Showing posts with label Dhoni in Tests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dhoni in Tests. Show all posts

April 04, 2009

Dhoni's Record for Most Catches in Test Matches

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:en:Mahendra Singh Dhoni at :en:Adelaide OvalImage via Wikipedia

India vs New Zealand, India in New Zealand, 2009 - 3rd Test
Date: 03-07 April 2009

  • Dhoni took six catches during the first innings of the third test against New Zealand, which sets the record for most catches by an Indian player in an innings.


  • Dhoni also equalled Syed Kirmani's record for most dismissals in an innings by an Indian wicket-keeper. Syed Kirmani has effected 6 dismissals (5 catches and 1 stumping) against New Zealand in 1976. Dhoni now has equalled that record for most dismissals with 6 dismissals (all 6 catches) against New Zealand.


  • Dhoni has also moved up to third position in the all-time dismissals list by Indian wicket-keepers. With the six dismissals in the first innings of the current match, Dhoni has now been involved in 109 dismissals. With that, he has surpassed Nayan Mongia's record of 107 dismissals. Dhoni now trails the legendary Syed Kirmani and Kiran More in the all time dismissals by Indian wicket-keepers. The following is the list of top five Indian wicket-keepers, in terms of all-time dismissals in test matches:

    Syed Kirmani - 198 dismissals
    Kiran More - 130 dismissals
    Mahendra Singh Dhoni - 109 dismissals
    Nayan Mongia - 107 dismissals
    Farokh Engineer - 82 dismissals


  • Dhoni also holds the record for most number of dismissals in an ODI innnings (six dismissals) by Indian wicket-keepers. This also is a world record, currently shared by players like Adam Gilchrist, Mark Boucher, Ridley Jacobs and Alec Stewart.
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March 24, 2009

Dhoni in Test Match #36

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India vs New Zealand, India in New Zealand, 2009 - 1st Test
Date: 18-21 March 2009

A Strong win by India
Another clinical display by the Indian cricket team under the captaincy of Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Winning might have become a regular habit for this Indian team. But, even for them, a victory after 33 years in New Zealand should have been a sweet achievement. A mystery finally resolved. This New Zealand might not have greats like Sir Richard Hadlee or Stephen Fleming, but they have promising youngsters under a captain, Daniel Vettori, who leads by example.

Dhoni, winning the toss, inserted New Zealand in. His bowlers did not diappoint him. Immediately, Zaheer Khan picked two wickets. Ishant Sharma followed almost immediately with three wickets. Munaf Patel, not to be left behind, picked one wicket. New Zealand were in deep trouble with the score card reading 60 for the loss of 6 wickets. Then, came the New Zealand resistance through their skipper Daniel Vettori and the in-form batsman Jesse Ryder. The two put on 186 runs for the seventh wicket, Vettori being the aggressive partner. Both Vettori and Ryder scored centuries and New Zealand were finally dismissed for a score of 279 runs.

India's reply did not have the best start after Virender Sehwag was run out for just 24 runs. But, Gambhir and Dravid collected the runs in a cool and composed partnership of 105 runs for the second wicket. At the dismissal of Gambhir, Sachin Tendulkar walked in and played an innings that reminded his early days. His knock of 160 runs was instrumental in India posting a big first innings total of 520 runs. Don't forget the contributions of Dhoni (47 runs) and Zaheer Khan (51 not out).

New Zealand started the second innings requiring 241 runs to avoid an innings defeat. Controversial dismissal of McIntosh off the third delivery from Zaheer Khan did not help them. Regular wickets by the Indians put New Zealand under pressure and the innings defeat looked on the cards when Daniel Vettori was dismissed and the score was 199 for 8. Then came a partnership of 76 runs between Brendon McCullum and Iain O'Brien that ensured India bat again. Harbhajan Singh bowled well for his six wickets.

India needed just 32 deliveries to knock off the 39 runs required for victory. The victory was achieved with a day to spare and with a margin of 10 wickets. History rewritten after 33 years!

