Sehwag’s unbeaten 228 rocks Multan

1023 views 13 replies
Reply to Topic
Shahrukh Khan

Age: 124
Total Posts: 43596
Points: 0

Location:
Netherlands, Netherlands
India 356 for 2 (Sehwag 228*, Tendulkar 60*) v Pakistan
Scorecard




Virender Sehwag posted the highest score by an Indian against Pakistan © AFP


Virender Sehwag racked up the fastest double-century on the subcontinent to put India in control of the first Test at Multan. Sehwag's blistering knock - he brought up 150 off as many balls and later 200 off 222 - exposed the Pakistani bowling attack on a pitch capable of driving fast bowlers to cricket suicide. India galloped to 356 for 2, and the sight of Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar well set will do nothing to help the sagging morale of Pakistan's tired bowlers.

Rahul Dravid, standing in for Sourav Ganguly, who was ruled out with a back injury, did his team the huge favour of winning the toss. That done, Sehwag and Aakash Chopra took over. The two, fire and ice, blunted the three-pronged pace attack. Shoaib Akhtar steamed in and delivered one frustrated bouncer after another. Mohammad Sami found that shortening his run-up did nothing to improve his accuracy. Shabbir Ahmed tried and tried, but even his high-armed action did not threaten the batsmen as there wasn't a hint of movement in the air or off the pitch.

In the city of saints, Sehwag (228 not out, 271 balls, 30 fours, five sixes) carved a name for himself. In Melbourne, on Boxing Day last year, he had fallen five short of the 200 mark, attempting to heave Simon Katich over midwicket to reach the big milestone in a blaze of glory. Today, he spent ten balls on 199. Not a lot, but it seemed an eternity because of the frenetic pace he had set. When he finally worked a weary Abdul Razzaq through the on side to take the runs that pushed him past 200, a weight lifted off his shoulders. The ghost of Melbourne was laid to rest at Multan.

Although the day will be remembered for Sehwag's extraordinary strokes, it dawned as plain as any other. After a fortnight of running from city to city and watching bowlers being plundered mercilessly on flat decks in one-dayers, it was yawning empty stands, white clothes, a red ball, and Test cricket once again. For Sehwag, though, neither the clothes nor the ball matter. On a day like this, he could hit the cover off a golf ball, without a stitch of clothing on his body. When he reached 200, he had made 134 runs just in boundaries. No bowler was spared, no shot left unattempted.



Mohammad Sami got rid of Rahul Dravid on a pitch tailormade for him © AFP



In contrasting fashion, Chopra played his part. To Sehwag's strident lead, Chopra hummed the back-up vocals. He blocked, nudged, dabbed, pushed and then blocked as the bowlers pounded in, hoping, more than expecting, a wicket to fall. Chopra stonewalled for 121 balls, reaching 42, before he inside-edged Saqlain Mushtaq to the man under the helmet on the leg side (160 for 1). The wicket fell against the run of play, but only after Chopra had accomplished the task assigned to him. He had provided the solidity at the top of the order that allowed Sehwag to lash 111 runs in an opening stand of 160.

Dravid fell soon after, 94 runs short of a century, as one person cheekily put it. The pitch, and conditions, were tailormade for Dravid. Had he got his eye in, you would have needed a forklift to drag him away from the wicket. Yet, when he was just 6 he miscued Sami to Yasir Hameed at square leg (173 for 2).

That was the last time the thin crowd of Pakistan supporters rose to their feet to cheer one of their own. Sehwag was joined by Tendulkar, and they made sure that they did not undo the good work of the first session. Tendulkar ensured that no wickets fell, encouraged Sehwag to curb his natural instincts just enough to enjoy a prolonged stay at the crease, and stamped his class on every checked drive and flailing cut. There was an air of resignation to Pakistan's bowlers every time Tendulkar faced up. While Sehwag's savagery, executed with the smile and wink of an inebriated pirate, always appeared to give the bowlers a chance, Tendulkar's mastery only reminded them of the heat and the dust.

On a day when records tumbled, India assumed a vice-like grip on this match. When the second day begins, the screws will tighten, as Tendulkar resumes on 60 and Sehwag continues from 228. It does not rain in Multan, so Pakistan really have little to pray for in this city of saints. Inzamam-ul-Haq will bristle at the pitch his groundsman has served up, but that won't help at this stage. He might not forgive Sami and Saqlain for dropping Sehwag soon after he had reached fifty. That won't help either. All Pakistan can do is restrict the damage, and then inflict some of their own when their turn to bat comes around.

