|
From the publishers of THE HINDU VOL. 25 :: NO. 46 :: Nov. 16 - Nov. 22, 2002 |
![]() |
||||
|
CRICKET/KOLKATA TEST
Windies give tense moments to IndiaVIJAY LOKAPALLYTHE announcement was out of place. One of the commentators claimed it was quite an exciting Test match. The last day of the match was reduced to a formality and then a farce as India plodded on and the spectators were treated to some artificial excitement. For a Test match it lacked the excitement that makes cricket an engaging game at the highest level. At best, it could be described as a keen contest.
V. V. KRISHNAN A team which had been dismissed as mediocre, gave India the jitters. The Indian 'stars' were brought down to earth by Carl Hooper and his men and it took a determined Sachin Tendulkar to save his captain the embarrassment of suffering a defeat at his home ground. Tendulkar's 31st Test hundred and V.V.S. Laxman's fourth were crafted at the right time in the series. Tendulkar was mighty relieved because it was his first century in six Tests at the Eden Gardens. "It was such a joy," he admitted. Laxman only reaffirmed that this was his favourite ground. The 281 against Australia was followed by two quality knocks of 48 and 154 not out on this occasion.
V. V. KRISHNAN For Sourav Ganguly, and of course the Kolkatans, the disappointment was immense. For the skipper, a maiden Test century at the Eden Gardens was again a mirage and the silence at the venue just about summed up the widespread dejection.
V. V. KRISHNAN On day one, the buzz was missing. The maidan was not bustling and daily tickets were available. This was not the Eden Gardens we had known. The demands were low for many reasons. The series had been decided; the West Indians were not a force they once were; and then the security hassles drove the keen spectators away. Only the dedicated made it to the Eden Gardens where you could not carry even your lunch and water. The Indians won the toss and with it a big advantage too. It was better to keep faith in the batsmen to show the way. So it was Sanjay Bangar, and not the stars, who excelled on the opening day with an innings of immense determination. His 77 off 197 balls was splendid by any standards and especially when you consider the fact that it was Test cricket.
V. V. KRISHNAN Some needless criticism for this Railways opener must have shocked the purists since Bangar was flawless. "Too slow, too defensive" moaned the experts in the television box but then how different could Bangar have batted when he had stroke-makers at the other end? And then he had instructions to follow. "Just stay there and keep one end up." That is precisely what Bangar aimed at as he held the Indian innings firm with a disciplined essay. It was not that Bangar had no strokes to offer. He hit 13 boundaries and was simply doing a job given to him. And he did it perfectly until the moment he was out to a good ball.
V. V. KRISHNAN In contrast, the Indian innings lacked the grit that Bangar displayed. Virender Sehwag, Tendulkar and Ganguly were out to poor strokes. Only Rahul Dravid suffered at the hands of the umpire when David Shepperd failed to notice the big inside edge. The nice man that he is, Dravid left the scene without any fuss. It was a rank bad decision. Dravid was to suffer a similar fate in the second innings when Asoka de Silva, not having a good series, ruled him leg-before despite an inside edge. Once again Dravid made no fuss. Two poor decisions in a match would shatter any batsman but Dravid took things in his stride quite sportingly.
V. V. KRISHNAN So, India's innings was pepped up by Laxman and the fast-improving Parthiv Patel while J. Srinath showed his batting potential after a long time. If India could post a decent total, the credit went to Bangar, who did not deserve the needless criticism from some former cricketers, who were often jeered during their playing days for slow batting.
V. V. KRISHNAN The West Indian response was the kind which brought back memories of the days when the team dominated international cricket. An opening wicket partnership of 172 was an act which would have given the series a different course had it come at the start. Wavell Hinds' century marked the partnership where Chris Gayle too thrived through some excellent stroke play. With this kind of start, the stage was ideal for Shivnarine Chanderpaul who compiled his fifth century against India - the earlier ones being one in 1997 and three when India visited the Caribbean last. The ease with which Chanderpaul got his runs reflected on the inconsistent Indian attack where Anil Kumble went for 169 runs, the first time he had conceded more than 150 on Indian soil. Then Harbhajan Singh earned his 11th five-wicket haul but it was not enough to prevent the West Indies from taking a big first innings lead. The men who made the Indian attack look so ordinary were Chanderpaul and Marlon Samuels, who scored his maiden Test century and in the process gave an indication of his talent. Some of the strokes that Samuels played against the spinners must have gladdened Carl Hooper, a good player of spin but a failure in this Test.
V. V. KRISHNAN If there was excitement, it came on the fourth day when West Indies collapsed in the morning and India in the afternoon before the master took over. Bangar, Sehwag, Dravid and Ganguly left cheaply. It was not a healthy score at all but then Tendulkar and Laxman came up with a record partnership for the fifth wicket and saved the day for a team which had promised to make a clean sweep of the series. It was a good Test wicket and that was a bright spot in a series which saw the home team make the most of favourable tracks. Winning a home series with help from the curator was not the best advertisement for Indian cricket. All the talk of having sporting pitches looked so hollow. If there was a gain from the series, it was Sourav Ganguly's performance as captain. He is on course to becoming India's most successful captain. The scores: India 358 (S. Bangar 77, V. Sehwag 35, S. Tendulkar 36, S. Ganguly 29, V.V.S. Laxman 48, P. Patel 47, J. Srinath 46, Dillon 3-82) and 471-8 (S. Tendulkar 176, V.V.S. Laxman 154 n.o., P. Patel 27, Harbhajan 26) drew with West Indies 497 (C. Gayle 88, W. Hinds 100, S. Chanderpaul 140, M. Samuels 104, Harbhajan 5-115, Kumble 3-169).
Contents Daily Sports The Hindu Business Line Frontline Home Copyright © 2002 The Sportstar Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Sportstar. |
||||||