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S. Ram Mahesh
ON CLOUD NINE: Yuvraj Singh has reasons to celebrate after his fighting century on Sunday. - PHOTO: V.V. KRISHNAN.
Harare: The final league match of the Videocon tri-series at the Harare Sports Club on Sunday promised little action for the holiday crowd, which grew progressively noisier and rowdier. Most of the action happened early and off the field. First, Zimbabwe Cricket (ZC) withdrew the contracts of Stuart Carlisle and Barney Rodgers, who ZC said demanded too much. Then, Tatenda Taibu stepped on to the field for the team photograph with his wicket keeping gloves and pads. Sourav Ganguly indicated he had chosen to field not bat. Heath Streak had surgery on Saturday to remove a blood clot in his left shin, and missed the match. Amidst all the brouhaha, India contrived to lose the match before the recalcitrance of youth took over. Yuvraj Singh and M.S. Dhoni played brilliantly putting on 158 in 140 balls to take India to a four-wicket win chasing a surprisingly high 251. While the win had little consequence for the tournament, the momentum it gives India can't be discounted.
Mature performance
Yuvraj's fourth ODI century (120, 124b, 12x4, 1x6), coming close on the heels of buddy Mohammad Kaif's match-winning effort, was sensible and breath-taking in equal measure; the celebrations a trifle more composed than last time around. Dhoni sauntered out with half the side down for 91 and ran hard with a surprisingly mature Yuvraj. Gaps that had earlier seemed like desert mirages, now lost any illusory qualities. Strangely, Taibu persisted with his non-regular bowlers: Sean Williams and Keith Dabengwa. The match could have gone Zimbabwe's way had Taibu managed to stump Dhoni off Williams when the score was 140. The left-armers were man-handled and an equation that threatened to slip away reduced to 47 in 48 balls. Good old-fashioned one-day cricket ones and twos and straight hits in between had taken over.
Tidy day
Dhoni's second successive finishing effort (67, 63b, 1x4, 3x6) followed another tidy day behind the stumps. The gloveman from Jharkhand looked balanced when he stood up to the medium pace of Ganguly and J.P. Yadav. The Indian top-order would have put a recidivist to shame, four wickets falling for 36. Rahul Dravid fell cheaply, as he was bowled again. The Indian vice-captain's role is crucial in chases and his failure doesn't bode well for the final. Kaif could have made way for Suresh Raina, but he played and got a dodgy decision. Venugopala Rao entered the cauldron, without a run to his name on tour so far. Except for a tendency to angle the ball to third-man, with the bat not quite in the recommended position, the man from Andhra looked promising. Till spinners Prosper Utseya and Gavin Ewing tightened the screws, Rao went through a phase where he found fielders inside the circle unerringly. The run-rate mounted, the crowd jibed. Two rushes of blood cost Rao his wicket. First he was dropped off a shot triggered by the situation. Then it was a case of one super sub nailing the other. Dabengwa splattered the stumps after Rao took off for a non-existent single. In a perverse way, it helped India.
Twin strikes
Earlier in the day, Vusimuzi Sibanda and Masakadza, two of Zimbabwe's most talented youngsters, were consumed by debutant R.P. Singh's swerve in one over. The control switch of India's assembly line of swing bowlers seems to have got stuck in the `left-handed' mode. Brendan Taylor's static feet were cause for much mirth and technical pontification. The one time his feet did move, he was caught short of his crease. Yuvraj did an uncanny impression of himself from the match against New Zealand, meeting grass, twisting around and uprooting the middle stump. The last two months have built up a lot of frustration for Taibu. He chose to unleash it on Sunday. The 22-year-old is affable and polite. His strokes were anything but. Ganguly, J.P. Yadav and Harbhajan were clubbed. To Murali Kartik, Taibu went down on a knee as often as a compulsive proposer. Sweeps and reverse sweeps were the outcome. Charles Coventry could have been Clark Kent. Maybe it's the spectacles. Or maybe it's the uninhibited hitting, completely out of sync with the stereotype. The two put on 116 in 137 balls, Zimbabwe's first century partnership of the tournament, before Yadav snuck one through Taibu (71, 97b, 5x4, 2x6). Instead of tempering himself, Coventry put the ball through a window two floors above the sightscreen.
SCOREBOARD Zimbabwe: V. Sibanda lbw b R.P. Singh 1, B. Taylor (run out) 26, H. Masakadza c & b R.P. Singh 0, T. Taibu b Yadav 71, C. Coventry c Kartik b Agarkar 74, A. Blignaut st Dhoni b Harbhajan 41, S. Williams (run out) 8, G. Ewing lbw b Kartik 7, B. Mahwire b Agarkar 2, P. Utseya b Agarkar 0, A. Ireland (not out) 1; Extras (lb-13, w-4, nb-2): 19. Total (in 50 overs): 250. Fall of wickets: 1-4, 2-4, 3-50, 4-166, 5-227, 6-232, 7-246, 8-248, 9-249. India bowling: R.P. Singh 8-1-44-2, Agarkar 10-3-34-3, Yadav 9-1-44-1, Harbhajan 10-0-39-1, Kartik 9-1-52-1, Ganguly 4-1-24-0. Power Play 1: Overs 1 to 10; Power Play 2: Overs 11 to 15; Power Play 3: Overs 16 to 20. India: V. Sehwag b Mahwire 12, S. Ganguly c Sibanda b Ireland 2, M. Kaif lbw b Blignaut 8, R. Dravid b Mahwire 6, Yuvraj c Dabengwa b Blignaut 120, V. Rao (run out) 27, M.S. Dhoni (not out) 67, J.P. Yadav (not out) 0; Extras (lb-1, w-11, nb-1): 13. Total (for six wkts, 48.1 overs) 255. Fall of wickets: 1-15, 2-23, 3-34, 4-36, 5-91, 6-249. Zimbabwe bowling: Mahwire 9.1-0-40-2, Ireland 10-0-59-1, Blignaut 9-0-54-2, Ewing 5-0-23-0, Utseya 6-0-25-0, Williams 5-0-30-0, Dabengwa 4-0-23-0. Power Play 1: Overs 1 to 10; Power Play 2: Overs 11 to 15; Power Play 3: Overs 16 to 20. Super Subs: V. Rao (for R.P. Singh), K. Dabengwa (for B. Taylor after 19 overs).
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