Ashwin confident of overhauling Australia's score

December 27, 2014 02:39 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 04:49 pm IST - Melbourne

Ashwin celebrates with his teammates after claiming the wicket of Mitchell Johnson on day 2 of the third Test in Melbourne on Saturday.

Ashwin celebrates with his teammates after claiming the wicket of Mitchell Johnson on day 2 of the third Test in Melbourne on Saturday.

Disappointed they might be after conceding “too many runs” to the Australians, but Indian off-spinner R Ashwin on Saturday said the tourists will pile up their own share on Sunday in the ongoing third cricket Test as the wicket has become flat now.

India had pushed Australia on the backfoot on Friday by reducing them to 259 for five but let the advantage slip on Saturday and the hosts ended up with 530 on the board. In reply, the Indians were 108 for one when stumps were drawn on the second day.

Ashwin said it was disappointing to let go of the advantage but exuded confidence that his side’s batsmen will do the job on day three.

“We wanted to get them out pretty early. That was the plan. Unfortunately Steve Smith batted very well,” said Ashwin.

“They got a bit too many runs for our liking. But if you look at the overall game, the score is pretty par for this pitch. The wicket seems slow and it is pretty flat. We’ll take 108/1 and we’ll like to pile on the runs on Sunday.”

Australia finished their first innings just ahead of tea with Smith scoring his third successive hundred of the series.

The young skipper was last man out for 192 runs, and he got fine support from Brad Haddin (55) and Ryan Harris (74).

“We really thought Haddin had a genuine weakness over there,” said Ashwin explaining the Indian bowlers’ continuous approach of using the short-ball plan.

“We continue to think he has a weakness over there. We will continue to target him in the next innings and the next Test match as well. He doesn’t quite look that comfortable to us.”

“We were delaying the run-scoring (against the tail-enders) and we were pretty much ready for it. But it wasn’t until the last 30 or 40 minutes when Smith teed off a bit. There was not a lot of lateral movement for us to exploit. We had plans in place to make sure Smith didn’t get away, but as it turned out he batted really well and towards the end he teed off,” Ashwin added.

While all the prime bowlers gave away more than 100 runs, Ashwin was still happy with his performance, particularly on the first day. He finished with figures of 3-134.

“The last two days have been quite hard work. I have put a real honest effort, put in whatever I have worked on in practice. I have been really disciplined in my skills. I have bowled better spells in patches in the past, but this is probably the best overall performance,” Ashwin said.

Talking about Smith in particular, he added, “Against anybody in such form you hope you have some luck and get them early. But he has been batting really well. We have not managed to find his edge. If at all we have found it we have put him down. It’s one of those spaces. He has batted really well and credit goes to him.”

India now has a tough job on their hands, with Australia still ahead by 422 runs. The first obvious target on day three will be saving the follow-on.

“The wicket was really slow yesterday morning. The ball didn’t come on much. Drives weren’t possible either. As the day went on it became much better. Today it was pretty good and it came on to the bat pretty well. We also batted well today,” he signed off.

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