India holds its nerve in a thriller

Bumrah’s brilliant last over does the trick after Rahul’s breezy knock

January 29, 2017 07:29 pm | Updated January 30, 2017 12:09 am IST - Nagpur

Coming good: Lokesh Rahul ended his drought at the top with a breezy 71 off 47 balls.

Coming good: Lokesh Rahul ended his drought at the top with a breezy 71 off 47 balls.

K.L. Rahul ended his drought at the top with a breezy 71 off 47 balls at the top of the order.

The bowling triumvirate of veteran Ashish Nehra, seasoned leggie Amit Mishra and uncanny pacer Jasprit Bumrah ensured that Rahul’s onslaught didn’t go waste as India registered a nail-biting 5-run win in the second Twenty20 International against England and keep the series alive going into the deciding rubber.

With a clever bowling unit of England stifled runs at the other end at the Vidarbha Cricket Association stadium in Jamtha, India was restricted to a sub-par total of 144 for eight. And despite Nehra’s twin strikes at the top and Mishra justifying his inclusion ahead of Parvez Rasool with a tight spell, Joe Root and Ben Stokes had put England in the driver’s seat going into the death overs.

With 32 required from 24 balls, India had its back to the walls. However, Nehra then trapped Stokes, who had earlier been bowled off a Mishra googly off the first ball only to survive once the replay showed it was a no-ball, and Bumrah followed it up with a three-run over. Jos Buttler pulled it back for England with 10 runs off the last two balls of the penultimate over, thus leaving Bumrah to defend eight runs off the last.

The pacer was first aided by umpire Shamshuddin who adjudged Root lbw with the batsman having edged the ball on to his pads. With Buttler missing an incoming one off the fourth ball, India win was sealed.

Earlier, K.L. Rahul ended his drought at the top with a breezy 71 off 47 balls at the top of the order. Still, a clever bowling unit of England stifled runs at the other end at the Vidarbha Cricket Association stadium in Jamtha. It resulted in India being restricted to a second successive sub-par total of 144 for eight in the second Twenty20 International.

After being put in to bat for the second time in four days, Virat Kohli continued to play the aggressor’s role, with Rahul taking his time to get going. Kohli’s cameo was edgy.

He was lucky to have seen a top-edge off Tymal Mills in the second over flying just out of the third-man’s reach; then was inexplicably ruled not out in the next over by umpire C. Shamshuddin when Chris Jordan appeared to have trapped the India captain plumb in front of the wickets. Kohli eventually holed out Jordan in the fifth to Liam Dawson, whose left-arm spin opened the innings for England, at long-on.

The next ball, Rahul hit a spanking lofted drive over covers. It was the 11th ball he faced and the Karnataka batsman didn’t look back for the next 12 overs. He drove the pacers with panache and cleared the long boundary off spinners at will. Still, the India innings never looked like changing gears at the other end.

The left-handed duo of Suresh Raina and Yuvraj Singh struggled to rotate the strike, especially off spinners. Captain Eoin Morgan employed the spin from seventh till the 14th over. And the trio of Moeen Ali, Adil Rashil and Dawson – included at the expense of pacer Liam Plunkett – conceded only 47 runs off these eight overs, dismissing the left-handed duo in return.

Manish Pandey then joined his Karnataka team-mate and managed to reduce the dot-ball percentage. Soon after Pandey’s arrival, Rahul hit the biggest six of the evening, tonking Dawson into the stands over long-off.

The death overs them completely belong to the England pacers, with India managing just a boundary and a six in the last five overs.

Black arm bands

The Indian contingent expectedly took to the field wearing black arm bands, sharing the grief with the family of strength and conditioning expert Rajesh Sawant and pacer Mohammed Shami. While Sawant, the India Under-19 trainer, died in his sleep in Mumbai, Shami’s father, Tousif Ali, passed away in Amroha on Friday.

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.