Host to the final of the Champions Trophy, the venue will be in Dubai with India to be given another chance of proving themselves with an exciting victory over a weakened Australian team. The victory was not an easy one for India, and Australia would be seeing back untold numbers of moments when the contest could have taken enigmatic and enthralling directions.
India had class and experience behind their title-fight, and the player in their ranks who matters most, according to that description, was at the center of it. Kohli had already carried off one of his trademark chase-controlling hundreds earlier against Pakistan, and turned in another solid 84, cutting his innings most unsuitably on account of an all-out attack. However, he was well clear at that point with 8000 in ODI chases, putting this one to bed at 40 off 44 balls.
They required hardly 33 balls, with KL Rahul and Hardik Pandya almost sealing victory before the latter was taken out with only one hit remaining to win the game. As in the Chennai World Cup chase between these two sides, it was Rahul again who saw the team home, this time with a six over long-on against Glen Maxwell.
Rahul and Hardik hit together five sixes and three fours, but that wasn’t enough for them to surpass Australia’s tally of boundary numbers (20 fours and eight sixes). Their victory was rather large with industriousness—124 balls of dot balls, versus the Australian’s 153, and they also ran a staggering 158 runs between wickets, while the Aussies only 129.
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As much as this was down to the fact that Kohli and his teammates – five others innings past 25 runs – elevated the ball into cavities and then ran, so also was there the factor of difference in quality between the bowling attacks, particularly the spinners. The Indian spinners had a wonderful economy rate towards the 50-mark while their Australian counterparts were 39.
India was relentless in their four-man spin attack on a bake-dry pitch looking to turn, only to find the pitch was merely slow and low. The Indian spinners never really had the option of mustering a full-front attack on their opposition but bettered their Australian counterparts in control, leaving the stumps in play and limiting the areas where the batters could score.
For the most part, Australia threatened at some point or another to accelerate the innings toward a 300-ish total after deciding to bat, with three of their batters getting into innings that, had it been another day, could have turned match-winning. Ultimately, though, all three came undone at their most dangerous moments.
Travis Head was dropped off a catch from off the bowl by Mohammed Shami in the first over. He took time to settle into the pace of the pitch, but he quickly made boundaries and went from 1 run from 11 balls to 39 runs from 32 balls to give India some void chills of Ahmedabad 2023. Then, as he faced his first ball in any format, including the IPL, from Varun Chakravarthy, he went for a massive one down the ground but he miscued a wrong’un, which went perfectly towards long-off.
Then came Steven Smith, who played some really good looking strokes to whisk the spinners over midwicket, to drive them through the covers, and even to slog sweep them straight, swiftly moving to 73. He put on half-century stands with Head, Marnus Labuschagne, and Alex Carey. He also had a few good fortunes; Shami dropped a catch offering on his return, though off his left hand and Axar Patel forced Smith to edge a straight drive onto the stumps, only to see the bails remain intact.
But just when Australia was 198 for 4 in the 37th over, Smith aimed to drill Shami between cover and mid-off, but then went for a big pull and missed the full-toss that crashed into the base of off-stump.
Five balls later, Australia collapses, losing another big wicket. After Axar’s slog-sweep six, Glenn Maxwell missed a pull off a ball skidding on to hit the stumps. In a matter of minutes, it had tilted in India’s favor.
Carey was still there and probably playing the innings of the match. Coming in at a difficult time – with Australia 144 for 4 and with Labuschagne and Josh Inglis sent back quickly by Ravindra Jadeja – he counter-attacked, exploiting the vacant spots in the outfield and attacking them with no half-measures. His first boundary, off the sixth ball he faced, started the party as he backed away to give himself room to loft Jadeja over mid-off. The length was a bit short and perhaps did not allow him to middle the shot, but he went through it nonetheless with the knowledge that there was nobody patrolling that boundary.
And yet, through sweeps, lofts over the covers, and reverse-sweeps, Carey motored to 60 off 56, but just when it seemed imperative for him to bat through the innings, with Australia seven down in the 47th over, he turned for a chancy second and was caught well short by a brilliant direct hit from Shreyas Iyer about two-thirds of the way back at backward square-leg.
All these happenings resulted in Australia being bowled out for 264 with three balls remaining.
This was the sort of total that lent itself to pacing the pursuit and not straining after boundaries to get there, even though the first few exchanges suggested otherwise.
Shubman Gill danced down the track to put Ben Dwarshuis away with an eye-catching short-arm jab, before inside-edging on to his stumps later in the over while trying to steer him fine, perhaps an injudicious shot in these conditions.
Rohit Sharma, meanwhile, went after the bowling as he usually does in the first powerplay, and played an innings that somewhat echoed Head’s: there were a couple of breath-taking hits, including a pulled six off Nathan Ellis; there were two dropped chances, neither entirely straightforward, but both catchable, by Cooper Connolly and Labuschagne; and then a dismissal off a risky shot, a sweep off a too-straight, too-full ball from Connolly.
That left India 43 for 2 in the eighth over, and Connolly was finally able to breathe after a torrid match to that point. Earlier in the day, opening in place of the injured Matthew Short, whom he had replaced in Australia’s squad, he had fallen for a nine-ball duck that also included six successive plays-and-misses off Shami.
Connolly could have had even more joy in his sixth over, when Kohli, looking to work his left-arm spin into the on side, sent a leading edge looping towards Maxwell at a catching short cover. Maxwell dived right, but couldn’t hold on to the one-hander. With Kohli on 51 and India 134 for 2, Australia could have had a foot in the door had this moment gone their way.
That much outside, Kohli was making batting look deceptively easy, playing only the oldest form of percentage shots but somehow scoring quicker than Iyer-who was moving about his crease often to scoop over the shoulder-in a third-wicket 91 build-up. Kohli only hit five fours in all-two pulls off the spinners and one off Ellis especially eye-catching for the speed of his footwork-but had no trouble in keeping the score going.
This was in part because Australia had produced a spin attack that boasted just one bona fide front-liner in Adam Zampa, a legspinner playing just his fourth ODI in Tanveer Sangha, and three batting allrounders or part-timers in Connolly, Maxwell, and Head. Given the total he was defending, too, Smith had to protect the boundaries, and allow the singles to drip away while waiting for an opening.
As such, India required 131 from 142 balls when Iyer was bowled out by Zampa’s quicker ball when he made room to cut. Yet, that didn’t stop them from being favorites with such batting depth. They settled into the seeming pattern of Kohli looking to bat through the chase with Axar – batting in his now-customary number five slot – and then Rahul taking on the bowlers at the other end in partnerships of 44 and 47.
Just when it was heading perfectly, and almost on the brink of getting into the century club, Kohli fell in the most un-Kohli-wise way. Earlier, Rahul hit Zampa for a straight six in that over, and India were well in control of their required rate. It isn’t usually the kind of moment Kohli picks to try and hit a six, but it was on this day. He picked the wrong’un, but the ball likely turned less than he expected, and forced him to hit straighter than intended, straight to the fielder at long-on. Kohli maybe is the most exacting calibrator of chases on this planet, but even he has been prone to impulses once in a while.