Virat Kohli smashed an unbeaten 82 in a 51-ball knock as India
successfully chased down Australia's total of 160-6 with five balls to
spare.
Thousands of bowing heads in the electrifying ambience of the PCA Stadium here told only one story – Virat Kohli's growth in stature as a cricketing superhuman.
Kohli's extraordinary batsmanship, which produced an unbeaten 51-ball
82, carried India to a memorable six-wicket win over Australia on Sunday
night and earned the host a place in the World Twety20 semifinals.
The class of Kohli's knock, which came amidst extremely difficult
circumstances and in a do-or-die match, reminded one of Sachin
Tendulkar's unforgettable assault on Australia in the summer of 1998 in
Sharjah.
India staged a tremendous fightback to restrict Australia to 160 for six
even though the Aussies were off to a flying start thanks to the
pyrotechnics of its combative openers. Kohli contributed half of the
runs to shoulder India to a glorious victory with five balls to spare.
WATSON'S FINAL BOW
For Australia, which is considered a big force in Test and one-day
cricket, its attempt to win the biggest prize in T20 was thwarted again.
The team crashed out of the event and one of its prominent all-rounders
Shane Watson retired from international cricket on a disappointing note.
India's resilience was put through another tough test when Australia
relied on an astounding onslaught from its openers Usman Khawaja and
Aaron Finch to amass 50 runs in less than four overs.
Khawaja was devastation personified. He pulled the first delivery from
Ashish Nehra to the square leg boundary and clubbed Bumrah for four
fours, including three in a row, to silence the packed PCA Stadium.
Finch stunned the Indians by hitting Nehra on the offside and hoisting
Ravichandran Ashwin over long on for two successive sixes. However, M. S. Dhoni and his men showed amazing composure to bounce back.
Old pro Nehra's love for good length rewarded him with Khawaja's wicket
with the southpaw edging an away going delivery to Dhoni.
India utilised the opening to make further inroads. David Warner's
stumping provided some solace to Ashwin but Dhoni was smart enough not
to overuse the wizard and showed faith in his alternatives.
Yuvraj Singh, who was yet to exhibit his bowling skills, struck
immediately removing the solid Steve Smith and Bumrah sprung back to
castle Glenn Maxwell.
Hardik Pandya frustrated the Australians and dismissed Finch and James Faulkner.
INDIA'S JITTERY START
India's chase was not up to the expectation as Rohit Sharma and Shikhar
Dhawan found it difficult to time the ball well on a slow surface. Their
fall within the power play overs retarded the run rate.
Suresh Raina fell cheaply but Kohli along with a struggling Yuvraj,
hobbling due to a leg injury, collected 45 runs off 38 deliveries and
kept the host in the hunt.
Exploring every opportunity, Kohli reached his second half-century of
the tournament before switching gears. With India requiring 39 off 18
balls, a breathtaking Kohli smacked two fours and a six off Faulkner and
four fours off Nathan Coulter-Nile to stun the Aussies.
The champion sank to the ground and brought the stadium to its feet when Dhoni hammered the winning runs.
No comments:
Post a Comment