India all out for 246 in first innings

June 21, 2011 02:29 am | Updated August 18, 2016 02:45 pm IST - Kingston (Jamaica)

India's Suresh Raina raises his bat after scoring a half century on the opening day of the first cricket Test match against West Indies in Kingston, Jamaica on Monday.

India's Suresh Raina raises his bat after scoring a half century on the opening day of the first cricket Test match against West Indies in Kingston, Jamaica on Monday.

It was a Monday of fortune swings on an intriguing Sabina Park pitch. There were cracks on the surface and the ball, on several occasions, reared at the batsmen.

Counter-attacking innings from Suresh Raina (82) and Harbhajan Singh (70) – the two added 146 runs for the seventh wicket – enabled India recover from 85 for six on the first day of the opening Digicel Test.

Then came a blistering spell from Fidel Edwards – he swung the ball at telling speeds and went for the jugular with his short-pitched stuff - enabled the host to restrict India to 246 in its first innings.

The West Indies was 34 for one at stumps. There were lift and seam movements for Ishant Sharma, Praveen Kumar sent down a few mean outswingers and both Harbhajan and Amit Mishra got the ball to turn and bounce rather alarmingly on a first day pitch.

The West Indies lost opener Lendl Simmons, caught bat-pad at short-leg after Ishant got a delivery to nip back.

Adrian Barath (26 batting) and Ramnaresh Sarwan (2 batting) were at the crease. Barath off-drove Mishra pleasingly but also survived a few anxious moments when the leg-spinner turned the ball across the face of the willow.

Earlier, the left-right combination of Raina and Harbhajan disrupted the line of the West Indies bowlers in a crucial stand. The marauding West Indies was pegged back.

The left-hander, not really tested by the short-pitched stuff, batted with balance and poise. Raina had a lot riding on this innings and put his mind over matter.

The southpaw was also judicious in his stroke-play. Raina oozed self-belief when he cover-drove Bishoo off the front foot. Soon, the leg-spinner was straight-driven.

Raina relied on time-tested methods. When the ball was pitched up, he drove in the `V'. And when the deliveries were pitched short, the left-hander responded with cuts and pulls.

The determined Raina was the last man to be dismissed; his pull off Rampaul was held by Bishoo close to the square-leg ropes.

Wherever there is Harbhajan, a fight is seldom far away. Harbhajan waded into the attack, took calculated risks against Bishoo to upset his rhythm.

When Bishoo varied his trajectory with a quicker ball, Harbhajan responded with a fierce cut. And when he flighted, Harbhahan dared to hit against the spin with a slog sweep.

Harbhajan's hand-eye coordination is his ally. And he can also cause plenty of damage with his bat-speed. When Rampaul pitched short, he nonchalantly swung him to the fine-leg ropes. Harbhajan, soon, bludgeoned Rampaul through covers.

Eventually, a brilliant act of catching ended the surging association. Bishoo sprinted to deep square-leg and then dived to his left to come up with the ball after Harbhajan miscued a hook off Edwards.

Rahul Dravid had promised much before Bishoo, imparting serious revolutions on the ball, took him out on the drive with a flighted leg-spinner. Seeking early momentum after lunch, Dravid smacked Bishoo for boundaries through covers off either foot. The leg-spinner held his nerve.

Dravid's 40 was a pleasing innings – he cut and straight-drove the pacemen - but the experienced campaigner failed to kick on.

Bishoo struck again. The leg-spinner gave the ball air putting seeds of doubts in Mahendra Singh Dhoni's mind about the whereabouts of his off-stump. The Indian skipper, caught at the crease, was done in by both the turn and the bounce.

V.V.S. Laxman succumbed to Bishoo in the first session. The flighted ball drew Laxman forward and the turn found the edge for the slip to come into play.

Debutant Virat Kohli did not last long. His away-from-the-body push when Edwards got one to shape away was straight out of ODI cricket.

India went to lunch at an uneasy 69 for four after electing to bat.

Edwards, with his sling-arm action, and the bustling Rampaul form an interesting combination. Edwards extracted awkward lift from just short of a good length.

Rampaul's run-up lacked momentum and thrust but he used his strong shoulders and wrists to get the ball to climb. Rampaul's sound wrist position also enabled him achieve lateral movement. The West Indian dismissed Vijay with a delivery that left the right-hander to force a miscued drive.

Debutant left-hander Mukund got behind the line of the short-pitched balls and left deliveries outside the off-stump.

Mukund (11) was looking good when he pushed a tad tentatively outside the off-stump at Rampaul – the delivery came in a shade – and ended up playing on.

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.