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A fitting finale to a thrilling series
Woorkheri Raman - 5 February 2002
The six match one-day series ended in Mumbai amidst great excitement
with both teams winning three each. India should have won the series
by a 5-1 margin but for their reluctance to learn from earlier
mistakes. This was more apt in the case of the middle-order batsmen
and once again they made a hash of things when the Indian side was
cruising to a victory.
© CricInfo |
Marcus Trescothick, tipped to be the future England captain, played an
attacking knock yet again. For some reason or the other, he went after
Agarkar in particular and decimated the latter in the opening spell.
The left-hander relished the pace and the bounce of the Wankhede
Stadium and unleashed attractive strokes all around the wicket. It
appeared that Trescothick had resolved to enjoy himself on the
concluding day of the tour. Though he lost his partner Nick Knight
early on, he carried the attack to the Indians along with Hussain. But
just when this partnership was reaching dangerous proportions, Hussain
departed.
Ganguly was forced to bring himself on with Trescothick getting stuck
into the spinners in their early overs. The skipper has the knack of
providing breakthroughs and he, in fact, went on to claim two wickets
in his only spell. With the visitors in sight of something around 300
runs, Ganguly in a last throw of the dice re-introduced Harbhajan
Singh. The Turbanator got into the act as if in vengeance by
getting two wickets in an over including that of the danger man,
Trescothick. The English middle order has competed with that of their
rival team by caving in on earlier occasions but Harbhajan completely
outwitted them at the Wankhede Stadium. He returned his best figures.
It was good to see Harbhajan bowl like he did against the Australians
a year ago. Unfortunately, Harbhajan's efforts were not supported in
the end overs as the last wicket put on enough runs to pile the
pressure on the Indians.
© AFP |
Ganguly was in a situation wherein circumstances dictated the course
of action he had to follow. The success of Sehwag at the top and his
successive century partnerships with Tendulkar left the Indian skipper
no other alternative but to push himself down to number three. The
explosive pair of Sehwag and Tendulkar started off in the usual manner
and the crowd was hoping that they would bat till the first half of
the Indian innings. Gough had other ideas and when he found the edge
of the little master Tendulkar, the evening coffees went cold all over
the country. Ganguly looked positive and confident and it would only
be fair to say that his running between the wickets came as a pleasant
surprise. He was keen on picking up singles till he gauged the pitch.
Once he got the measure of the bowling, he began striking the ball way
into the crowds at will. His confidence level was high and the way he
charged the English fast bowlers suggested that the skipper has got
over his blues. He fell to Giles again but this time around he was
unfortunate to see the ball ricocheting on to the stumps.
Ganguly's dismissal rekindled the flagging spirit of the visitors and
the hosts repeated what they did in Delhi in impeccable fashion. In
the end, the visitors clinically strangled the lower order batsmen and
leveled the series before embarking on a flight to New Zealand.
There were quite a few aspects, which were consistent, and
unfortunately none were on the positive side. To start off, the
visitors played their middle overs badly after good starts, which was
aped by the hosts as well. Secondly, the youngsters in the Indian side
have not utilised the opportunities that came their way. Thirdly, the
incompetence of the umpires was quite obvious and the mistakes were
horrendous. The entire nation was embarrassed by some disgraceful
umpiring decisions in the one-dayers and it is about time that real
good umpires are appointed.
© CricInfo
Teams
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England,
India.
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Players/Umpires
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Ajit Agarkar,
Nick Knight,
Nasser Hussain,
Harbhajan Singh,
Marcus Trescothick,
Darren Gough,
Sourav Ganguly,
Sachin Tendulkar,
Virender Sehwag.
|
Tours
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England in India
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Grounds
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Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai
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