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Sports / Cricket

Sharma hits century as India take control

Published: 08 Nov 2013 - 11:51 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 06:35 pm

Kolkata: Rohit Sharma cut down on his flamboyance to author a chanceless century on debut and put India in command overcoming morning jitters on day two of the first cricket Test match against the West Indies in Sachin Tendulkar’s farewell series here yesterday.

Five days after plundering a double hundred in the ODI against Australia that left the cricketing world stunned, Rohit mixed caution with elegance to remain unconquered on 127 (228 b, 16x4, 1x6), as India finished the day on 354/6 at the Eden Gardens. 

Giving Rohit company in the middle was a brilliant Ravichandran Ashwin (92 batting, 148 b, 10x4), with the duo eclipsing the good work done by the visitors’ talented off spinner Shane Shillingford (4/130), who pulverised the Indian batsmen in the opening session by claiming four scalps.

Rohit-Ashwin’s unbroken seventh wicket partnership has fetched 198, and the hosts have now opened up a 120-run lead over the West Indies’ first innings total of 234. On a dramatic day of fluctuating fortunes, the morning session belonged to the visitors, before the hosts steadied the ship post-lunch, and then consolidated their position with a rollicking batting show in the final two hours.

Rohit announced his arrival with a bang on the Test scence, as he spearheaded a salvage effort after India were at one time deep in the woods at 83/5.

Rohit reached the three-figure mark in style with two back-to-back boundaries off another debutant Sheldon Cottrel to reach 102 in the 23rd over after tea. The milestone achieved, the young man raised his arms, pumped his fists, took off his helmet and waved his bat. 

The hundred came in 239 minutes, as the stylish willower faced 194 balls, and unleashed a dozen fours and a solitary six off Shillingford to become the 14th Indian to score a hundred on his maiden Test appearance. He is also the third Indian after Deepak Shodhan and Mohammad Azharuddin to crack a ton on debut at the Eden Gardens. Turning out in his 17th Test match, Ashwin played like a specialist batsman after coming to the crease at 156/6, when skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni (42) got out.

Ashwin crafted some fluent strokes, to finish the day eight short of his second hundred. He had scored a match-saving century when the two teams had last met in 2011 in the Mumbai Test.

Rohit and Ashwin’s efforts helped the crowd recover from the heartbreak of batting maestro Tendulkar’s cheap dismissal, albeit to a debatable umpiring decision. The big wicket of Tendulkar fell when Shillinford bowled a doosra, which pitched on the middle, straightened, eluded an outside edge from Tendulkar’s defensive bat and hit the back pad high. Umpire Nigel Llong of England raised the index finger as pin-drop silence descended on the stadium. Replays showed the ball striking the pad quite high and could have gone over the stumps.

Tendulkar faced 21 balls during his 41-minute stay. The memorable part were two exquisite fours through deep mid-wicket off Shllingford in the bowler’s sixth over. The first was in fact the day’s number one boundary.

IANS