1st Innings:
New Zealand 279 (Daniel Vettori 118, Jesse Ryder 102, Ishant Sharma 4 for 73, Munaf Patel 3 for 60)

India 520 (Sachin Tendulkar 160, Gautam Gambhir 72, Rahul Dravid 66, Zaheer Khan 51 not out, CS Martin 3 for 98, Iain O'Brien 3 for 103)

2nd Innings:
New Zealand 279 (Brendon McCullum 84, Flynn 67, Harbhajan Singh 6 for 63, Munaf Patel 2 for 60)
India 39 for no loss (Gambhir 30 not out, Dravid 8 not out)

Match Result: India won by 10 wickets

Man of the match: Sachin Tendulkar, for his 160

Dhoni's performance in the 1st innings:
Catches : 3 / Stumpings : 1
Batting: 47 runs (123 balls), 4s: 7/ 6s: 0

Dhoni's performance in the 2nd innings:
Catches : 1 / Stumpings : 0
Batting: Did Not Bat
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March 17, 2009

New Zealand Cricket Team for Test Matches

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Yesterday, we saw the Indian Cricket team selected for the test matches against New Zealand. We also went through the probable line-up for the first test match. Today, I will give you the list of New Zealand team that is selected for the first test match. The New Zealand squad consists of 13 players, led by captain Daniel Vettori. The squad is as follows:

1. Daniel Vettori (Captain)
2. Jesse Ryder
3. Martin Guptill
4. Tim McIntosh
5. Kyle Mills
6. Brendon McCullum (Wicket-keeper)
7. Ross Taylor
8. Brent Arnel
9. James Franklin
10. Jeetan Patel
11. Chris Martin
12. Iain O'Brien
13. Daniel Flynn

In the Twenty20 tournament, New Zealand came victorious. But, that was quickly nullified by the Indian cricketers efforts in the ODI tournament. New Zealand was completely outplayed in the first four one-dayers, including the abandoned ODI. But, New Zealand came back strongly in the final ODI, just in time to keep the interest alive for the Test match series. Will this have an impact on the Test match series?

In my opinion, India still starts as favourites due to their experienced batting line-up. Sehwag and Tendulkar were blazing in the one day matches. If they bring forward some of that form to the test matches, New Zealand will always be chasing the Indians. Ishant Sharma and Zaheer Khan had been exceptional over the past one year or so, particularly in the test match arena. With helpful conditions, they may prosper further.

But, let us not completely discount New Zealand. They have the home advantage. Some of their players like Jesse Ryder, Brendon McCullum and Guptill are in good nick. Their bowlers might not have been executing the plans well, but they have the potential to do well in test match setup.

We are in for a good, gripping contest for the next five days.
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March 16, 2009

Indian Cricket Team for Test Matches

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The teams will take a new look as shorter version of the game gives way to traditional test matches. The test matches had been interesting, of late, and had produced some excellent nail biting finishes. The recent India-Australia series, Australia-South Africa series and West Indies-England cricket series were really good. Going along these lines, we should have an interesting series ahead.

The Indian team for the test series will have some of the seniors coming back to replace one-day/ T20 specialists. The Indian team is as follows:

1. Virender Sehwag
2. Gautam Gambhir
3. Rahul Dravid
4. Sachin Tendulkar
5. VVS Laxman
6. Yuvraj Singh
7. Mahendra Singh Dhoni (Captain and wicket-keeper)
8. Harbhajan Singh
9. Zaheer Khan
10. Ishant Sharma
11. Munaf Patel

The Batsmen
It is certain that Sehwag and Gambhir will open the innings. The No. 3, 4 & 5 are assured places for Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman. Yuvraj Singh is most likely to fill in as the sixth batsman, unless Dhoni decides to play five specialist bowlers.

The Bowlers
Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma are three bowlers who will be automatic selections. The only place that might be up for discussion will the last bowler slot. It will be a fight between Munaf Patel, Dhawal Kulkarni, Lakshmipathy Balaji and Amit Mishra. It is unlikely that India will be playing two spinners in New Zealand. I personally feel that Munaf Patel might just make it, even though I prefer to try out Dhawal Kulkarni.

Reserve Players
The other players including M. Vijay (reserve opening batsman), Dinesh Karthik (reserve wicket-keeper) and Amit Mishra (reserve spinner) have to wait unless someone is not able to play.

The first test match is scheduled to be played from March 18 to March 22 at Hamilton.
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December 09, 2008

England Cricket Tour: Dhoni as captain

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Mahendra Singh Dhoni will be leading the Indian Test side for a full series for the first time. The doubts hanging over the England cricket tour has been cleared after Reg Dickason cleared Chennai for the first test match. The England cricket players had arrived in Chennai yesterday for the match commencing on 11 December 2008.

