Tendulkar Finds Touch in Waugh’s Final Bash

Author: 
Agence France Presse
Publication Date: 
Sat, 2004-01-03 03:00

SYDNEY, 3 January 2003 — Sachin Tendulkar finally came good with a half-century as India attempted to take the steam out of Steve Waugh’s farewell fourth Test bash at the Sydney Cricket Ground here yesterday.

The ‘Little Master’ has threatened to produce a long-awaited innings of substance and 44,901 Sydneysiders here to celebrate home-town hero Waugh’s 168th and last Test match were treated to Tendulkar’s overdue return to form.

Following on from another explosive innings of 72 by freewheeling opener Virender Sehwag, Tendulkar carried on the momentum to have the Indians in a healthy position as they chase a first-ever series win in Australia. At stumps on the opening day, India after winning the toss were 284 for three with Tendulkar unbeaten on 73 with V.V.S. Laxman not out 29.

Tendulkar took time to get into his scoring stride, his 37th Test half-century coming off 100 balls, but by the close he had worked himself and his team into early command. He had batted for 202 minutes off 156 balls with 12 boundaries.

It has been a largely forgettable series for 30-year-old Tendulkar, who had scores of 0, 1, 37, 0 and 44 in the series and ended 2003 with only 153 runs in five Tests at an average of 17. But it all began to come together for the most prolific batsman in modern cricket and when he reached 36 he became only the fourth player to pass 9,000 runs in Test cricket.

Tendulkar ranks behind only Australians Allan Border (11,174) and Steve Waugh (10,807) and fellow Indian Sunil Gavaskar (10,122) in most Test runs scored. “I think India’s strategy is pretty clear,” said Australian coach John Buchanan.

“They were very happy to win the toss and then to try and bat for as long as possible because it is a difficult issue coming off back-to-back Test matches and then bowling first...”

Before Tendulkar’s lean spell came to an end, India looked in a little bother with the loss of their top performing batsman Rahul Dravid for 38 — his lowest in his last six innings of the series — and the tourists at 194 for three.

Dravid, who scored 233 in the second Adelaide Test, took his series aggregate to 528 at 105.60, before he was leg before wicket to Australia’s best bowler Jason Gillespie. He was hit above the knee roll and New Zealand umpire Brent Bowden took a while to raise his finger ending a 66-run third wicket stand with Tendulkar.

Sehwag and Chopra compiled their second consecutive century opening stand in as many Tests to get India away to a bullish start. Sehwag, who exhilarated with his adventurous knock of 195 in Melbourne with 25 boundaries and five sixes, looked to be heading in the same direction again before he become Gillespie’s first wicket of the innings.

Gillespie broke through 13 overs after lunch when he got one to lift and leave Sehwag to be snapped up behind by Adam Gilchrist for 72. Sehwag, who put on 123 for the first wicket with Chopra, batted for 169 minutes with 10 boundaries and a six.

Chopra had some scares in his innings of 45 before he succumbed to a superb Brett Lee delivery three overs later. Chopra lived by his wits early in the first hour with Lee having him caught behind off a no-ball on eight, and then next ball he was dropped by Simon Katich in a straightforward chest-high chance in the gully.

Ponting Honored With McGilvray Medal

Ricky Ponting yesterday was awarded the McGilvray Medal as the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s (ABC) Test cricketer of 2003. Ponting had a stellar year accumulating 1,503 runs at 100.20, the best in Test cricket, including six centuries, three of them double-centuries. The medal was presented to Ponting by the Australian Prime Minister John Howard in the team dressing room after the day’s play here.

India’s Pakistan Tour Will Not Feature Asia Cup

The Asia Cup, the symbol of limited-overs cricket supremacy in the continent, is expected to be held in July after officials decided against clubbing it with India’s upcoming tour of Pakistan.

The six-nation tournament was originally scheduled to be held in late April at the end of India’s first Test series in Pakistan in almost 15 years. But the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) abandoned the idea when told by India it had a commitment to play a Test series in Bangladesh.

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