As Monty Panesar made a triumphant Test match return something nagged away at England's sense of well-being. That something was Cheteshwar Pujara and by the close of an absorbing first day in Mumbai even Panesar had to play second best to India's new batting sensation.
Pujara has now batted for more than 15 hours without England discovering
how to dismiss him, following his unbeaten double century in Ahmedabad
with another hundred - and the promise of more to come - at Wankhede
Stadium as he countered a turning pitch with another innings of poise
and certainty.
The first new ball unveiled a story of Pujara's watchfulness as Panesar
made a jubilant return with four wickets and half India's side were
dismissed for 119. But the second new ball suggested that the batsman
had emerged the stronger when to chants of Pu-ja-ra, Pu-ja-ra, he moved
off 99 by pulling James Anderson's second delivery resoundingly through
square leg. It is only the second Test of a four-Test series but there
is a sense in Indian cricket of a changing order.
Pujara's tranquil progress has echoed throughout the early stages of
this series. There was some bounce to excite England's pace bowlers and
predictably he was tested with the short ball, but he emerged
comfortably enough to suggest he will be an India batsman who can also
prosper overseas. An unbroken stand of 97 with R Ashwin, whose unbeaten
60 took only 84 balls, completed India's escape.
Anderson was inches away from having Pujara caught at point by Nick
Compton, plunging forward, on 17, and he also survived a hard chance to
Anderson at gully when 60, this time off Panesar. His most prolonged
discomfort came on 94 when England appealed, legitimately enough, for a
catch off Alastair Cook's toe at short leg but the umpires called for TV
evidence which showed that the ball had also struck the ground.
MS Dhoni unashamedly wants Indian Test pitches to turn from the outset
and the captain got just what he wanted - an old Wankhede pitch, used
only three weeks ago, ragging and bouncing. It was to Indian cricket
what a blatantly green seamer at Trent Bridge might be in England, a
deliberate attempt to take the opposition out of their comfort zone.
"If it does not turn, I can come and criticise again," Dhoni had chirped
prior to the game as he warned that he did not expect the sort of slog
faced by India's spinners in Ahmedabad. There will be no angry exchanges
with the groundsman, no disappointed email to the BCCI.
But if Dhoni would have found this dry, threadbare surface, with the
ball going through the top on the first afternoon, much to his liking,
England's spinners were uplifted by the surface, with Panesar, who,
after being controversially omitted from England's Test side in
Ahmedabad, ending the day with 4 for 91 in 34 overs. It was quite a
collection, with Virender Sehwag, in his 100th Test, and Sachin
Tendulkar bowled in successive overs.
It is rare to see Panesar and Graeme Swann in tandem and the contrast
was an engrossing one: Panesar, bowling his left-arm spin with a
deliberative air, as if any lapse in accuracy would startle him; Swann,
forever jack the lad behind the dark glasses, his own concentration
never quite overcoming the suspicion that he had just emerged from a
crafty cigarette behind the bike sheds.
Swann played his part, bowling Yuvraj Singh for a second-ball duck by
coming wide of the crease and straightening one, but it was Panesar's
return that captured the attention. He began nervously, conceding two
boundaries in his first over and initially overpitched, but soon found a
pace and control that allowed him to settle.
If the removal of Sehwag was commonplace, a full delivery which bowled
him off his pads as he flicked lazily to leg, his dismissal of Tendulkar
was a gem, turn and bounce to strike his off stump, ensuring that there
would be no rush into Churchgate Station on the Mumbai trains as the
day progressed. Pujara's legside steers have yet to bring the
worshippers flocking.
Sehwag had been in contented mood before the start, fielding
congratulations on reaching his milestone, but his innings - 30 from 43
balls - never convinced. Twice in one over, Anderson almost defeated two
uncertain half-bat pushes, Sehwag first inside-edging past leg stump
and then beating second slip off the outside edge. Panesar removed him
at the start of his fifth over, moving his short leg to gully and
perhaps benefiting as Sehwag sensed the ball fired in at his pads
represented easy pickings on the legside.
Panesar's third wicket was that of Virat Kohli. By mid-afternoon, the
pitch was already turning, and with reasonable pace. A puff of dust as
the ball broke through the surface was a forewarning for Kohli that his
drive to short extra cover was about to end in disaster. Anderson's
inswing had removed Gautam Gambhir second ball of the day. Anderson had
a half-decent day; Stuart Broad did nothing to allay doubts about his
worth on Indian pitches.
After their nine-wicket defeat in Ahmedabad, England had at least
indicated that another lost toss would not automatically heap more
misery upon them. They have never lost more than eight Tests in a
calendar year, but in 2012 they have already lost seven and their
shortcomings in Asia have been largely responsible.
For a side which began the year ranked as the No. 1 Test side in the
world, it is a rapid reversal. With three Tests remaining in the series,
their reputation is on the line. At least by selecting Panesar the
balance of their side possessed some logic rather than the Englishman
Abroad stereotype they had relied on in Motera, but the last hour did
not go well for them. They need to find a way to break Pujara's tread.
