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A chase to remember

Bharat Sundaresan

Posted: Nov 06, 2009 at 1130 hrs IST
      

Hyderabad: The final ball of the fifth over during India’s chase in Hyderabad may have had little significance to the eventual outcome of the match, but for the capacity crowd at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, what had transpired before it and what was to follow were from two different worlds.

When Sachin Tendulkar flicked Ben Hilfenhaus through mid-wicket for three runs, he became the first batsman in the history of one-day cricket to reach 17,000 runs. It was the moment that the people of Hyderabad had waited for with fingers crossed, and when it arrived, the celebration was absolutely no-holds-barred.

After all, with India chasing an improbable 351 against a fired-up Aussie outfit, it seemed like the only real hurrah up for grabs as far as the 30,000 spectators at Uppal went. Little did they know that Tendulkar had a special surprise up his sleeve to celebrate the milestone.

Australia, batting first after winning the toss on a good pitch that offered consistent bounce, showed that they were up for the challenge here. Shane Watson was the early aggressor, his 89-ball 93 setting the pace for Australia. Ricky Ponting scored a run-a-ball 45 while Michael Hussey and Cameron White came out all guns blazing. All this time, Shaun Marsh held one end up, starting slowly and opening up towards the end, as his 112 and the late charge took Australia to 350. The last time the two teams met on a pitch with even bounce was during the second one-dayer in Nagpur, and led by Mahendra Singh Dhoni, India went on to post a mammoth 354 for seven. Ponting & Co had returned the favour.

In Nagpur, Australia’s chase had almost crumbled before it began. In Hyderabad, even as wickets fell at one end, Tendulkar seemed determined to do it alone.

The much talked-about seven runs behind him, Tendulkar broke the shackles and began marshalling India towards their gargantuan task. The boundaries seemed to flow that much easier and his 92nd half-century came off 47 deliveries. The well-set Virender Sehwag had once again failed to convert his start, while Gautam Gambhir, Dhoni and Yuvraj Singh soon followed suit.

Memories from the ’90s came floating back as Tendulkar fought a lone battle. The cover-drives, the slashes over point and the flicks through mid-wicket kept flowing from Tendulkar’s blade and he even danced down the track to deposit Nathan Hauritz over the sightscreen twice on the trot.

Suresh Raina walked in and, after being dropped off the first ball he faced, decided to put his head down. For the hour or so he spent in the middle, he had the best view of a masterpiece being constructed. Tendulkar brought up his 45th century off 81 balls with 10 boundaries and three sixes. He wasn’t finished though, and as the runs kept coming, it suddenly seemed as if the magical night would have a fairy-tale ending after all.

But with India needing 19 off their last three overs, the dream was over. Tendulkar, who had by then scored a scintillating 175, attempted an uncharacteristic scoop off Clint McKay and this time it ballooned to short fine-leg. The equation was still achievable, but the belief seemed to have walked off the field with Tendulkar. Some helter-skelter running, a few mindless heaves, three more wickets, and India had lost by three runs.

For years now, Tendulkar — despite the unparalleled achievements — has been forced to bear the criticism for not leading India to victory on enough occasions while chasing. But last night, even the harshest of cynics would’ve appreciated what was one of the greatest innings played in ODI history.

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  • Comments
     
A chase to remember
by Ravishankar on 2009-11-07 13:08:15.844886+05:30
It is very unfortunate that Sachin gets blamed if India looses. when sachin was out we needed 19 runs of 17 balls and the power play was on. The last 3 wickets could not get these runs. I am immediately recollect the same kind of situation Australia were in the round robin against Pakistan in the Champions Trophy. At that time it was Brett Lee and Haurtiz were at the crease and by taking singles they reached the target and qualified for the Semis. They had the desire to win.Why couldnt Jadeja, Praveen, Nehra and Munaf do the same. It was shoking to find Nehra trying to loft the ball. It did not have enough power to cross the fence for a six because the fielder came runing half way to take the catch. What was needed at that time was to give Praveen the strike. jadeja is fit for Ipl and should stay there or we consider him only a bowler.SA chased 424 agst OZ was built on Gibbs innings but the tail enders did it.We came close to winning because of Sachin. Chasing 350 is no joke.
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Sachin
by Indira venkataraman on 2009-11-07 11:25:53.329625+05:30
It is unfair to criticise Sachin whenever India looses a match despite his huge scores in those matches. It takes 11 other players to contribute to win matches. No doubt Kapil's knock against Zimbabwe in 1983 WC helped us to qualify for the semi finals. But the same Kapil's unwarrented shot in the semi final against England at Mumbai in the 1986 WC prevented us from reaching the finals. Sometimes a player is lucky with a shot and sometimes not. Had we won the 5th ODI everyone would have praised Sachin but since lost all the criticisms. Sachin and Lara are 2 great players who could have won more matches for their countries had they got support from the other end. Win or loss one should be able to appreciate a good performance by a player. The very fact that he is playing for 2 decades prove that he is able to handle the pressure of playing at the international level.
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Sachin doesnt deserve this
by Sumit on 2009-11-07 10:44:03.666041+05:30
Sachin tendulkar at 36 years of age played as if his life is on the line and made a mockery of the aussie attack. But what rubbish by other bastmen like Dhoni, Yuvraj & 4 last bastmen. They couldnt even manage to keep Sachin's head high leave aside India's.
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Everyone remembers the winner not the one who finished just a fraction behind
by Shiva Gopalakrishnan on 2009-11-07 10:05:13.454259+05:30
I cannot fathom Raina getting out when the aussies where at the mercy of Sachin
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Unfortunate
by kris kini on 2009-11-07 09:50:01.155073+05:30
I feel very sorry for Dhoni. Some day if he wins a one day series against Soth Africa then he will be the first Indian captain to win a one day series atleast once against every test cricket playing nation. I wish good luck for Dhoni since this series is still not over.
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