4th Test: West Indies v India at Antigua, 10-14 May 2002
Anand Vasu
CricInfo.com

West Indies 1st innings: Lunch - Day 3, Tea - Day 3, Stumps - Day 3,
Live Reports from previous days


KUMBLE SCALPS LARA AMIDST HIGH DRAMA
You want action, forget the one-dayers, stick to Test cricket. The final session of play on the third day saw West Indies slip from 88/1 to 187/3. But that wasn’t half of it. Anil Kumble, broken jaw and all, came out to the middle, bowled spot on and scalped the key wicket of Brian Lara.

When Wavell Hinds brought up his half century with a spanking cover drive, the fans at Antigua were on their feet. After watching India bat for two days and a bit, there was finally some West Indian batting on display. And it was gorgeous clean hitting at that.

Till Tendulkar enticed a false shot from Hinds. A looping wrong ‘un seemed badly pitched a shade outside the leg stump. Leaning forward and preparing to clout the ball to the fence, Hinds found the ball dipping on him, played down the wrong line and heard the death rattle. The ball spun back enough to clip the leg stump. Hinds’ well made 65 (117 balls, 9 fours) had come to an end.

Sarwan watched quietly from the non-striker’s end as the biggest roar of the day welcomed Lara out to the middle. Lara on a flat wicket… a run fest on the cards?

Not much later, just after news came in that Kumble was flying back to India the next day for surgery, out walked the man himself. Heavily strapped up, with bands going around his jaw, over his head and across the back of it, a semi-mummified Kumble walked out to the middle.

The ball was tossed to Kumble and a slider slipped past Lara’s outside edge off the very first ball. There was much speculation about the wisdom of such a move. Perhaps it was foolhardy to ask a man with a fractured jaw to bowl?

All talk was put to an end, as is so often the case with Kumble, by one delivery. Tossed up, fizzing through, pitching on off and spinning in just a touch, Lara’s across the line swat was not good enough. The pad was struck, Kumble appealed as well as his plaster would allow and umpire David Shepherd confirmed that Lara (4) was plumb lbw.

Carl Hooper and Sarwan then went on to steady the ship. On a flat wicket, the last thing West Indies needed was a flurry of wicket. And that almost happened. In the 64th over of the day Kumble had Hooper caught at forward short leg, only to see umpire Shepherd call no-ball. Off the very next ball, one that bounced and turned, Hooper flashed hard to slip. Dravid got his hands to it but could not latch onto the chance.

The rest of the day, thankfully, passed off uneventfully. Hooper chipped and drove his way to 26, Sarwan, the very picture of solidity and cool composure racked up 50.



WEST INDIES RESPOND STEADILY
Responding to India’s healthy 513/9 declared, West Indies got off to a solid start. At tea on the third day, the hosts reached 88 for the loss of Chris Gayle’s wicket. India minus Anil Kumble tried a few tricks with Sachin Tendulkar sending down a few overs. Wavell Hinds and Ramnaresh Sarwan were good enough to take West Indies through to tea.

The West Indian openers began well enough, seeing off the new ball. There was almost no movement off the wicket or in the air. Javagal Srinath and Ashish Nehra shared the new ball but could not trouble the batsmen.

Zaheer Khan, with his extra pace and awkward angle got a couple of deliveries to jump. This was not yet cause for concern however, as Hinds and Gayle drove fluently through both off and on side.

The first real chance for the visitors came in the 24th over of the day. Gayle, moving across his stumps and flicking a full delivery found Shiv Sunder Das at square leg. The fielder however reacted a touch late and floored the catch.

Fortunately for the Indians Gayle did not make them pay for their mistake. Without adding another run to his tally of 32, Gayle nicked Zaheer Khan through to the keeper soon after.

Sarwan replaced Gayle out in the middle and the ball was beginning to lose its shine by this stage. India were prompted to bring Sourav Ganguly and Tendulkar into the attack and this helped the overs roll along. Tendulkar in particular infused some interest into the proceedings with leg-breaks and googlies that turned prodigiously. The wrong ‘uns in particular troubled the left-handed Hinds more than once.

As it turned out though, Hinds (48 not out) and Sarwan (5 not out) took West Indies safely through to tea.



INDIA DECLARE ON 513/9 AFTER RATRA HUNDRED
The morning of the third day was an eventful one on and off the field. News filtered in that Anil Kumble was injured and was unlikely to play any further part in the game. On the field, Ajay Ratra scored his maiden Test, and indeed first class, century. Laxman was dismissed early in the piece and India declared on 513/9.

Ratra, increasingly under pressure for not making runs, watched in dismay as Laxman became the seventh Indian wicket to fall. After making 130 (244 balls, 14 fours) Laxman played back to a short ball from Merv Dillon and trod on his wicket. An unusual dismissal but one that West Indies would take on a flat wicket.

Zaheer Khan (4) then hung around long enough to see Ratra reach three figures. It did not come easily, but when it did, the joy was unbridled. The whole Indian team stood on the balcony clapping and cheering as Ratra became the first Indian ‘keeper to score a Test century overseas. This is of course overlooking Vijay Manjrekar’s similar achivement, as he was not really a specialist keeper.

The effort took India to a substantial total. And when the declaration came, after Javagal Srinath made 15 and was dismissed, Ratra was unbeaten on 115 (282 balls, 12 fours). India’s 513/9 declared had all but put paid to any chances of a result in this game.

In response, the West Indian openers negotiated seven overs before lunch reaching 17 for no loss. Chris Gayle (7 not out) and Wavell Hinds (9 not out) will be looking to make big scores on this flat wicket. The only possible threat, Kumble, has all been ruled out with injury.

© CricInfo

Date-stamped : 13 May2002 - 18:47