Steve Waugh stands tall as India flicker and fade out
Anand Vasu - 12 March 2001
From the euphoria and exultation of yesterday, India were brought back down
to earth by a display of attacking cricket that Australia may as well
patent as their own. At the helm of Australian cricket Steve Waugh is a
veritable Goliath. A Goliath that no David has been able to slay in 16 Test
matches. When his troops fail him, Waugh steps up to the war front himself.
On the second day of the second Test at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata, Waugh
notched up his highest ever Test score in India, got his 25th Test hundred
and passed Javed Miandad in the list of all time run getters - in one
innings. Only Allan Border, Sunil Gavaskar and Graham Gooch have scored
more runs in Test cricket than Waugh. And only Sunil Gavaskar, Don Bradman
and Gary Sobers have got more hundreds. But it's not about personal
milestones for Steve Waugh. It's about grim situations, survivors and true
champions. After posting a healthy 445, Waugh's Australia reduced India to
128/8 at stumps.
The visiting captain showed clearly that there was no such thing as doing
half the job against Australia. Either you knock them over completely or
you pay the price. As Steve Waugh (110) and Jason Gillespie (46) put on 113
runs for the ninth wicket, India were slowly but surely paying the price.
The partnership was a record for the ninth wicket against India, beating
the 96 put together by Ian Healy and Gavin Robertson at Chennai in 1998.
Record or not, it certainly put paid to India's plans of knocking the
Aussies over quickly.
Coming out from lunch, Waugh proved himself a worthy leader of a team that
has won 16 Test matches on the trot. Mixing abundant caution with calculated risks, the Australian captain notched up his 25th Test century. Having never made a Test hundred in India, Waugh was more emotional than normal as he tugged at the red handkerchief in his pocket, took off his helmet and raised his bat to a full house Eden crowd. In turn, the mass of swaying spectators too were forced to stand up and applaud a true champion. Moving from 93 to 99 with a crisp hit over midwicket for six, Waugh then worked the ball away to point to get to his century. In the process of getting to his hundred, Steve Waugh passed Miandad's tally of 8832 Test runs.
When finally, Waugh (110 runs, 203 balls, 11 fours, 1 six) was trapped leg
before wicket by Harbhajan Singh, the Australian innings had ended on a
rather imposing note. Harbhajan Singh, easily the pick of the bowlers had
secured returns of 7/123.
Yesterday the crowd of around 75,000 went home happy at a spirited Indian
performance. Today however, the crowds were considerably larger at the start of play, certainly thinner and more disappointed at the end.
The cause for that is there for all to see. In a last session that yielded
96 runs, seven Indian wickets and with it the slightest chances of victory
was were lost. Collapses happen in Test cricket. But when a team limps off
the ground like an errant pet dog whipped by its master, tail between its
legs, there is no grandeur in the defeat.
That Sadagoppan Ramesh (0) and Shiv Sunder Das (20) should fail against
high quality fast bowling is not something that will cause huge surprise
around the country. However, when Sachin Tendulkar (10) plays across the
line and is trapped plumb in front, Rahul Dravid (25) plays all over a
drifter from Shane Warne and loses his leg stump and Sourav Ganguly (23) is
snapped up by a diving Steve Waugh at gully against the bowling of Michael
Kasprowicz, the façade of the great Indian middle order is shattered. The
triumvirate of Indian cricket had fallen. After that, even the die hard
Indian fan from Kolkata who paid good money for his ticket could stand it
no more. An emotionally drained crowd poured out of the Eden Gardens with
the words 'let down' on their minds.
The tail succumbed meekly as VVS Laxman showcased his own penchant for
strokemaking in lost causes. Hues of his 167 at Sydney against the same
foes in a dire situation were there for all to see as he helped himself to
26 of the finest runs, flicking and driving with ease. Aesthetically his innings might have been pleasing. At the end of the day however, India need a further 118 to avoid the follow on. Looking down the barrel, one can already hear travel agents welcoming customers with yet another Test match heading for an early finish.
© CricInfo
Teams
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Australia,
India.
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Players/Umpires
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Steve Waugh,
Jason Gillespie,
Allan Border,
Javed Miandad,
Sunny Gavaskar,
Graham Gooch,
Gary Sobers,
Michael Kasprowicz,
Shiv Sunder Das,
Sadagoppan Ramesh,
Shane Warne,
Rahul Dravid,
Sourav Ganguly,
Glenn McGrath,
Sachin Tendulkar,
V.V.S.Laxman,
Harbhajan Singh.
|
Tours
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Australia in India
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Scorecard
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2nd Test: India v Australia, 11-15 Mar 2001 |
Grounds
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Eden Gardens, Calcutta
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