Posted 29 Mar 2004

Rain Man says
Sehwag is done with his 300, so this 228 news is old now
Posted 29 Mar 2004

~Fragi~ says
309 ct by taufeeq bowled by Sami
Posted 29 Mar 2004

Rain Man says
nice..mein to samajh raha tha, 400 karega
Posted 29 Mar 2004

Day 2

Pakistan 42 for 0 (Farhat 17*, Taufeeq 20*) trail India 675 for 5 dec (Sehwag 309, Tendulkar 194*) by 633 runs
Live scorecard
An uphill battle

Virender Sehwag's record-breaking 309 and India's surprise declaration with Sachin Tendulkar stranded on 194 were the talking points of the second day's play. As the third day begins, the focus shifts onto the bowlers. Having scored a mammoth 675 for 5 declared, the batting has done its job. From this point on in the Test match, it is India's bowlers who have to pull their weight.

Pakistan's batsmen, for their part, must show that they have the ability to fight back after being kept out in the field for long. They must make the best of the pitch at this stage, as it is only going to get more difficult to bat on. The ball will stop on the batsman on the fourth and fifth days and there is even a possibility of uneven bounce.

Taufeeq Umar and Yasir Hasmeed showed in the dying moments of the third day that it was possible to build partnerships, and resist the bowlers, if you are patient. The two openers, both young, have a great opportunity to make tall scores and a name for themselves. Pakistan reached 42 for no loss without major scares, but the follow on target of 476 is still a long way off.

Posted 30 Mar 2004

day 3
Pakistan fight back after early losses


Pakistan 137 for 2 (Hameed 36*, Inzamam 31*) trail India 675 for 5 dec by 538 runs
Live scorecard
The war of attrition began in earnest on the third day. India's bowlers chipped away at the Pakistani batting line-up and wedged out two vital wickets in the first session of play. With 675 runs behind them, the bowlers had the confidence to simply put the ball in the right places and wait for the batsmen to make a mistake. At lunch, Pakistan were 137 for 2, with Inzamam-ul-Haq and Yasir Hameed holding fort.

Rahul Dravid used his bowlers well - he began with Zaheer Khan bowling flat out, then defended with Irfan Pathan and Lakshmipathy Balaji. The pressure applied by India's young bowlers meant that Anil Kumble could attack relentlessly.

In theory, it sounds simple - bowl wicket to wicket, just short of a driving length, and batsmen will be stifled. Few bowlers other than Glenn McGrath have been able cut out the loose deliveries and put this theory into practice. For a patch of play on the morning of the third day, Pathan and Balaji executed this task with such accuracy that two quick wickets resulted.

The first to go was Taufeeq Umar (23), who drove at a Pathan delivery that slanted away from him, and only managed an edge to Dravid in the slips (58 for 1). Just 26 balls later, India had their second breakthrough. Balaji got a delivery to pitch on the stumps and straighten enough to beat Imran Farhat's bat. Farhat, who was trying to work the ball to the on side, missed and was trapped in front (73 for 2).

Hameed (36, 65 balls, 5 fours) continued from where he left off in the one-dayers. He used deft touches - a classic late cut off Sachin Tendulkar was a case in point - to keep the strike turning over. Every single was cheered by the thin crowd populating the Elahi Brothers enclosure as it brought the local hero on strike. Inzamam can play the deft touches as good as anyone else, but did not bother. He was fed with several loose deliveries and almost every one disappeared to the fence. There was a ferocious square cut, and a flowing straight drive in his knock of 31. Pakistan need someone to get stuck in and make a big one like Virender Sehwag did. Inzamam is certainly the man for the job. At lunch Pakistan reached 137 for 2, and still trailed India by 538 runs.





Inzamam-ul-Haq was in fine touch, and helped revive Pakistan's innings
Posted 30 Mar 2004

~Fragi~ says
ah 6 gone
Posted 31 Mar 2004

Rain Man says
forget it, we're gona lose the test matches as well...
Posted 31 Mar 2004

MrDeath says
this is gonna drawn..
Posted 31 Mar 2004

~Fragi~ says
following on
Posted 31 Mar 2004

Rain Man says
Posted 31 Mar 2004

¥Ä§ ÐËViL said:

forget it, we're gona lose the test matches as well...



dont be hopeless
Posted 31 Mar 2004

day 3
Pakistan struggle against determined Indians

Pakistan 364 for 6 (Hameed 91, Inzamam 77) trail India 675 for 5 dec by 311 runs
Scorecard





Yasir Hameed's 91 had class stamped all over it, and his cover-drives, in particular, were a treat © AFP




India inched closer to getting themselves into a position that would allow them to dream of a first-ever Test win in Pakistan. They ended a day of gently seesawing fortunes with the advantage, having taken six Pakistani wickets at intermittent intervals throughout the day, the last coming off the final delivery. India haven't quite got a grip on this game, but there were signs of Pakistan choking under the sheer volume of runs. Yet they might just have kept India out in the field long enough to make them think twice about enforcing the follow-on even if they do have the option. At 364 for 6 by the close, Pakistan were 311 runs adrift of the mammoth Indian total.


