Tendulkar's 29th century hands India a comfortable victory
John Ward - 4 July 2001
This last match of the first round of the triangular tournament was
meaningless as far as the competition was concerned, as both teams had
already qualified at the expense of Zimbabwe. India gave themselves a
boost in confidence, though, with a convincing six-wicket victory over
West Indies, with a century from Sachin Tendulkar as the highlight.
Play began on a clear winter's day, with the flattest of pitches, but
India still decided to bowl on winning the toss. Both teams played one
or two reserve players, but West Indies are concerned about Cameron
Cuffy, the best bowler of the tournament to date, who had a foot
injury and was likely to miss the rest of the tour.
So hard was the ground that Ashish Nehra fell heavily in his delivery
stride in the first over, but fortunately was able to continue. India
bowled well but did not receive the same help from the conditions as
usual, and Chris Gayle and Daren Ganga were able to make a sound start
without undue worry. Both played some fine drives off the odd poor
delivery, with Gayle looking particularly impressive. He flattered
only to deceive, though, falling for 23 as soon as Harbhajan Singh
came on, chipping a low catch to extra cover. However, the opening
stand of 47 at three an over was more than useful.
Ganga reached a creditable fifty with a perfectly played sweep to the
boundary as West Indies began to accelerate. He was fortunate
immediately afterwards, though, when umpire Graeme Evans did not
consult the third umpire about a very close run-out attempt that the
television camera revealed to be out. In the next over, though, he
again tried a risky single, only to be sent back rather late, and this
time was several metres out of his crease when Sameer Dighe's throw
hit the stumps.
Wavell Hinds was next to his fifty, which came off 57 balls, tribute
to his ability to keep the score moving almost constantly, mainly with
back-foot drives and the occasional pull. He alone of the top batsmen
seemed able consistently to evade the fielders, and a score of 157 for
two after 40 overs was perhaps not enough on such a flat pitch.
Shivnarine Chanderpaul, perhaps frustrated in his efforts to keep the
score moving, chipped a catch to midwicket off Debashish Mohanty to
depart for 16. Then Hinds skied an attempted pull to be caught and
bowled for 66 by Harvinder Singh, making West Indies 170 for four.
Carl Hooper and Ridley Jacobs had to reorganize the innings, which
they did quite successfully until Hooper (24) holed out at long-on off
Harvinder. Jacobs, with 27 not out, as usual did all that was asked of
him, while Ramnaresh Sarwan was unbeaten with 13, but 229 for five was
probably rather less than West Indies would have liked in good batting
conditions.
Sachin Tendulkar was soon under way, with a couple of boundary pulls
off short balls from Reon King, followed by a leg glance for four, all
in the opening over, and West Indies were missing Cuffy already.
Sourav Ganguly joined the party with three boundaries in an over when
he first faced King, who retired to lick his wounds after his first
spell of three overs conceded 29 runs. His replacement Colin Stuart
did no better, pitching short and wide to allow Ganguly two more fours
from cuts; he bowled just two overs for 19.
The fifty came up in the eighth over as Tendulkar hooked a short ball
from Mervyn Dillon for six, and he went on to a personal fifty off 49
balls, soon followed by Ganguly off 80. The West Indian bowlers failed
to keep a consistent length and the batsmen were never under real
pressure. Finally Dillon, the best of the bowlers with only 22 runs
conceded off his ten overs, deceived Ganguly (62) with a slower ball
that he drove straight to mid-off. The opening pair had put on 133.
Virender Shewag was given an opportunity at number three, but was
stumped off Hooper for 4; however, the camera showed the ball was in
the left hand while the bails were removed with the right. Hemang
Badani played across the line to be bowled through the gate by Hooper
for four, and three wickets had fallen for 19 runs.
Rahul Dravid brought stability to the other end while Tendulkar
reached his 29th one-day century, and his second in Zimbabwe. Dravid
then fell for 15, yorked by Chris Gayle, but Reetinder Sodhi (16 not
out) stayed to finish the match in the 49th over with Tendulkar, who
finished with 122.
© CricInfo
Teams
|
India,
West Indies.
|
Players/Umpires
|
Cameron Cuffy,
Ashish Nehra,
Chris Gayle,
Daren Ganga,
Harbhajan Singh,
Wavell Hinds,
Shiv Chanderpaul,
Debasis Mohanty,
Sourav Ganguly,
Sachin Tendulkar,
Mervyn Dillon,
Virender Shewag,
Rahul Dravid,
Carl Hooper,
Reetinder Sodhi.
|
Tours
|
West Indies in Zimbabwe
|
Tournaments
|
Coca-Cola Cup (Zimbabwe) |
Scorecard
|
6th Match: India v West Indies, 4 Jul 2001 |
Grounds
|
Harare Sports Club
|