Jamaica Gleaner
Published: Sunday | November 9, 2008
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India in front after dismissing Aussies

Indian bowler Ishant Sharma (right) celebrates after he dismissed Australian batsman Jason Krejza (left) during the third day of the fourth and final Test in Nagpur yesterday. - AP

NAGPUR, India (AP):

INDIA LED Australia by 86 runs at stumps on the third day of the series-deciding fourth Test yesterday after dismissing the visitors for 355. India ended at 0-0 after Virender Sehwag safely negotiated one over at Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium.

Offspinner Harbhajan Singh earlier led a tight Indian bowling performance to counter the hardworking efforts of Michael Hussey and opener Simon Katich.

Australia trail 1-0 in the four-Test series for the Border-Gavaskar Trophy. Hussey edged the visitors closer to India's 441 with a 229-ball innings of 90 after Katich scored his fifth Test century, but the hosts held the upper hand.

Regained control

Australia were doing well in their chase with Hussey and Katich dragging the team slowly to 229-2 before India fought back and regained control with three wickets in the middle session.

Allrounder Cameron White steered a lower-order fightback with 46, but the end of the innings came when he holed out to deep mid-on off Harbhajan and Mitchell Johnson followed in a similar manner.

Harbhajan finished with figures of 3-94, while legspinner Amit Mishra collected 2-58.

India employed defensive tactics for their pacemen throughout the day and slowly wore down the batsmen.

"We're very satisfied to keep them down to 166 runs in a day and have most of our plans work out," paceman Ishant Sharma said.

Australia scored just 42 runs in the morning session for the loss of Katich, managed 49 between lunch and tea and collected another 75 before the innings ended shortly before stumps.

Katich was not surprised by the Indian plan, but it left the Australians frustrated at their inability to score.

"They know they don't have to win the Test match," Katich said. "Judging by the scoring rate today, we'd have to keep them to around 300 on the last day. We'll have to bowl well tomorrow and take our chances."

Sharma said his team had not discussed how many it would need to keep Australia from winning.

Worsening situation

Hussey, who started the day on 45, sweated over his 12th Test half-century and narrowly missed reaching three figures when he was run out by a brilliant piece of fielding from rookie Murali Vijay.

Hussey drove Harbhajan hard off the back foot, but Vijay intercepted the shot at silly point and threw it back to wicketkeeper Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who pushed the ball on to the stumps.

Australia's situation worsened when Shane Watson was bowled two overs later for two when he attempted to defend against Harbhajan's delivery, only for it to bounce under his bat and on to the stumps.

Watson's dismissal left Australia at 266-6 before Brad Haddin and White combined for 52 valuable runs for the seventh wicket. Haddin padded up to a big-turning legspinner from Mishra on 28, with the ball clipping the dangling bat on the way through to Rahul Dravid at first slip.

Harbhajan created regular danger and was backed up by Sharma, who took 2-64 from 26 overs, and Zaheer Khan with 1-68.


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