Ind vs Aus ODI: Dhoni anchors, Kedar effects India's maiden bilateral series win against Aussies

Virat Kohli’s men became the first country to return from Australia without losing a single series.

January 18, 2019 04:17 pm | Updated 05:18 pm IST

M.S. Dhoni plays a shot during the third and final ODI against Australia in Melbourne on January 18, 2019.

M.S. Dhoni plays a shot during the third and final ODI against Australia in Melbourne on January 18, 2019.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni rekindled his love affair with final flourishes, anchoring India to their maiden bilateral ODI series triumph in Australia for a perfect finish to a historic trip Down Under in Melbourne on Friday.

Virat Kohli’s men became the first country to return from Australia without losing a single series having won the Test series 2-1 and drawn the T20 Internationals 1-1.

From a dasher, to a finisher to finally the anchor in the last leg of his career, Dhoni 3.0 was in full flow during India’s successful chase of 231 on a sluggish Melbourne pitch after Yuzvendra Chahal set it up with a career-best 6 for 42.

Dhoni’s unbeaten 87 off 114 balls was a testimony to his high quality match awareness as the street-smart Kedar Jadhav (61 no, 57 balls) donned the role of a finisher.

The former India skipper’s role going into the business end of his illustrious career is that of an anchor, who takes the game deep.

He performed his role to perfection with world class exhibition of running between the wickets in what could well be his last match on theAustralian soil.

Not to forget the ‘Man of the Series’ award for a hat-trick of half-centuries and two coming in winning causes.

While Dhoni was lucky to be dropped on 0 and 74 but Australian bowling never had the sting to unsettle the Indian batsmen despite skipper Virat Kohli (46) being dismissed with more than 100 runs left.

Chasing 231, India got off to a slow start as well. Australia created some good pressure with the new ball, in particular Jhye Richardson (1-41) who tied down Rohit Sharma (9).

It worked as the right-handed opener was caught at slip in the sixth over. Despite Kohli coming to the crease thereafter, India struggled in the first powerplay and only scored 26-1 in the first ten overs.

Kohli added 44 runs with Shikhar Dhawan (23) for the second wicket, but it was a slower partnership than usual thanks to some tight bowling and fielding by Australia in this passage of play.

The duo tried to cut loose, as Peter Handscomb dropped Kohli (on 10) at first slip off Billy Stanlake (0-49) in the 12th over. But things turned around for Australia when Dhawan lobbed a return catch to Marcus Stoinis in the 17th over.

While Kohli and Dhoni added 54 runs off 82 balls for the third wicket, it was an uncharacteristic partnership. There were two incidents of confusion between the wickets — first in the 21st over when Kohli was stranded and was saved for a lack of a direct hit.

The Dhoni-Jadhav (121 runs) partnership then took some time in getting going. In the meantime, Dhoni reached his 70th ODI half-century off 74 balls.

Jadhav then soothed Indian nerves as he scored his fourth ODI half-century off 52 balls, as the equation came down to 14 needed off 12. He struck two fours in the penultimate over off Peter Siddle (1-56) to close in on the match.

Earlier, Yuzvendra Chahal picked up 6-42 as Australia were bowled out for 230 runs (48.4 overs).

Chahal matched Ajit Agarkar’s 6-42 in 2004 as he recorded the joint best-ever ODI figures on Australian soil. In doing so, he also improved on his previous best of 5-22 against South Africa at Centurion in January 2018.

Chahal varied the pace of his deliveries and also used the deception in his flight to make life miserable for Australian batsmen.

For Australia, Peter Handscomb (58) scored a fighting half-century and took them to a respectable total after they were reduced to 161-6 at one stage.

Play was delayed by ten minutes because of rain and, after the first two balls in the Australian innings there was a further 20-minute delay before weather improved. The hosts faltered under cloudy skies though as Bhuvneshwar Kumar (2-28) and Mohammed Shami (2-47) bowled excellent opening spells.

Scoreboard

Australia Innings: Alex Carey (wk) c Kohli b Bhuvneshwar 5; Aaron Finch (c) lbw b Bhuvneshwar 14; Usman Khawaja c & b Chahal 34; Shaun Marsh st Dhoni b Chahal 39; Peter Handscomb lbw b Chahal 58; Marcus Stoinis c Rohit b Chahal 10; Glenn Maxwell c Bhuvneshwar b Shami 26; Jhye Richardson c Kedar Jadhav b Chahal 16; Adam Zampa c Vijay Shankar b Chahal 8; Peter Siddle not out 10; Billy Stanlake b Shami 0. Extras: (LB-2, W-8) 10

Total: (all out in 48.4 Overs) 230

Fall of Wickets: 1-8, 2-27, 3-100, 4-101, 5-123, 6-161, 7-206, 8-219, 9-228, 10-230.

India bowling: Bhuvneshwar Kumar 8-1-28-2, Mohammed Shami 9.4-0-47-2,Vijay Shankar 6-0-23-0, Kedar Jadhav 6-0-35-0, Ravindra Jadeja 9-0-53-0, Yuzvendra Chahal 10-0-42-6.

India innings: Rohit Sharma c Shaun Marsh b Siddle 9; Shikhar Dhawan c & b Stoinis 23; Virat Kohli (c) c Alex Carey b Jhye Richardson 46; MS Dhoni (wk) not out 87; Kedar Jadhav not out 61. Extras: (LB-1,W-7) 8

Total: (for 3 wickkts in 49.2 Overs) 234

Fall of wickets: 1-15, 2-59, 3-113.

Australia bowling: Jhye Richardson 10-1-27-1, Peter Siddle 9-1-56-1, Billy Stanlake 10-0-49-0, Glenn Maxwell 1-0-7-0,Adam Zampa 10-0-34-0, Marcus Stoinis 9.2-0-60-1.

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