MELBOURNE: Off the last ball of the 113th over, the right-hander had run two to get to 99 but lost the strike. As he was midway through the second, he put his hand on his helmet, as if regretting the momentary lapse of awareness. It was one of the few mistakes he made all day, perhaps the only one.
It meant that Jasprit Bumrah would be on strike against Pat Cummins to start the next over. And his worst fears were realised when the Indian pacer was dismissed off the third ball of the over. That look on Reddy's face came immediately after that wicket. He was still on 99 and last man Mohammed Siraj was coming in to bat.
As Siraj made his way to the middle, accompanied by a cacophony of boos around the Melbourne Cricket Ground, many in the stadium had started praying because if there was anyone who deserved a century, it was Reddy—he could not be stranded on 99. Not him.
The fourth ball of the over beat Siraj and skimmed past his edge. The fifth was a bouncer and he ducked. The final delivery was full and straight. Siraj defended it and the crowd went absolutely mad. It was the loudest they had been all day.
Soon, Reddy gave them an opportunity to top that though when he hit the third ball of the next over from Scott Boland for four to reach a memorable ton. Reddy's dad, Mutalya, watching from the stands, was in tears. So were so many others. This was the stuff dreams are made of.
Australia had come into the day expecting India to fight but also hoping that maybe by tea they would be having another go at the Indian bowlers. But at close of play on Day 3, India had made their way to a gritty 358/9—still trailing by 116 runs.
Two youngsters, the 21-year-old Reddy (105*—176 balls, 10x4, 1x6) and the 25-year-old Washington Sundar (50 off 162 balls), had defied the odds with a 127-run partnership that helped the visitors claw back into the match.
Bu hikaye Hindustan Times Lucknow dergisinin December 29, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Hindustan Times Lucknow dergisinin December 29, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Hyd Man Shot Dead in US, Kin Urge Govt to Help Bring Body
A 26-year-old man from Hyderabad was shot dead by unidentified people at Washington Avenue in the US on Sunday, his family members told reporters on Monday.
U'khand nod for UCC rules
THE RULES WILL COME INTO FORCE ONCE THEY ARE NOTIFIED LATER THIS MONTH ON A DAY THAT STATE CM DHAMI WILL ANNOUNCE
Turf questions in CCI's Meta order
CCI HAD IMPOSED A ₹213 CRORE PENALTY ON META FOR ALLEGEDLY ABUSING ITS DOMINANT POSITION
Donald Trump 2.0 and the limits of CEO as president
Donald J Trump has officially become the 47th President of the United States (US).
China Executes 62-Year-Old Who Killed 35 in Zhuhai Car Rampage
China on Monday executed a man who killed 35 people in a car rampage in the southern city of Zhuhai in November, in the country's deadliest mass attack in years.
Trump and India-US ties: What will work, what needs work
Under Donald Trump, just like the past five American presidencies including his own, America's strategic relationship with India will deepen.
Go First fails to take off, NCLT orders liquidation
The National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) ordered the liquidation of debt-laden Go First on Monday, bringing to an end a 20-month-long insolvency process after the grounded budget carrier failed to get any viable resolution plan.
Engaging with President Trump
India-US ties may be immune to a change of guard in Washington, but New Delhi should be prepared to respond to the challenges ahead
Decoding illegal cylinder biz and how it fuels Mela risks
Authorities say special teams formed to detect, check sale of \"non-ISI mark\" cylinders near Mela, FIR will be lodged against anyone caught supplying them
Not Satisfied: CM Seeks Death Sentence, Oppn Hits Out at TMC
Looking back at the case