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Pak-India
ODI series
Yuvraj, Dhoni power India to win
Guwahati fixture
GUWAHATI—Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Yuvraj Singh slammed solid
half-centuries to guide India to an emphatic five-wicket victory over
Pakistan in the first one-day international here on Monday.
Skipper Dhoni top-scored with 63 and Yuvraj made 58 as India surpassed
Pakistan’s total of 239-7 with 18 balls to spare for a 1-0 lead in the
five-match series. Left-handed Yuvraj and Dhoni applied themselves
remarkably well on a low, slow pitch as they took no risks during their
105-run stand for the fourth wicket to ensure a comfortable win.
Yuvraj hit one six and six fours in his 31st half-century and Dhoni
eight fours in his 17th. When Dhoni was caught behind off paceman Shoaib
Akhtar, India were just 15 short of win with five wickets in hand. “The
start we got was excellent. Our bowlers bowled according to the field.
Murali Kartik and Harbhajan Singh have been doing well consistently and
the conditions favoured the spinners,” said Dhoni, named man of the
match.
“The pitch was doing a bit and we knew if we got settled down we could
go after the bowlers later.” Pakistan earlier rode on impressive
half-centuries from middle-order batsman Mohammad Yousuf (83 not out)
and left-handed opener Salman Butt (50) to reach a respectable total
after winning the toss.
Akhtar briefly raised Pakistan’s hopes of defending the total when he
troubled the Indian top order in a sharp four-over opening spell, but
was unlucky not to get more than one wicket. His eagerly-awaited duel
with record-breaking Sachin Tendulkar (four) ended early as he trapped
the Indian leg-before in his second over with a slower delivery that
kept a bit low. Akhtar then came close to removing Gambhir early in the
batsman’s innings, the ball going between wicket-keeper Kamran Akmal and
first-slip Younis Khan and then eluding the outstretched right hand of
the slip fielder for fours.
The lapses proved costly as Gambhir (44) went on to add 82 for the
second wicket with Sourav Ganguly (39). “I think a target of 240 was
defendable on this surface, but we dropped two-three catches,” said
Pakistan captain Shoaib Malik. “We were struggling a bit in the field.
We learnt a lot from today’s game. There are still four more matches to
go and we hope to do better.”
Indian spinners Harbhajan, Kartik and Tendulkar earlier played major
roles in restricting Pakistan. Part-timer Tendulkar grabbed two crucial
wickets, while off-spinner Harbhajan and left-arm spinner Kartik
conceded just 65 off their combined 20 overs.
Tendulkar dismissed hard-hitting Afridi (31) and Malik (two) just when
Pakistan threatened to go for big shots. India looked in command after
tight spells from the spin trio, but Yousuf kept his end intact and
helped his side score 74 in the closing 10 overs. Butt, dropped for the
recent home one-day series against South Africa, did the bulk of scoring
in the initial overs and executed some handsome strokes against new-ball
bowlers Zaheer Khan and Rudra Pratap Singh. Yousuf initially struggled
to score freely against spin and offered a chance on 10 when he mistimed
a shot off Kartik, but Ganguly was a bit late to reach the ball running
to his right in the covers.
The Pakistani batsman made the most of the chance and went on to
complete his 58th half-century. He hit seven fours in his 88-ball knock.
India had the best of Pakistan in a lacklustre contest on a slightly
demanding pitch, restricting them to 239 and then knocking off the runs
through a string of contributions from the top order. It was not the
most spectacular cricket, but it was sensible from India and perhaps a
touch too circumspect from Pakistan, whose batsmen did not do enough,
and whose bowlers were committed and disciplined but rarely penetrative.
When Shoaib Malik won the toss and chose to bat it appeared to be a
sound decision, given that the pitch was dry, on the slower side, and
threatened to break up in the second half. And when Salman Butt and
Kamran Akmal got off to a breezy start, it appeared that India would
have their work cut out. Akmal square drove crisply for boundaries when
he was offered width and Butt used his wrists to guide the ball into
gaps with excellent timing. —Agencies |