Full Strength England Cricket Team
It is satisfying to know that England has arrived in full strength, in spite of fears earlier that some players might opt out. You could not blame them if any of them have chosen not to visit India after the Mumbai terror attacks. But, the England cricket players have shown faith in the security arrangements by Indian authorities.

Hope all the doubts about security will be away from the minds of the cricket players and they will start to concentrate on the game of cricket. England had been outplayed in the ODI series 5-0, but they have to come back in the test match series.

Indian Cricket Team Selection
The following is the 15-member Indian squad for the test match:

Virender Sehwag,
Gautam Gambhir,
M Vijay,
Rahul Dravid,
Sachin Tendulkar,
VVS Laxman,
Yuvraj Singh,
S Badrinath,
Mahendra Singh Dhoni (captain & wicket-keeper),
Harbhajan Singh,
Amit Mishra,
Pragyan Ojha,
Zaheer Khan,
Ishant Sharma,
Munaf Patel

Gambhir comes back after serving the one-match ban. Yuvraj Singh and Pragyan Ojha take the places of Sourav Ganguly and Anil Kumble, the veterans who retired after the Australia cricket series. It is a pity that Rohit Sharma could not find a place in the test squad. No one doubts his skills. But, he needs to show consistency that has failed him consistently. Two of Tamil Nadu batsmen, M Vijay and S Badrinath, find their names in the squad. They are unlikely to play in the test match unless someone else is injured. How great it would be for Vijay and Badri to play in front of their home crowd? Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma will be opening the bowling with Munaf Patel as the standby seamer. Harbhajan Singh and Amit Mishra are likely to play as spinners, with Pragyan Ojha as standby spinner.

Time for Cricket
Chennai is full of police and security had been taken very seriously. The climate is the only thing that could stop an entertainer in Chennai. It is rather gloomy conditions in Chennai for the past one month or so. But, the enthusiastic Chennai crowd is already clearing the tickets for the test match. Let us hope to see an entertaining cricket match with twists and turns that are purely associated with test matches.
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December 04, 2008

England Cricket Tour to India

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England cricket tour is still hanging in the balance, even though the reactions suggest the tour might go ahead. The general feeling points that the security consultant Reg Dickason is comfortable with the arrangements in Chennai. Dickason is scheduled to visit Mohali later and he will also hold meetings with Hugh Morris, the managing director of England cricket, and Sean Morris, the chief executive of England's Professional Cricketers' Association (PCA).

I personally feel that the tour must go on. While I respect the individual cricket player's decision, I think no place is in the world is safe now. Is United States of America safe? The act of terrorism on twin towers, known as 911 now, is not forgotten yet. Is London safe? The serial bombings in the underground trains will put that conclusion to doubt. Is Chennai safe? It was considered to be a "Peace Park" until the former Primer Minister of India, Rajiv Gandhi, was assasinated by a suicide bomber.

I am not concluding that safety and security should be compromised. We should not give place to complacency. But, at the same time, we should not let the terrorists achieve what they want. The terrorists want to implant the seeds of fear and insecurity among the citizens. If we allow that to happen, we are completely lost.

The Indian Government and the Indian cricket board should ensure all necessary safety precautions are taken and nothing should be left unattended. If this is going to cause some inconvenience to the general public, they will understand it is for their own good. Let us all stand united in this effort to resurrect the image of India.

I appreciate Andrew Strauss, the England opener, for showing his faith and expressing openly that the England cricket tour must go on. If other England cricket players understand his feelings, probably they too will feel comfortable.

The Indian cricket team is expected to be chosen today. Mahendra Singh Dhoni will lead a full series for the first time. Yuvraj Singh is expected to come in place of the retired Sourav Ganguly. Gambhir is also expected to return to his opener's slot after serving out the one-match ban imposed during the Australia test match series.
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November 19, 2008

ECB Rejects BCCI's Request

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A couple of days ago, BCCI (Board of Control for Cricket in India) made a request to ECB (England and Wales Cricket Board) to postpone the first Test match between England and India by a day. The first test is scheduled to commence on 11 December 2008, following the ongoing seven match ODI-series.

Why did BCCI request to postpone the match?
The reason for the postponement is to give sufficient time for Mahendra Singh Dhoni to fly from Chennai to Ahmedabad. Dhoni, captain of Chennai Super Kings in IPL (Indian Premier League), will play in the Champions Twenty20 League 2008 from 3 Dec to 10 Dec. If Chennai Super Kings reaches the final to be played on 10 December, Dhoni will not be able to play either the Champions League final on 10 Dec or the first test match commencing on 11 Dec.

