Strauss stars as England dominate
Sunday, 14 December 2008
Andrew Strauss and Paul Collingwood batted England into a commanding 247-run lead with two days remaining in the first Test against India in Chennai, reports BBC.
Strauss, a centurion in the first innings, was 73 and Collingwood 60 in an unbroken 129 for the fourth wicket.
After India had been dismissed for 241 four balls after lunch, England held a lead of 75, but were soon in trouble at 48-3 in their second innings.
But they recovered magnificently to reach 172-3 at stumps.
With a number of deliveries now breaking through a wearing surface, India will not be heartened to hear the record successful run-chase in a Test at the MA Chidambaram Stadium is 155.
And though the 1986 Indians famously tied a match here against Australia by making 347 in the final innings, Monty Panesar and Andrew Flintoff will surely pose more of a threat than Ray Bright and Greg Matthews did 22 years ago.
England's cricket at the start of the day lacked the intensity of the second evening, and for more than an hour India's batsmen Mahendra Dhoni and Harbhajan Singh did very nicely after resuming on 155-6.
Just 10 deliveries into the day, Dhoni smoothly guided Flintoff behind point for four and two overs later pulled him him for another boundary.
Thereafter, it was Harbhajan dominating the scoring - sweeping Panesar twice to the fence and hitting a couple of fours off Steve Harmison.
Dhoni looked solid, and though Harbhajan was playing more riskily he did not look particularly vulnerable and, with England looking a bit tired in the field, India were firmly back in the contest.
But it took just one delivery to change both teams' mindsets. Panesar drifted a ball onto Harbhajan's pads, the batsman edged into his pads, and Ian Bell took a good catch at short-leg.
The pair at put on 75, Harbhajan contributing 40, but next man Zaheer Khan should have departed for a golden duck - umpire Billy Bowden choosing to turn down an excellent Panesar lbw appeal.
Zaheer did not exactly cause England problems, however, as Flintoff began a new spell and soon had him beaten for pace, the lbw appeal this time upheld by the other umpire, Daryl Harper.
Then came the prized wicket of Dhoni (53), who lofted Panesar straight to Kevin Pietersen at long-off. England might have finished it then and there, but Amit Mishra and Ishant Sharma added 22 handy runs and took the Indian innings just beyond the lunch break before Flintoff bowled Mishra.
England began their second innings with great comfort, India once again finding no swing with the new ball.
Sharma over-stepped seven times in six overs, but the delivery that began England's top-order slide was, by inches, legal.
It pitched just outside Alastair Cook's off-stump, held its line, and the batsman could have regarded himself as unfortunate to get a thin edge behind - it was the first delivery that had caused him any trouble.
Having made just 17 runs in the first innings, Ian Bell needed a score, but he propped forward to Mishra's top-spinner without sufficient care and short-leg took the catch.
Dhoni sensed now was the time to take the initiative and as Pietersen sauntered out to begin his innings he immediately brought the left-arm spinner Yuvraj Singh into the attack.
Yuvraj, who had caused Pietersen problems in the one-day series, immediately obliged with a lovely delivery that pitched on middle-and-off and turned a fraction. But Pietersen would still have been desperately disappointed to be out lbw, though there was nothing wrong with the decision.
Strauss, a centurion in the first innings, was 73 and Collingwood 60 in an unbroken 129 for the fourth wicket.
After India had been dismissed for 241 four balls after lunch, England held a lead of 75, but were soon in trouble at 48-3 in their second innings.
But they recovered magnificently to reach 172-3 at stumps.
With a number of deliveries now breaking through a wearing surface, India will not be heartened to hear the record successful run-chase in a Test at the MA Chidambaram Stadium is 155.
And though the 1986 Indians famously tied a match here against Australia by making 347 in the final innings, Monty Panesar and Andrew Flintoff will surely pose more of a threat than Ray Bright and Greg Matthews did 22 years ago.
England's cricket at the start of the day lacked the intensity of the second evening, and for more than an hour India's batsmen Mahendra Dhoni and Harbhajan Singh did very nicely after resuming on 155-6.
Just 10 deliveries into the day, Dhoni smoothly guided Flintoff behind point for four and two overs later pulled him him for another boundary.
Thereafter, it was Harbhajan dominating the scoring - sweeping Panesar twice to the fence and hitting a couple of fours off Steve Harmison.
Dhoni looked solid, and though Harbhajan was playing more riskily he did not look particularly vulnerable and, with England looking a bit tired in the field, India were firmly back in the contest.
But it took just one delivery to change both teams' mindsets. Panesar drifted a ball onto Harbhajan's pads, the batsman edged into his pads, and Ian Bell took a good catch at short-leg.
The pair at put on 75, Harbhajan contributing 40, but next man Zaheer Khan should have departed for a golden duck - umpire Billy Bowden choosing to turn down an excellent Panesar lbw appeal.
Zaheer did not exactly cause England problems, however, as Flintoff began a new spell and soon had him beaten for pace, the lbw appeal this time upheld by the other umpire, Daryl Harper.
Then came the prized wicket of Dhoni (53), who lofted Panesar straight to Kevin Pietersen at long-off. England might have finished it then and there, but Amit Mishra and Ishant Sharma added 22 handy runs and took the Indian innings just beyond the lunch break before Flintoff bowled Mishra.
England began their second innings with great comfort, India once again finding no swing with the new ball.
Sharma over-stepped seven times in six overs, but the delivery that began England's top-order slide was, by inches, legal.
It pitched just outside Alastair Cook's off-stump, held its line, and the batsman could have regarded himself as unfortunate to get a thin edge behind - it was the first delivery that had caused him any trouble.
Having made just 17 runs in the first innings, Ian Bell needed a score, but he propped forward to Mishra's top-spinner without sufficient care and short-leg took the catch.
Dhoni sensed now was the time to take the initiative and as Pietersen sauntered out to begin his innings he immediately brought the left-arm spinner Yuvraj Singh into the attack.
Yuvraj, who had caused Pietersen problems in the one-day series, immediately obliged with a lovely delivery that pitched on middle-and-off and turned a fraction. But Pietersen would still have been desperately disappointed to be out lbw, though there was nothing wrong with the decision.