Expressindia> Sports
Group Websites
Expressindia
Indian Express
Financial Express
Screen
Loksatta
Channels
Blogs
Astrology
Shopping
Hotels
Tenders
Classifieds
ExpressQnA


MOST READ

Ads by Google



Font Size - -A +A

India has last laugh after a bitter summer: Media

Agencies

Posted online: Wednesday, March 05, 2008 at 1000 hrs IST
      

Melbourne, March 5: : Australian media again highlighted off spinner Harbhajan Singh as India claimed epoch-making tri-series victory at Brisbane and described the young side's feat as having "the last laugh after a bitter summer of explosive tensions".

Harbhajan, who had hit headlines throughout the long tour for being at the centre of off-field controversies, proved to be the nemesis of Australian all rounder Andrew Symonds, claiming him in both the tri-series finals while also cheaply removing another detractor Matthew Hayden at Sydney.

"As cricket became a contact sport, Australia were pitchforked out of the finals in straight sets by an Indian side which had the last laugh after a bitter summer of explosive tensions," said leading newspaper The Daily

Telegraph.

Australian Associated Press reported the home side's plight under the title 'Australia sunk in straight sets' after Ricky Ponting's men lost to India by nine runs and 2-0 in the best-of-three finals.

"Instead of a fitting one-day farewell for retiring wicketkeeper (Adam) Gilchrist, it was controversial spinner Harbhajan Singh who laughed last and loudest, lapping up the triumph on the Gabba boundary in front of ecstatic expat fans," the paper said.

Heandline of the main article in another national daily The Australian aptly summed up the tour as it said - 'A summer of spite ends in Indian glory'.

"A fresh, young India beat Australia by nine runs in last night's ultimately gripping second final at Brisbane's Gabba to wrap up the competition after winning by six wickets in Sydney on Sunday," the Australian wrote.

"India's wild celebrations matched those of Australia after winning a dramatic second Test in Sydney and India after its historic third Test victory in Perth," it said.

'Herald Sun' narrated similar sentiments after the Indian triumph, saying 'Rough night as Indians reign'.

"Andrew Symonds shoulder-charged a streaker but it was his nemesis Harbhajan Singh and his Indian teammates who landed the knockout blow as Australia crashed out in straight sets in the tri-series finals at the Gabba last night," it said.

Courier Mail analysed the defeat in which it concluded that "the gap between Australia and the rest has closed to the point where the national selectors must be getting sweaty palms."

"The Indian team which trumped Australia last night contains just one player Sachin Tendulkar over 30. Australia, by contrast, had just three players James Hopes, Michael Clarke and Mitchell Johnson under 30.

"Earlier this week, India stormed to victory in the under-19 World Cup. They are a nation on the rise. Australia are not tumbling into any sort of abyss but they are in slight decline.

"Given the quality of their retiring stars, it simply had to happen even given the continued excellence of Matthew Hayden, Mike Hussey and Michael Clarke and the emergence of late-blooming James Hopes."

Ads by Google
Rate this article
 
Post Comment :
Name * Message *
Email ID *
Subject *
TERMS OF USE:
The views represented here are not neccesarily endorsed by www.expressindia.com and its allied websites. All messages will be moderated and no message that has inflammatory, abusive, derogatory language or any language deemed unfit for publication by the editor will be displayed. Though it will be endeavoured that as many messages as possible be displayed, there will be time lag between the submission and publication of the messages. The website reserves the right to publish or reject any message.
I agree to the terms of use.
  • Comments
    Hide Comments
Indian Media's fixation of Western Media
by Srini Parthasarathy on 2008-03-05 13:45:32.803249+05:30
I am not sure why the Indian media is so concerned on what the western media thinks of its players etc. The other way never happens. From my experience in the USA and Australia; the western media at best is partisan and never takes the right stand. It prefers the popular view. Just ignore them.
Reply | Forword | Report Abuse
Victory at Gabba
by megh on 2008-03-05 12:39:42.865001+05:30
well for many of us indians, pakistan's contemptuous place has been replaced by Australia; After loosing the test series and the 2 nation ODI it has come to great relief that Young team India managed to beat australia in the tri-series. It was a job well done and put the aussies in the right corner; probably they will need to rethink of who is the obnoxious weed! i have failed to comprehend with the difference between someone calling some one a monkey and being called a weed (?), which is a form of ameoba.It was also good to know the hockey victory by 7-3 against australia.
Reply | Forword | Report Abuse
Still number 1
by Brian on 2008-03-05 14:17:51.555184+05:30
11 games played, 4 wins to India, 1 draw, 1 no result and 5 wins to Australia, we are still in the winning corner.
Reply | Forword | Report Abuse
yeah yeah whatever
by vishal on 2008-03-06 21:46:09.879865+05:30
true ..but you must be feeling the squeeze cause your corner has become much tighter now :-)
Reply | Forword | Report Abuse
Featured Ads
© 2008 Indian Express Newspapers (Mumbai) Ltd. All rights reserved
The Indian Express Group | Advertise With Us | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Work With Us | Site Map