Tendulkar wait continues but India take command

Author: 
IAN RANSOM | REUTERS
Publication Date: 
Tue, 2011-12-27 17:23

With Tendulkar gliding effortlessly toward his 100th
international century, Siddle sent a stinging full-pitched delivery that swung
in late and bowled the 38-year-old through the gate to break a 117-run
partnership with Rahul Dravid.
Ishant Sharma came in as nightwatchman and survived the last
three balls of the second day to see India through to 214 for three at stumps
in response to Australia's first innings total of 333 at the Melbourne Cricket
Ground.
Dravid ended the day unbeaten on 68 alongside Sharma, who
has yet to score, with the tourists primed to build a big total on a pitch that
is offering little for the bowlers.
Tendulkar and Dravid had resumed after tea on 99-2 and made
hay while the sun shone, blunting an Australian attack that had been buoyed by
their dismissal of Virender Sehwag for 67 shortly before the interval.
The pair dominated the hosts in a bruising session with few
genuine chances but Siddle's late breakthrough was just reward for a bowler who
thought he had removed Dravid for 65 a few overs earlier, only for the decision
to be overturned on review.
Television replays showed the paceman's foot had crept over
the crease, rendering it a no-ball, and after the fiery redhead from rural
Victoria had displayed his anger by spitting on the field, he came steaming
back with renewed determination.
"It actually felt like he did come through five k's
(kilometers per hour) quicker after that which was good and I thought he showed
a bit of character coming back after what happened to get Tendulkar late in the
day," wicketkeeper Brad Haddin told reporters.
"It was a big blow for us to get him." Having
survived a tense few overs before tea, Tendulkar belted Siddle for six off the
first ball of the final session with an uppercut over the slips to ignite the
crowd of 52,000.
By the time he trudged off the ground to warm applause, the
"Little Master" had lofted another two deliveries over the slips
cordon and stroked a pair of sublime cover drives among the eight boundaries he
spread around the ground.
Dravid reverted to type, playing the role of straight man in
the double act, reaching his half-century off 139 balls with a thick edge that
fired past home captain Michael Clarke in the slips on the way to the fence.
Tendulkar raised his 50 a few minutes later with a deft
flick to mid-on off spinner Nathan Lyon, sparking a roar from the crowd, where
one of the many banners read: "We welcome His Excellency Sachin Tendulkar
to the MCG." India spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, who took 3-81, said
Tendulkar would bounce back from another near-miss. The right-handed master
batsman has been stranded on 99 international centuries since March.
"It will eventually happen, so there's no point in
really bothering about it," he said.
Sehwag had earlier put Australia to the sword, helped along
by two dropped catches. Mike Hussey grassed a diving chance in the gully early
in the hard-hitting opener's innings, while Haddin later spilled an edge toward
the end of his knock.
Sehwag registered his 8,000th run in the seven-boundary,
83-ball innings before Pattinson had him play onto his stumps.
Opener Gautam Gambhir was out for three when he feathered an
edge to Haddin off recalled paceman Ben Hilfenhaus.
Resuming their innings on 277-6, Australia's tail-enders
cobbled 56 runs for the final four wickets with paceman Zaheer Khan and Ashwin
sharing two wickets apiece.
Zaheer had Haddin caught behind for 27 to end a 72-run stand
with Siddle, but Hilfenhaus and Pattinson frustrated the tourists with a 27-run
partnership for the ninth wicket before Lyon joined the latter to add another
15.
Ashwin ended a quick 19 from Hilfenhaus who was caught in
the deep by Virat Kohli, and then bowled Lyon for six when he attempted an
ill-judged sweep.
Zaheer, playing his first test in five months after a long
injury layoff, took 4-77 to finish the best of the Indian bowlers. Umesh Yadav matched
Ashwin's haul of three wickets.
"In the end we were happy with 330. India might be a
little bit in front than us in the game but it's evenly poised tomorrow if we
start this first session well," Haddin added.
 

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