Interestingly, Dhoni is the only player to be affected from either sides playing the test match. The Champions Twenty20 league involves eight teams namely, Chennai Super Kings, Dolphins, Middlesex, Rajasthan Royals, Sialkot Stallions, Titans, Victoria and Western Australia.

Well done, ECB!
It is understood that ECB has rejected BCCI's request. I am glad that ECB had not given into BCCI. How crazy on the part of BCCI to request to change a match which is just three weeks away? What will happen to the travel plans of thousands of fans, journalists, commentators and officials? Why not just drop Dhoni from the Champions League final, if Chennai Super Kings reaches the final? Alternatively, why not let someone else lead the team in the first test match? At least Dhoni will get a well deserved break from cricket.

Why so much cricket? Give me a break man!
It is such a pity that BCCI could not plan its schedule ahead. It is not just about maximizing the schedule. The planning of the calendar should involve sufficient rest for players and enough time for fans to get some interest in the upcoming series. There was just three days between the end of Australia series and the beginning of England series. I wrote about this many times, but cannot stop myself complaining. Every series needs some hype, excitement and expectations before full commencement of the series. This will keep the interest of the game as well as the well-being of the cricketers intact.
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November 18, 2008

Test Cricket beats ODI

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I have written sometime ago that Cricket is boring. In fact, I should rewrite that article that ODI cricket is boring. If the recent test series against Australia and the first two ODI matches against England are any indication, then I can conclude that Test cricket is here to stay. And ODI format will make way for Twenty20 format.

Test Cricket is Interesting
Just recall the four test matches between India and Australia. We saw gripping contest between two teams, one that could not accept defeat and another one fighting to go on top of the table. Every match had its own twists and turns, that made each day of the test match interesting to watch. The first match went to the last day and Indians forced a draw. The second match saw how clinically a victory could be achieved against the World Champions. The third match saw a see-saw battle and ended in a draw. The final match once again stretched to the last day and probably India won the match as Australia decided to go for the kill on the last day. Interesting twenty days of cricket.

ODI is Boring
Just look at the two ODIs so far concluded against England. The first match was a no-contest once Yuvraj Singh and Sehwag hammered the bowlers. The match was all but over at mid-stage. Its merely a formality to be completed for Dhoni's men. Eventually they bowled out England for 229 runs and won the contest by a whopping margin of 158 runs. If anyone expected a better contest in the second ODI, it all lasted only for the first ten overs. From then on, it was India's way all along. England fell short again, this time by a margin of 54 runs. Will we able to see a better contest in the coming matches?

Future of Cricket
ICC is trying everything to bring back interest to the ODI format. Supersub rule, changes to powerplays, mandatory ball changes, ... Nothing seem to work so far. If nothing happens drastically in favour of ODIs, I expect Twenty20 to take over as the preferred shorter version. With the successful emergence of IPL and other Twenty20 leagues everywhere, it is only logical to conclude that Test Cricket and Twenty20 will see the end of ODIs. The format that ruled the game of cricket for close to 25 years might come to an end soon.
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November 13, 2008

Dhoni and Captaincy, Made For Each Other

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Captaincy is not all about success. Captaincy is not all about technical skills. Captaincy is not all about knowledge. Yes, you need all of those in a certain mix. But, more importantly, leadership and man management takes precedence.

Good leaders have become great captains. On the contrary, great players have failed to be good captains. Sachin Tendulkar is one glaring example. Great captains lead by example, take criticism in stride and protect their team when needed. Dhoni has taken the right step in the captaincy mode. If success is the yardstick, then there is enough proof of his leadership skills; ICC Twenty20 World cup, CB series triumph in Australia and his three-out-of-three test match wins against South Africa and Australia. But, I am not going to discuss about that here. I am going to highlight simple gestures from Dhoni that would have touched many hearts.

#1: Fitting Farewell to Sourav Ganguly
During the final moments of the Nagpur test against Australia, Dhoni invited Ganguly to take over the captaincy for some time. It was an extraordinary gesture from Mahendra Singh Dhoni. With Ganguly playing his final test match, how proud he would have felt. Can any one else give a better farewell to a wonderful player and a revolutionary captain himself?

