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Astle powers New Zealand to victory

S. Ram Mahesh

The Indian bowling, which had a bad day against Zimbabwe, had another

— Photo: V.V. Krishnan

WHIRLWIND KNOCK: Nathan Astle knocked the stuffing out of the Indians with his attacking batting.

HARARE: Yet again, the Law of Averages and Murphy's Law didn't see eye to eye. Fifteen losses in the last 20 finals meant India was overdue, said the Law of Averages. Murphy's Law countered saying as far as India and finals go, everything will go wrong.

It did. And New Zealand took full advantage courtesy a Nathan Astle (115 not out, 131b, 13x4, 1x6) hundred to win by six wickets and lift the Videocon Cup at the Harare Sports Club on Tuesday.

After India had — in fits and starts — reached 276, the Black Caps chased it down with consummate ease. The Indian bowling, which had a bad day against Zimbabwe, had another. The disappointing aspect was this less-touted flank had looked potent in the league phase and the feeling was the batting needed to click for India's problems to disappear.

On Tuesday, Irfan Pathan, Ashish Nehra and Ajit Agarkar had problems with their radars — straying on the legs or serving it up wide for variety. Stephen Fleming and Astle plundered and prospered as the run-rate hovered close to ten in the early stages.

Fleming chose to explore the whole dial, hitting Pathan for five fours in the fifth over. Not to be outdone, best mate Astle picked Agarkar for three boundaries. Indian shoulders slumped as the pair

galloped along. Lest someone think of this an un-aesthetic ambush, Fleming put elbows and torso together for an exquisite straight drive.

Virender Sehwag, who had matched the Kiwi pair earlier, stemmed the leak with two quick wickets. But Scott Styris displayed great nous in picking Power Play 3 and J.P. Yadav to engorge the gap between runs needed and balls remaining. Astle switched gears and did a Tendulkar to milk the bowling.

When in hitting distance, he uncorked a massive hit to reach his 15th ODI hundred and celebrated a little more boisterously than usual. Any hopes of a last-gasp turnaround slipped through substitute Suresh Raina's hands as Lou Vincent was dropped with 34 needed from 33.

Classic confrontation


Earlier on, empty stands witnessed a classic confrontation. Bond vs Sehwag. The battle between these gladiators went to the Indian opener. He didn't quite hit the Kiwi paceman out of the attack, but — in between slaps past point — fended him off. Any thoughts of a carnage were perished.

The Black Caps didn't get an early sighter of the middle order as Ganguly decided to wander down the wicket himself. From this advanced position, the Indian skipper carved a few delicacies off Mills.

While Bond tried to tighten the straps, Mills slipped up. After a conventional, `wear off the shine' beginning, the Indians decided to quicken the deterioration of the white ball. Seventy-two came before Ganguly kicked himself. Mohammad Kaif made strong claims for a Test spot, finessing the ball through the covers and wristing it through mid-wicket.

Sehwag went to his 18th ODI half-century, the first in 15 innings, with — what else — a six. But as India looked to tighten its vice, the man from Najafgarh (75, 65b, 12x4, 1x6) lobbed an easy catch and Vettori bamboozled Rahul Dravid with another of those armers. Sehwag's carelessness had frittered away carefully built up momentum. Vettori did beat him in flight though.

Without Cairns (batting Super Sub) and Andre Adams, Fleming looked to get Astle's overs out of the way while India rebuilt. Vettori wheeled away from the Golf Course End, his lovely high arm action placing the ball in different orbits. He bowled his ten in one crafty spell for 35.

Yuvraj Singh couldn't repeat his heroics and fell to an intemperate hook shot, further eroding India's position.

The Men in Blue scored just 28 from overs 29 to 38. Kaif continued, but wickets fell in a heap at the end.

All of India's lower order hitters left in the quest of quick runs, as Fleming wrested the initiative, shuffling his bowlers around. Kaif was stranded on 93 (110b, 8x4). Two injections of urgency propelled India to 276.

The first came predictably with Sehwag. The second happened when the ball was changed in the slog overs, negating the slowing down of the pitch.

scoreboard India: V. Sehwag c Vincent b Vettori 75, S. Ganguly c Marshall b Oram 31, M. Kaif (not out) 93, R. Dravid lbw b Vettori 0, Y. Singh c Bond b Mills 20, V. Rao c McMillan b Oram 8, M.S. Dhoni lbw b Styris 11, J.P. Yadav c McCullum b Oram 0, A. Agarkar c Mills b Bond 6, I. Pathan c Vincent b Oram 10, A. Nehra b Oram b Mills 0; Extras (lb-5, nb-4, w-13) 22; Total (in 49.3 overs) 276.

Fall of wickets: 1-72, 2-155, 3-155, 4-185, 5-203, 6-230, 7-231 , 8-255, 9-272.

New Zealand bowling: Bond 9.3-0-44-1, Mills 9.3-3-45-2, Oram 8.3-0-58-4, Styris 8-0-56-1, Vettori 10-0-35-2, Astle 4-0-33-0.

Super Sub: Chris Cairns (for Shane Bond).

Power Play 1: overs 1 to 10, Power Play 2: 11 to 15, Power Play 3: 16 to 20.

New Zealand: S. Fleming c & b Sehwag 61, N. Astle (not out) 115, H. Marshall lbw b Sehwag 3, S. Styris st Dhoni b Sehwag 37, C. McMillan c Dhoni b Yuvraj 13, L. Vincent (not out) 33; Extras (lb-9, nb-1, w-6) 16. Total (for four wkts. in 48.1 overs) 278.

Fall of wickets:1-121, 2-125, 3-183, 4-206.

India bowling: Pathan 5-1-40-0, Nehra 6-0-40-0, Agarkar 6.1-0-43-0, Harbhajan (sub) 10-0-49-0, Sehwag 10-0-44-3, Yadav 1-0-14-0, Y. Singh 10-1-39-1.

Power Play 1: 1 to 10, Power Play 2: 11 to 15, Power Play 3: 24 to 28.

Super Sub: Harbhajan (for V. Rao).

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