Player of the Match
Player of the Match
  • BATSMEN
    R
    B
    M
    4s
    6s
    SR
    3.5 well, well, that isn't the best of deliveries, but it's got the big wicket of Waugh. Wide line, swinging away almost from the time it leaves the bowler's hand, pitching just short of a good length. Waugh looks to cut, well away from his body, and gets a top-edge that Mongia accepts gleefully. He can be erratic, but he's got the happy knack of picking up wickets, Agarkar 18/1
    20.1 what a bowling option. He has been used before the other specialist spinner, primarily because he is likely to take it away from the two left-hand batsmen. Gilchrist has been a little edgy of late. This time he looks to go back to cut a length ball, but this is not short enough. All he manages is an edge for Mongia to gobble 85/4
    4.1 two in three balls, and Prasad gets the reward for his discipline! Lovely length, probing away in that fifth-stump channel, angling in and possibly straightening just a touch. Ponting strides forward to defend, and gets a thin edge through to Mongia. It was wide enough to leave, possibly, so Ponting probably didn't need to play at it if all he was looking to do was defend. But then, the initial angle may have drawn him into playing 19/2
    5.5 big appeal, and Steve Bucknor walks away from his position, looking uninterested, but he gestures to his square-leg colleague Javed Akhtar... Is he asking him whether that carried to the keeper? Low chance for Mongia after Moody drove with an angled bat at a full one outside off stump. It goes low to Mongia, inches above the ground, and he appears to take it cleanly enough, with both gloves, but he barely appeals, and that might be because Moody hasn't edged it. It's not very clear, but if he has edged it at all, it's come right off the toe-end of the bat. The decision goes up to the third umpire, and I suppose all he's been asked is whether the ball carried. The red light flashes to send Moody on his way 26/3
    27 what a break for India. This partnership is looking dangerous, but all of a sudden these two have ended up at the same end. Bevan gets some width, and cuts this to the right of sweeper-cover. Bevan is always coming back for two but Waugh doesn't respond, never leaves his crease. Laxman sees this, and his throw reaches the bowler's end to run Bevan out. Well he couldn't have seen it and then adjusted the throw but he was always doing the right thing: throwing at Waugh's end should there be a second attempted 121/4
    43 flighted ball on off stump, and Kanitkar picks up Waugh with his last ball to add to the wicket of Gilchrist. Waugh had decided it was time for him to have a proper dip, but he can't quite get the power behind his lofted drive to clear the straight boundary. Agarkar takes a very good catch, sprinting full-tilt to his left at long-on, juggling it once, but not losing his cool despite being on the move 224/6
    47.2 down the track again, making himself plenty of room, and this time he doesn't get to the pitch of Kumble's wrong'un. Looks to hit over deep midwicket, but the ball skews up off the outside half of his bat, and it baloons down to long-on. Lehmann goes for 70 off 59 balls, a brilliant innings no matter what the situation but especially brilliant given the circumstances when he came in to bat 255/7
    48.3 another slower legcutter, wide of off stump, drives it in the air, to the right of sweeper cover, and what's happened there? Big, big mix-up. Martyn wanted the second, he wanted the strike. Warne was slow to catch on, and ended up sending his partner back, by the time it was too late for Martyn to beat Jadeja's throw to Prasad. Not what Australia wanted by any means. 263/8
    not out
    6
    7
    13
    0
    0
    85.71
    49 another slower one, fuller this time and a little wider. Goes hard at it, looking for the big one down the ground, and doesn't middle it at all. Balloons for a simple catch to Kanitkar at long-off. That is Prasad's 100th ODI wicket, and it's appropriate that he gets it with a legcutter 264/9
    not out
    1
    2
    4
    0
    0
    50
    Extras
    10 (b 4, lb 3, nb 1, w 2)
    TOTAL
    272/9 (50 Overs, RR: 5.44)
    Fall of wickets: 1-18 (Mark Waugh, 3.5 ov), 2-19 (Ricky Ponting, 4.1 ov), 3-26 (Tom Moody, 5.5 ov), 4-85 (Adam Gilchrist, 20.1 ov), 5-121 (Michael Bevan, 26.6 ov), 6-224 (Steve Waugh, 42.6 ov), 7-255 (Darren Lehmann, 47.2 ov), 8-263 (Damien Martyn, 48.3 ov), 9-264 (Michael Kasprowicz, 48.6 ov)
    BowlingOMRWEconWDNB
    BKV Prasad1013223.200
    AB Agarkar806127.6222
    A Kumble1014614.600
    HH Kanitkar1005825.801
    RL Sanghvi1004504.500
    VVS Laxman101101100
    SR Tendulkar101201200
  • BATSMEN
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    4s
    6s
    SR
    8.5 they have shut Ganguly down over the last few overs, and now they have got him out too. He rocks back to try to manufacture a pull, but the ball is perhaps not short enough, and he ends up getting a leading edge for a simple catch to mid-on 39/1
    44.3 oh that is a shocker. How can that be out lbw? Kasprowicz has bowled from wide on the crease from around the wicket, and he has been given out lbw. This is the worst decision I have even seen. This is not even full. So there is no way it is physically and scientifically possible for the ball to pitch in line and then cut back enough to be hitting the stumps. This is missing off by a mile. You have to really praise Tendulkar for taking this decision in his stride, and not do the equivalent of snatching a cap from an umpire. This is really abysmal umpiring from Akhtar. Nevertheless a great innings has come to an end, and the crowd sure knows it. I am sure he wanted to see India through, but he has been sawn off, and he accepts the applause just as he is about to exit the scene 248/3
    24.2 back of a length outside off, and is he walking? Seems like it, and it seems as if umpire Akhtar only raised his finger once Mongia started to move. Looks to open his bat face and run it down to third man, and he seems to have got a little tickle through to Gilchrist. Fleming has given Australia the breakthrough they wanted almost as soon as he came back. Mongia goes for a well-made 28 128/2
    47 wide down the leg side. Oh it is not. He has been given out. I am rubbing my eyes here. India are not playing Australia here. They are playing Umpire Akhtar, and coming up short. This is a big wide down the leg side, and apropos of nothing, Akhtar raises his finger to give him out caught behind 261/4
    not out
    11
    14
    19
    0
    0
    78.57
    not out
    6
    2
    6
    1
    0
    300
    Extras
    15 (b 1, lb 7, nb 2, w 5)
    TOTAL
    275/4 (48.3 Overs, RR: 5.67)
    Fall of wickets: 1-39 (Sourav Ganguly, 8.5 ov), 2-128 (Nayan Mongia, 24.2 ov), 3-248 (Sachin Tendulkar, 44.3 ov), 4-261 (Mohammad Azharuddin, 46.6 ov)
    BowlingOMRWEconWDNB
    DW Fleming1014724.700
    MS Kasprowicz1004824.830
    SK Warne1006106.111
    TM Moody9.306306.6300
    ME Waugh302006.6610
    SR Waugh602804.6602

Match Notes