#2: Apt Reward for an Achiever
Another moment that caught my eyes happened just after India’s victory in the second test match against Australia. India has just completed a resounding win against the World Champions. It is a great moment of achievement for the team as they played absolutely attacking cricket throughout the match. Everybody rushed to grab a stump as a souvenir. Ganguly, a centurion in the first innings and playing his last test series, could not get one for himself. Dhoni gave Ganguly the stump he had taken for himself.

#3: Recognize Budding Talents
One more significant moment came during the presentation ceremony of Commonwealth Bank Series 2008. India has just outplayed Australia in the finals and defeated them 2-0 in the best of three finals. Dhoni invited Piyush Chawla, the youngest in the Indian team, to hold the trophy when the team assembled on the podium to pose with the CB Series trophy. How proud Chawla would have been?

It is very hard to believe that Dhoni made his debut just less than four years ago. These moments might be forgotten down the years. But, Sourav Ganguly and Piyush Chawla will remember those precious little moments for ages. After all, captaincy is not all about hogging the limelight yourself. It seems Dhoni has understood that clearly. Well done Dhoni.
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October 14, 2008

Dhoni in Test Match #30

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India vs Australia, Australia in India, 2008 - 1st Test
Date: 9-13 October 2008

India manages draw on the final day
Australia won the toss and elected to bat on a pitch that was expected to aid spinners later on. Ricky Ponting led from the front by scoring his first century in India. Zaheer Khan removed Hayden off the very first over, thanks to an error from the umpire. In spite of good bowling spells from Zaheer and Ishant Sharma, Ricky Ponting and Simon Katich started to build a careful and controlled partnership. Ricky Ponting's century and his 166 run partnership was the highlight of the day. The Indians had come back later in the day by removing Michael Clarke cheaply. Australians ended the day on 254/4 with Michael Hussey on 46.

On the second day, Zaheer struck immediately by removing Shane Watson. But, a 91-run partnership between Hussey and Brad Haddin ensured that India could not capitalize. The Indians frustration grew further as Brett Lee combined with Hussey to post an useful 59 run partnership for the 8th wicket. The tail rallied around the brilliance of Hussey. When Hussey was last man out for 146, the score has swelled to 430. Zaheer picked 5 wickets, Ishant Sharma had 4 wickets and Harbhajan Singh accounted for one. India's captain and leading wicket-taker Kumble was disappointing, sending down 43 overs without a wicket. The Indians replied strongly and the openers were unseparated by the end of the day at 68/0.

The third day morning saw the Indians failing miserably and suddenly the scoreline read 106/4. A half-century from Dravid and 47 from Ganguly provided some respect to the total. But, the Indians had much to cheer later on when Harbhajan Singh and Zaheer Khan combined brilliantly to post an 80 run partnership for the eighth wicket. When Harbhajan was dismissed late in the day, he had already helped India to avoid the follow-on. He also scored a half century. Indians ended the day on 313/8.

If the third day had not frustrated the Australians, then certainly the fourth day would have done it. Zaheer Khan went on to score a half-century and in the company of Kumble and Ishant took the score to 360. The Indians fell short of the Australian score by a mere 70 runs. Australia looked shaky in the second innings, losing 5 wickets for the addition of 128 runs. But, Haddin and Watson have put on an unbeaten 65 runs partnership for the sixth wicket. Once again, Kumble was disappointing.

The final day was set absolutely for a stern test for the Indians. Ricky Ponting declared the innings after playing only 5 overs, during which they added another 35 runs. The target for the Indians is tempting enough, 299 runs in 83 overs. But, quick dismissals of Sehwag and Dravid stopped any such calculations to continue. It was up to the Indians to play out time and overs. The feat was achieved wonderfully by Gambhir, Sachin, Laxman and Ganguly. They played sensibly under pressure and ensured that Indians do not lose another match on the final day. Sachin fell one short of a well-deserved half century and within touching distance of Lara's all-time record.

