11, caught by Kristian Clarke off Zak Foulkes, and
Shubman Gill was dismissed for 23 by Kyle Jamieson, leaving India two down
inside seven overs.
Kohli immediately set about rebuilding the
innings with purpose.
Shreyas Iyer and KL Rahul failed to provide
support, departing cheaply as India slipped to 71 for four.
Kohli, however, remained unflustered,
rotating strike efficiently and punishing loose deliveries. His partnership
with Nitish Kumar Reddy (53 off 57 balls) revived India’s hopes, with the duo
adding valuable runs through intelligent placement rather than reckless
hitting.
Even as required rate climbed, Kohli
continued to attack selectively, reaching his century that drew loud applause
from the Indore crowd.
Harshit Rana’s late cameo of 52 off 43
balls briefly reignited hopes, but the asking rate proved too steep. Kohli’s
dismissal at 292 for nine -- caught by Daryl off Kristian Clarke -- sealed
India’s fate.
As New Zealand celebrated a landmark
triumph on Indian soil, Kohli walked off to a standing ovation, his innings a
lone beacon on a night of collective disappointment for the hosts.
For the visitors, it was a moment to savour
-- a historic series win achieved through composure, power and belief. For
India, it's a reminder that even home dominance can crumble despite individual
brilliance.
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