As Monty Panesar made a triumphant Test match return something nagged away at England's sense of well-being. That something was Cheteshwar Pujara and by the close of an absorbing first day in Mumbai even Panesar had to play second best to India's new batting sensation.
Pujara has now batted for more than 15 hours without England discovering
how to dismiss him, following his unbeaten double century in Ahmedabad
with another hundred - and the promise of more to come - at Wankhede
Stadium as he countered a turning pitch with another innings of poise
and certainty.
The first new ball unveiled a story of Pujara's watchfulness as Panesar
made a jubilant return with four wickets and half India's side were
dismissed for 119. But the second new ball suggested that the batsman
had emerged the stronger when to chants of Pu-ja-ra, Pu-ja-ra, he moved
off 99 by pulling James Anderson's second delivery resoundingly through
square leg. It is only the second Test of a four-Test series but there
is a sense in Indian cricket of a changing order.
Pujara's tranquil progress has echoed throughout the early stages of
this series. There was some bounce to excite England's pace bowlers and
predictably he was tested with the short ball, but he emerged
comfortably enough to suggest he will be an India batsman who can also
prosper overseas. An unbroken stand of 97 with R Ashwin, whose unbeaten
60 took only 84 balls, completed India's escape.
Anderson was inches away from having Pujara caught at point by Nick
Compton, plunging forward, on 17, and he also survived a hard chance to
Anderson at gully when 60, this time off Panesar. His most prolonged
discomfort came on 94 when England appealed, legitimately enough, for a
catch off Alastair Cook's toe at short leg but the umpires called for TV
evidence which showed that the ball had also struck the ground.
MS Dhoni unashamedly wants Indian Test pitches to turn from the outset
and the captain got just what he wanted - an old Wankhede pitch, used
only three weeks ago, ragging and bouncing. It was to Indian cricket
what a blatantly green seamer at Trent Bridge might be in England, a
deliberate attempt to take the opposition out of their comfort zone.
"If it does not turn, I can come and criticise again," Dhoni had chirped
prior to the game as he warned that he did not expect the sort of slog
faced by India's spinners in Ahmedabad. There will be no angry exchanges
with the groundsman, no disappointed email to the BCCI.
But if Dhoni would have found this dry, threadbare surface, with the
ball going through the top on the first afternoon, much to his liking,
England's spinners were uplifted by the surface, with Panesar, who,
after being controversially omitted from England's Test side in
Ahmedabad, ending the day with 4 for 91 in 34 overs. It was quite a
collection, with Virender Sehwag, in his 100th Test, and Sachin
Tendulkar bowled in successive overs.
It is rare to see Panesar and Graeme Swann in tandem and the contrast
was an engrossing one: Panesar, bowling his left-arm spin with a
deliberative air, as if any lapse in accuracy would startle him; Swann,
forever jack the lad behind the dark glasses, his own concentration
never quite overcoming the suspicion that he had just emerged from a
crafty cigarette behind the bike sheds.
Swann played his part, bowling Yuvraj Singh for a second-ball duck by
coming wide of the crease and straightening one, but it was Panesar's
return that captured the attention. He began nervously, conceding two
boundaries in his first over and initially overpitched, but soon found a
pace and control that allowed him to settle.
If the removal of Sehwag was commonplace, a full delivery which bowled
him off his pads as he flicked lazily to leg, his dismissal of Tendulkar
was a gem, turn and bounce to strike his off stump, ensuring that there
would be no rush into Churchgate Station on the Mumbai trains as the
day progressed. Pujara's legside steers have yet to bring the
worshippers flocking.
Sehwag had been in contented mood before the start, fielding
congratulations on reaching his milestone, but his innings - 30 from 43
balls - never convinced. Twice in one over, Anderson almost defeated two
uncertain half-bat pushes, Sehwag first inside-edging past leg stump
and then beating second slip off the outside edge. Panesar removed him
at the start of his fifth over, moving his short leg to gully and
perhaps benefiting as Sehwag sensed the ball fired in at his pads
represented easy pickings on the legside.
Panesar's third wicket was that of Virat Kohli. By mid-afternoon, the
pitch was already turning, and with reasonable pace. A puff of dust as
the ball broke through the surface was a forewarning for Kohli that his
drive to short extra cover was about to end in disaster. Anderson's
inswing had removed Gautam Gambhir second ball of the day. Anderson had
a half-decent day; Stuart Broad did nothing to allay doubts about his
worth on Indian pitches.
After their nine-wicket defeat in Ahmedabad, England had at least
indicated that another lost toss would not automatically heap more
misery upon them. They have never lost more than eight Tests in a
calendar year, but in 2012 they have already lost seven and their
shortcomings in Asia have been largely responsible.
For a side which began the year ranked as the No. 1 Test side in the
world, it is a rapid reversal. With three Tests remaining in the series,
their reputation is on the line. At least by selecting Panesar the
balance of their side possessed some logic rather than the Englishman
Abroad stereotype they had relied on in Motera, but the last hour did
not go well for them. They need to find a way to break Pujara's tread.
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