1st Innings:
Australia 430 (Michael Hussey 146, Ricky Ponting 123, Zaheer Khan 5 for 91, Ishant Sharma 4 for 77)
India 360 (Zaheer Khan 57 not out, Harbhajan Singh 54, Johnson 4 for 70, Watson 3 for 45)

2nd Innings:
Australia 228/6 declared (Shane Watson 41, Haddin 35 not out, Ishant Sharma 3 for 40, Harbhajan Singh 2 for 76)
India 177/4 (Tendulkar 49, Laxman 42 not out, Clark 1 for 12, Johnson 1 for 23)

Match Result: Draw

Man of the match: Zaheer Khan, for his 6 wickets and 57 not out

Dhoni's performance in the 1st innings:
Catches : 2 / Stumpings : 0
Batting: 9 runs (51 balls), 4s: 0/ 6s: 0

Dhoni's performance in the 2nd innings:
Catches : 0 / Stumpings : 0
Batting: Did Not Bat
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April 15, 2008

Dhoni in Test Match #29: Summary

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India vs South Africa, South Africa in India, 2008 - 3rd Test
Date: 11-13 April 2008

Dhoni won his first test match as captain. Well done Dhoni! His knock of 32 runs in the first innings and his 60 runs partnership with Sourav Ganguly was crucial in determining the outcome of the match. His decisions, particularly in rotating the bowlers, has to be apprciated. He seems to know the trick of throwing the ball to the right bowler at the right time. Dhoni! Do you have any magic wand with you?

Dhoni's performance in the 1st innings:
Catches : 0 / Stumpings : 1
Batting: 32 runs (54 balls), 4s: 5/ 6s: 0

Dhoni's performance in the 2nd innings:
Catches : 1 / Stumpings : 0
Batting: Did Not Bat
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April 13, 2008

Dhoni in Test Match #29: Day 2

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India vs South Africa, South Africa in India, 2008 - 3rd Test
Date: 11-13 April 2008

Day 2 (12 April 2008): Ganguly helps India take the lead

India took a marginal lead in the first innings thanks to half-centuries from Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman. Their efforts were ably supported by useful knocks from Rahul Dravid, Yuvraj Singh and Mahendra Singh Dhoni. The Indians are ahead by 23 runs with just one wicket in hand when play ended.

India made progress mainly through a cautious 78-run partnership between Dravid and Laxman, 65 runs partnership between Ganguly and Yuvraj and a 60 run partnership betweeen Ganguly and Dhoni. The state of the pitch encouraged played who had the courage to take on the bowlers. The unplayable deliveries that cleaned Dravid and Laxman could have prompted Ganguly to score runs whenever the opportunity is there. The situation needed to take some calculated risk. Ganguly did that and came out with his head high. He lost his wicket only when he was slowly running out of partners.

Yuvraj was fluent for his 32. Dhoni too scored 32. His partnership with Ganguly seemed to take India to a comfortable lead. But, a moment of rush paved the exit of Dhoni. From 248 for 5, India lost their way to 279 for 9. Sree Santh ended the day with a fluent four off the last delivery. Will he be able to deliver few more punches?

The slender margin might not help India too much as they have to bat last in the crumbling pitch. India would be happy to add a few more runs through Sree Santh and Ishant Sharma. But, that looks unlikely. The match outcome might depend on how well the South Africans play in their second innings.

Day three, in all probability, will decide the winner of this match.

1st Innings:
South Africa 265 (Smith 69, Amla 51, Harbhajan Singh 3 for 52, Ishant Sharma 3 for 55)
India 288 for 9 (Ganguly 87, Laxman 50, Morkel 3 for 57, Steyn 3 for 60)
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April 12, 2008

Dhoni in Test Match #29: Day 1

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India vs South Africa, South Africa in India, 2008 - 3rd Test
Date: 11-13 April 2008

Day 1 (11 April 2008): Absorbing Battle Between Bat and Ball

South Africa won the toss and rightly chose to bat first on a track that assisted spin from the word go. No team would love to bat on the fifth day, if at all the match extends until then. At the end of the day, the South Africans were restricted to a challenging first innings total of 265. There is no necessity for India to bat as the South Africans were bowled out only in the 88th over of the day.

The bowling department, strengthened by the inclusion of Ishant Sharma, did perform well in helpful conditions. Ishant Sharma and Harbhajan Singh took three wickets each. Chawla picked two wickets while the part-timers Yuvraj Singh and Sehwag picked up a wicket each.

At one stage, it didn't look as good for India. The South Africans were comfortably positioned at 152 for 1. The opening pair of Graeme Smith and McKenzie put on 61 runs. That followed with confident half centuries from Smith and Amla. The Indians slowly and steadily clawed their way back in the post-tea session.

India made three changes to the team that lost the second test match. Ishant Sharma replaced the unimpressive R.P.Singh, Piyush Chawla stepped in for unfit Kumble and Yuvraj Singh came in for Irfan Pathan.