The two best batsmen in the Pakistan team, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Yousuf Youhana, were both extremely unhappy at being given out by Simon Taufel. Inzamam was at the wrong end of a bat-pad catch while Youhana was dismissed trying to flick a ball slipping well down the leg side. On a flat pitch, under the glare of the exceedingly hot Multan sun, it was not easy for the bowlers, and they were grateful for any help that they received. But it was not all bad news for Pakistan: Yasir Hameed batted exceedingly well for his 91, while Abdul Razzaq (who was still there when stumps were drawn) and Moin Khan struck some telling blows towards the end of the day. They took the aggressive route to survival, and it came off for them.



India gained the early advantage by removing both openers in the first session, but Hameed and Inzamam looked to be batting Pakistan towards safety when the persevering Anil Kumble struck by removing Inzamam before tea, and then Irfan Pathan doubled India's joy by dismissing Hameed.

Inzamam was deeply disappointed, but had to go when he was adjudged caught at forward short leg for 77, with 13 fours. Hameed, whose assured batting delighted the small crowd, was unlucky to miss out on a century. Hameed made 91 (151 balls, 14 fours) and richly deserved a century just for the assured manner in which he handled everything that was bowled at him.







So all the good work of the second session was undone by a brief passage of play in which two wickets fell in the space of ten runs. Until he was given out, Inzamam had handled the barrage of around-the-wicket balls with aplomb. He cut out the horizontal-bat shots and defended with bat and pad held close together. When the ball was pitched well outside the leg stump he nonchalantly kicked it away. The fall of Inzamam's wicket, with the score on 233, dented Pakistan's hopes of avoiding the follow-on.

Shortly afterwards, Hameed tickled Pathan through to Parthiv Patel (243 for 4), to give India a decided boost on a day when bowling was a thankless task. Despite a couple of accurate spells of bowling by Pathan and Lakshmipathy Balaji, India's attack never threatened to run through the Pakistan batting line-up. Zaheer Khan was not at his best and Anil Kumble, though enthusiastic, did not trouble the batsmen consistently.

But, thanks to the discipline showed early on, India had prised out two wickets in the morning session. The first to go was Taufeeq Umar (23), who was forced to push at a Pathan delivery that cut away, and only managed an edge to Rahul Dravid in the slips (58 for 1). Just 26 balls later, India had their second breakthrough when Balaji got one to pitch on the stumps and straighten enough to beat Imran Farhat's bat. Farhat (38), who was trying to work the ball to the on side, missed and was trapped in front (73 for 2).

Zaheer improved steadily through the day, but success eluded him till the 94th over of the innings, when he had Youhana (35) caught behind down the leg side (321 for 5). India then had to wait till the last ball of the day for their next wicket. Sachin Tendulkar set Moin up perfectly, and bowled him for 17 with a googly that ensured India ended the day on a high (364 for 6). Razzaq, battling it out on 47, will have to wait till tomorrow to meet his partner.

Pakistan 364 for 6 (Hameed 91, Inzamam 77) trail India 675 for 5 dec by 311 runs
Scorecard



Yasir Hameed's 91 had class stamped all over it, and his cover-drives, in particular, were a treat © AFP



India inched closer to getting themselves into a position that would allow them to dream of a first-ever Test win in Pakistan. They ended a day of gently seesawing fortunes with the advantage, having taken six Pakistani wickets at intermittent intervals throughout the day, the last coming off the final delivery. India haven't quite got a grip on this game, but there were signs of Pakistan choking under the sheer volume of runs. Yet they might just have kept India out in the field long enough to make them think twice about enforcing the follow-on even if they do have the option. At 364 for 6 by the close, Pakistan were 311 runs adrift of the mammoth Indian total.

The two best batsmen in the Pakistan team, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Yousuf Youhana, were both extremely unhappy at being given out by Simon Taufel. Inzamam was at the wrong end of a bat-pad catch while Youhana was dismissed trying to flick a ball slipping well down the leg side. On a flat pitch, under the glare of the exceedingly hot Multan sun, it was not easy for the bowlers, and they were grateful for any help that they received. But it was not all bad news for Pakistan: Yasir Hameed batted exceedingly well for his 91, while Abdul Razzaq (who was still there when stumps were drawn) and Moin Khan struck some telling blows towards the end of the day. They took the aggressive route to survival, and it came off for them.

India gained the early advantage by removing both openers in the first session, but Hameed and Inzamam looked to be batting Pakistan towards safety when the persevering Anil Kumble struck by removing Inzamam before tea, and then Irfan Pathan doubled India's joy by dismissing Hameed.

Inzamam was deeply disappointed, but had to go when he was adjudged caught at forward short leg for 77, with 13 fours. Hameed, whose assured batting delighted the small crowd, was unlucky to miss out on a century. Hameed made 91 (151 balls, 14 fours) and richly deserved a century just for the assured manner in which he handled everything that was bowled at him.



