Fortunes swung in an absorbing opening one-dayer, but it was Pakistan
who held their nerve to record a six-wicket win and go one-up in
Chennai. Junaid Khan had India reeling with a remarkable spell of swing
bowling, MS Dhoni bailed India out with a tenacious, unbeaten century
but the target of 228 wasn't enough to test Pakistan. Nasir Jamshed
played a composed, yet chancy century, but nevertheless took the
responsibility of finishing the job he had started.
The difference was in the way the teams batted against the new ball.
India were put in and ended up losing 5 for 29 by the tenth over. Dhoni
toiled masterfully, fighting off cramps to take India to a respectable
total, but not quite a winning one. Pakistan too looked shaky when they
came out against the moving ball, but ensured they didn't lose wickets
in a clump early, unlike India.
The morning had ingredients you wouldn't normally associate with one-day
cricket in India - morning start, overcast conditions, a green pitch,
moisture. The left-arm seam duo of Junaid and Mohammad Irfan hit the
timber with such regularity that they might well have come out wielding
axes rather than cricket balls. Reputations counted for nothing as
India's top order was exposed for their lack of technique against the
moving ball against two seamers with a combined experience of 15 ODIs.
Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir, Virat Kohli and Yuvraj Singh were all
bowled through the gate, playing down the wrong line to full, swinging
deliveries. Dhoni and Suresh Raina came together at 29 for 5 and focused
on picking up singles rather than counterattacking their way to a
recovery.
The innings could have finished earlier had Misbah not put down Dhoni at
midwicket on 16. The drop was to cost Pakistan 97 runs. The boundaries
had dried up during an attritional phase in which only two boundaries
were scored in the space of nearly 30 overs.
Dhoni's innings was of two contrasting parts. He nudged and poked his
way to fifty off 86 balls, hitting just two boundaries and a six. The
plan was to delay the slog till the final block of ten overs. His next
61 came off just 39 balls. As the innings closed, Dhoni could barely
stand. In a bid to conserve energy, Dhoni focused on hitting out and it
was a blessing in disguise for India as he regularly found the gaps,
helping India ransack an unlikely 81 off the last ten overs.
Dhoni bashed the free hit off Junaid over wide long-on for the first six
of the innings, launched Ajmal out of the ground over long-on and
brought up his century with a six over extra cover. His stand of 125
with Ashwin was India's highest for the seventh wicket. Dhoni's march
towards his century featured an array of shots on both sides of the
wicket, including the helicopter shot, the pull and the squirt past
gully.
India held control at the start of the innings when Mohammad Hafeez
misjudged a viscious inswinger and lost his off stump, giving
Bhuvneshwar Kumar a wicket off his first ball in ODIs. Bhuvneshwar
dismissed a shaky Azhar Ali cheapy to reduce Pakistan to 21 for 2 after
10.2 overs. Thereafter, the initiative slipped from India due to a
combination of bad luck and poor fielding.
Jamshed was let off thrice in his innings, on 7, 24 and 68. He first set
off for a single that should never have happened, scampered back but
there was nobody to back Bhuvneshwar's throw. He was then let off by the
umpire, who failed to spot an inside edge to the pads on its way to
slip. Later, Yuvraj spilled a sitter at point at a time when India were
desperate for a wicket.
In between, Jamshed impressed with his temperament and it helped that he
had the experienced Younis Khan to guide him. The pair focused on
preserving wickets, preferring to keep with the asking rate rather than
exceed it. Younis didn't allow the spinners to settle, picking Yuvraj
for boundaries through the on side. Yuvraj was India's best spinner in
the T20s, but he wasn't as effective today. Raina leaked two sixes in an
over, thereby forcing Dhoni to look at other options.
Ashok Dinda broke the stand when he had Younis chipping a low catch to
Ashwin at midwicket, and he ought to have had Jamshed as well, had
Yuvraj hung on at point. As Jamshed began to tire, Misbah and Shoaib
Malik scored boundaries to take Pakistan closer. Jamshed reached his
century with a pull, drawing comparisons with his innings against
Australia in Abu Dhabi in August, also scored under excessive humidity.
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