1st Innings:
South Africa 265 (Smith 69, Amla 51, Harbhajan Singh 3 for 52, Ishant Sharma 3 for 55)

Milestone:
Dhoni became the first wicket-keeper to captain the Indian test team. Dhoni was given the captaincy as the regular test captain Anil Kumble was declared unfit. With this, Dhoni has captained in all forms of the game, Test match, One Day International and Twenty20
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August 16, 2007

Dhoni in Test Match #20: Summary

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India vs England, India in England, Pataudi Trophy Test Series (2007) - 3rd Test
Date: 9-13 August 2007

Dhoni's performance in the 1st innings:
Catches : 1 / Stumpings : 0
Batting: 92 runs (81 balls), 4s: 9/ 6s: 4

Dhoni's performance in the 2nd innings:
Catches : 1 / Stumpings : 0
Batting: 36 runs (64 balls), 4s: 4/ 6s: 0
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August 14, 2007

Dhoni in Test Match #20: Day 5

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India vs England, India in England, Pataudi Trophy Test Series (2007) - 3rd Test
Date: 9-13 August 2007

Day 5 (13 Aug 2007): India content with a 1-0 series triumph

The Indians have wrapped the test match series by a 1-0 margin after the England batsmen played with some character on the final day to force a draw in the final match.

The final day had its share of interesting twists, with Indian bowlers picking up wickets at regular intervals to keep the match alive until the last minute. The first session saw the departure of both openers. The match might have taken a different route if only Dravid accepted the catch from Vaughan off Kumble. Dravid spilled an easy chance just before lunch. Three wickets in the first session would have given much more confidence to the bowlers.

But, Vaughan and Pieterson played well to deny any openings for the bowlers to exploit. A short disruption to play due to bad light helped India get the next wicket. Lost his concentration after the break, Vaughan departed. Then, Pieterson and Collingwood continued. Both playing fluently, the runs started to flow. When everything seemed to be slowly meandering to a draw, the new ball created some buzz again.

Sree Santh struck with the first delivery of the new ball by getting Collingwood lbw. Pieterson continued to reach his second century of the series. A lapse in concentration just after completing his century cost his wicket. He flashed outside to a delivery from Sree Santh and was caught behind. With still about 20 overs available, the Indians hoped for a final breakthrough.

The thought would have been supported by the sight of Matt Prior walking in, who is out for nought in the first innings. But, Bell and Prior played out another 15 overs. When Bell was out, only 5 overs left in the match. Prior and Sidebottom finished the match without any further slide.

India is so near and yet left the match to meander to a draw. The fourth day's negative approach has let England to play out the match. The celebrations showed that Dravid and his men are happy with the 1-0 series win. To a certain extent, it is understandable as they have lost back-to-back matches after taking a lead.

Whatever it is, this is a happy moment for Indian cricket. A series win in England after 21 years should be memorable.

Result: The match is drawn. India won the three match series 1-0

Player of the match: Kumble
Player of the series: James Anderson (England) / Zaheer Khan (India)

1st innings:
India 664 (Kumble 110 not out, Dhoni 92, Karthik 91, Sachin 91, Dravid 55, Laxman 51, Anderson 4 for 182)
England 345 (Bell 63, Collingwood 62, Cook 61, Zaheer 3 for 32, Kumble 3 for 94)

2nd innings:
India 180/6 declared (Ganguly 57, Collingwood 2 for 24)
England 369/6 (Pietersen 101, Bell 67, Sree Santh 3 for 53)
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August 13, 2007

Dhoni in Test Match #20: Day 4

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India vs England, India in England, Pataudi Trophy Test Series (2007) - 3rd Test
Date: 9-13 August 2007

Day 4 (12 Aug 2007): Dravid leads with poor strategy

A poor approach by the Indians let the game slip away from them and gave England some breath at the end of the penultimate day. This is a day that should go into the cricketing text books for wrong reasons.

After claiming the last wicket in the morning, India had a lead of 319 runs with still about 170 overs left in the game. Dravid's decision not to enforce the follow-on is understandable, but his approach later on is incomprehensible. The way Dravid batted gave a feeling that India is fighting hard to save the match. How else can you describe an innings from the captain who scores 12 runs off 96 deliveries?

