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Mane, Gambhir lead Indian fightback
Santhosh S
January 22, 2001
After being dismissed for 231 and conceding a lead of 168 runs, India
fought back gallantly to finish at 241 for no loss, at the end of the
third day's play in the second `Test' match being played between India
Under-19s and England Under-19s at the MA Chidamabaram Stadium,
Chepauk in Chennai on Monday.
England looked like making a comeback after their loss in the first
`Test', by reducing India to 122/4 at the end of play on Sunday. In
the morning session's play of two and a half hours, England picked up
three more wickets conceding 90 runs.
Chris Tremlett bowled well in the morning and was distinctly unlucky
when Nicky Peng dropped a sitter in the slips of his bowling. The
batsman to benefit was Kashinath Khadkikar. Soon after completing his
fifty, Ishan Ganda survived a confident appeal for caught behind off
the bowling of Ian Pattison. The ball seemed to kiss the batsman's
gloves on its way to the keeper.
The incident really fired up the English boys. Pattison had a few
words to say to the batsman. Ganda was clearly disturbed by all that
was going around him and fell to the bowling of Tremlett, caught
behind by Mark Wallace for 67. Ganda faced 143 balls and struck eight
boundaries in his innings.
The India colts were in a shaky position at 156/5 and were thrown into
deeper trouble when Khadkikar was caught behind off Justin Bishop for
30 at 171. The left arm pacer Bishop, bowling over the wicket, made
the ball angle away from the right handed batsman and took the edge.
Andrew McGarry came back into the attack and bowled with much more
fire and purpose. A well directed bouncer from McGarry had Vidyuth
Sivaramakrishnan hooking and the ball flew high to the fine leg.
Pattison, running around, took a good catch, close to the boundary
line. The poor English fielding continued as Pattison dropped Mulewa
Dharmichand at third slip off the bowling of McGarry.
India resumed after lunch at 212/7 requiring 38 more runs to avoid the
following on. In the second over after the luncheon, Pattison made a
ball to rise awkwardly and all Dharmichand could do was to pat it to
the cover fielder John Sadler.
Captain Ajay Ratra was the next to go at 216, caught by Bishop off the
bowling of Monty Panesar. Ratra made 28 runs before being caught at
deep mid off, going for a big shot. The last pair of SK Trivedi and N
Aggarwal tried their best to reach the magic score of 250. Trivedi was
caught by Wallace of the bowling of Pattison for 12 at the score of
231. Aggarwal remained unbeaten on 5.
Following on, 168 runs behind, India U19s got off to a blazing start
with openers Vinayak Mane and Gautham Gambhir in tremendous striking
form. Both batsmen played lovely hook shots of the medium pacers. Mane
hooked one from McGarry for a six over the square leg and welcomed
Tremlett with two powerful square cuts that fetched him boundaries.
The post tea session clearly belonged to the openers. Mane and Gambhir
launched a punishing counter attack to complete brilliant unbeaten
centuries. Both batsman continued to be in tremendous form, playing
all the shots in the book. The runs were scored at such a fast rate
that India got over the first innings deficit of 168 runs in the 32nd
over.
Gambhir, the left-handed batsman who plays for Delhi in the Ranji
Trophy, has a first class century to his credit. Today he made the
English bowling look quite ordinary. The strokes from his bat flew in
all direction as Ian Bell ran out of ideas. To make things worse, Mane
played an equally explosive innings driving and pulling at will.
England slipped from the commanding position of strength to absolute
defence, due to their miserable fielding display. Wallace and Panesar
missed simple catches off the flashy Gambhir. Mane too had a reprieve
off the bowling of Bishop when McGarry misjudged an overhead catch at
mid off. England has only themselves to blame for such an ordinary
effort in the field.
Ian Bell brought in the bowling changes at regular intervals, but
failed to make the breakthrough. By close of the day's play, he
brought himself into the attack and Mane duly despatched him to the
cover fence to reach his hundred. After three balls of seam, he
shifted to bowling off spin, epitomising the clueless English
performance.
At close of play India Under-19s were 241 for no loss in 47 overs. The
opening batsmen have so far dominated the bowling scoring at more than
five runs an over. Gambhir is unbeaten on 121 off 141 balls with 17
fours and a six. Mane is on 115 off 144 balls with 14 boundaries and
two sixes.
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