Irfan Pathan drew first blood for India, and then removed the dangerous Yasir Hameed © Getty



So all the good work of the second session was undone by a brief passage of play in which two wickets fell in the space of ten runs. Until he was given out, Inzamam had handled the barrage of around-the-wicket balls with aplomb. He cut out the horizontal-bat shots and defended with bat and pad held close together. When the ball was pitched well outside the leg stump he nonchalantly kicked it away. The fall of Inzamam's wicket, with the score on 233, dented Pakistan's hopes of avoiding the follow-on.

Shortly afterwards, Hameed tickled Pathan through to Parthiv Patel (243 for 4), to give India a decided boost on a day when bowling was a thankless task. Despite a couple of accurate spells of bowling by Pathan and Lakshmipathy Balaji, India's attack never threatened to run through the Pakistan batting line-up. Zaheer Khan was not at his best and Anil Kumble, though enthusiastic, did not trouble the batsmen consistently.

But, thanks to the discipline showed early on, India had prised out two wickets in the morning session. The first to go was Taufeeq Umar (23), who was forced to push at a Pathan delivery that cut away, and only managed an edge to Rahul Dravid in the slips (58 for 1). Just 26 balls later, India had their second breakthrough when Balaji got one to pitch on the stumps and straighten enough to beat Imran Farhat's bat. Farhat (38), who was trying to work the ball to the on side, missed and was trapped in front (73 for 2).

Zaheer improved steadily through the day, but success eluded him till the 94th over of the innings, when he had Youhana (35) caught behind down the leg side (321 for 5). India then had to wait till the last ball of the day for their next wicket. Sachin Tendulkar set Moin up perfectly, and bowled him for 17 with a googly that ensured India ended the day on a high (364 for 6). Razzaq, battling it out on 47, will have to wait till tomorrow to meet his partner.






India inched closer to getting themselves into a position that would allow them to dream of a first-ever Test win in Pakistan. They ended a day of gently seesawing fortunes with the advantage, having taken six Pakistani wickets at intermittent intervals throughout the day, the last coming off the final delivery. India haven't quite got a grip on this game, but there were signs of Pakistan choking under the sheer volume of runs. Yet they might just have kept India out in the field long enough to make them think twice about enforcing the follow-on even if they do have the option. At 364 for 6 by the close, Pakistan were 311 runs adrift of the mammoth Indian total.

The two best batsmen in the Pakistan team, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Yousuf Youhana, were both extremely unhappy at being given out by Simon Taufel. Inzamam was at the wrong end of a bat-pad catch while Youhana was dismissed trying to flick a ball slipping well down the leg side. On a flat pitch, under the glare of the exceedingly hot Multan sun, it was not easy for the bowlers, and they were grateful for any help that they received. But it was not all bad news for Pakistan: Yasir Hameed batted exceedingly well for his 91, while Abdul Razzaq (who was still there when stumps were drawn) and Moin Khan struck some telling blows towards the end of the day. They took the aggressive route to survival, and it came off for them.

India gained the early advantage by removing both openers in the first session, but Hameed and Inzamam looked to be batting Pakistan towards safety when the persevering Anil Kumble struck by removing Inzamam before tea, and then Irfan Pathan doubled India's joy by dismissing Hameed.

Inzamam was deeply disappointed, but had to go when he was adjudged caught at forward short leg for 77, with 13 fours. Hameed, whose assured batting delighted the small crowd, was unlucky to miss out on a century. Hameed made 91 (151 balls, 14 fours) and richly deserved a century just for the assured manner in which he handled everything that was bowled at him.








Shortly afterwards, Hameed tickled Pathan through to Parthiv Patel (243 for 4), to give India a decided boost on a day when bowling was a thankless task. Despite a couple of accurate spells of bowling by Pathan and Lakshmipathy Balaji, India's attack never threatened to run through the Pakistan batting line-up. Zaheer Khan was not at his best and Anil Kumble, though enthusiastic, did not trouble the batsmen consistently.

But, thanks to the discipline showed early on, India had prised out two wickets in the morning session. The first to go was Taufeeq Umar (23), who was forced to push at a Pathan delivery that cut away, and only managed an edge to Rahul Dravid in the slips (58 for 1). Just 26 balls later, India had their second breakthrough when Balaji got one to pitch on the stumps and straighten enough to beat Imran Farhat's bat. Farhat (38), who was trying to work the ball to the on side, missed and was trapped in front (73 for 2).





Posted 31 Mar 2004

~Fragi~ says
hum harney waley hain .. aaj stadium jana tha ..per ...khkeekekke kiya fiada hoga
Posted 01 Apr 2004

Reply to Topic