The situation demanded some quick runs, but the early wickets of Jaffer, Karthik and Sachin upset Dravid's plans. Even then, if a player of Dravid's calibre is unable to rotate strike by taking singles, then this team is not deserved to win. While at the other end Ganguly was scoring almost a run a ball, Dravid was defending. Ganguly contributed 57 runs to the 4th wicket partnership of 65 runs. Finally, when Dravid declared,they have consumed 58 valuable overs. Any other international team would have cashed in on the situation to score about 200 runs in 40 to 50 overs.

With exactly 500 runs to win, England finished day 4 positively without losing any wicket in the 20 overs. England might not be able to chase down another 444 runs in 90 overs, at about 4.93 runs per over. But, they could well bat out the day. If that happens, India has to blame only themselves for losing the stronghold in the match. The approach by Dravid to safely hold the 1-0 lead is ridiculous. Stronger teams emerge when you are always on the look-out for victories.

1st innings:
India 664 (Kumble 110 not out, Dhoni 92, Karthik 91, Sachin 91, Dravid 55, Laxman 51, Anderson 4 for 182)
England 345 (Bell 63, Collingwood 62, Cook 61, Zaheer 3 for 32, Kumble 3 for 94)

2nd innings:
India 180/6 declared (Ganguly 57, Collingwood 2 for 24)
England 56/0 (Cook 27 not out)
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August 12, 2007

Dhoni in Test Match #20: Day 3

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India vs England, India in England, Pataudi Trophy Test Series (2007) - 3rd Test
Date: 9-13 August 2007

Day 3 (11 Aug 2007): England fighting hard to stay in the match

England is facing the ignominy of following on after they lost 9 wickets for 326 runs at the end of the third day. India might still prefer not to enforce the follow-on. But with still 338 runs behind, England might find it very tough to save this test match, let alone the series.

There were three half-centuries, but that is not going to be enough to reach the mighty first-innings total posted by the Indians. There was a period when England looked like they are upto the challenge. Pieterson and Collingwood put on 78 runs for the 5th wicket and then Collingwood joined hands with Bell to put on another 86 runs. But, as it stands, the important question on everybody's mind now is will India force the follow-on or not?

1st innings:
India 664 (Kumble 110 not out, Dhoni 92, Karthik 91, Sachin 91, Dravid 55, Laxman 51, Anderson 4 for 182)
England 326/9 (Bell 63, Collingwood 62, Cook 61)
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August 11, 2007

Dhoni in Test Match #20: Day 2

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India vs England, India in England, Pataudi Trophy Test Series (2007) - 3rd Test
Date: 9-13 August 2007

Day 2 (10 Aug 2007): Kumble dominates the opposition with batting

Its not new that we see Kumble on the headlines. Normally, you would associate him making headlines due to his bowling performance. For a change, Kumble is under the limelight today for his batting performance. Yes, Kumble finally got his maiden hundred.

Interestingly, he is the lone century-maker on the Indian side in this series. If no one makes a hundred in the second innings, then Kumble can be very proud of his achievement that he is the only one who made century in the England test series 2007.

Dhoni came very close to scoring a century, but finally missing it by just 8 runs. Dhoni took the challenge from Pietersen when he came on to bowl. He hit two massive sixes but was out trying to hit the third one. You won't see many batsmen taking such a risk when they are in the 90s. But, Dhoni is different. He makes the game interesting and plays as the situation demands.

India made a huge total of 664, with every batsman going into the double digits. Three batsmen were dismissed in the 90s. It looks great to read the scorecard.

1st innings:
India 664 (Kumble 110 not out, Dhoni 92, Karthik 91, Sachin 91, Dravid 55, Laxman 51, Anderson 4 for 182)
England 24/1 (Cook 12 not out)
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August 10, 2007

Dhoni in Test Match #20: Day 1

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India vs England, India in England, Pataudi Trophy Test Series (2007) - 3rd Test
Date: 9-13 August 2007

Day 1 (09 Aug 2007): India off to a solid start



1st innings:
India 316/4 (Karthik 91, Dravid 55, Kumble 3 for 32)
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August 07, 2007

Dhoni in Test Match #19: Summary

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India vs England, India in England, Pataudi Trophy Test Series (2007) - 2nd Test
Date: 27-31 July 2007

Dhoni's performance in the 1st innings:
Catches : 0 / Stumpings : 0
Batting: 5 runs (6 balls), 4s: 1/ 6s: 0

Dhoni's performance in the 2nd innings:
Catches : 1 / Stumpings : 0
Batting: DNB
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