MELBOURNE: For once in the series, Australia had the measure of Jasprit Bumrah. His opening spell of six overs had leaked 38 runs and, on a true wicket, the batters were looking more than comfortable.
But one of the truest measures of greatness is how you respond when the chips are down and for all his skill, it is often Bumrah's heart that helps him bounce back. In the presence of 87,242 fans—the highest attendance for a day of Test cricket between Australia and India in Australia—cricket delivered it all: a teenager taking on one of the modern greats, some aggression, a shoulder bump, partnerships that saw the hosts gain a position of strength and a fightback led by the indomitable Bumrah.
This was theatre that only Test cricket can deliver. If you hung around long enough, you would be rewarded.
At close of play, Australia were a respectable 311/6. Respectable... only because at 237/2 they looked on course for so much more. But India's fightback saw them get four wickets for 62 and end the day feeling a lot better than they would have after the first hour. At the crease for the hosts were Steve Smith on 68 and skipper Pat Cummins on 8.
The first hour, though, was something the rest of day had a hard time living up to. It was cricket on the edge with each ball brimming with promise. Sam Konstas was brought into the team to take Bumrah on and he did more than just that. He set the tone for the game with an innings that will see expectations on the teenager rapidly rise.
The Australia opener had a torrid time for a few overs before he decided to take the game on. The runs came in a flurry of fours, sixes, reverse ramps and scoops and the huge Boxing Day crowd took every opportunity to roar its approval. After the first hour, Australia had clearly thrown the first punches.
Bu hikaye Hindustan Times Navi Mumbai dergisinin December 27, 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 Navi Mumbai dergisinin December 27, 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
Back in hockey, Ward hopes to shine in HIL
The season gets going
Nagal Continues To Stay Away From Davis Cup
India's singles No. 1 Sumit Nagal continues to remain absent from national duty as his name was missing from the team's upcoming Davis Cup World Group I play-off tie against Togo, to be held in New Delhi in February.
Jayasuriya aims to make SL cricket find an upswing
It's been only two months since Sanath Jayasuriya took over as full-time head coach of Sri Lanka's men's cricket team.
Tough beginning for world No. 1 Carlsen; Raunak stuns Firouzja
World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen had a torrid start to the World Rapid and Blitz Championship, losing in one round and escaping with draws in two others to end Day 1 of the rapid event at 2.5/5 in New York.
A Run Out Spoils India's Fightback Script at MCG
Jaiswal and Kohli looked settled for a long haul when a run out and two quick wickets took India from 153/2 to 159/5
Rohit's Insipid Captaincy Lets Australia Take Control
It was a slow trudge out, with head bowed, for India's captain Rohit Sharma. The imagery just fit. He had just been dismissed for 3, trying to play a tentative pull shot that was a cross between something you play in gully cricket and how a tailender usually responds to a short ball.
Akasa Air's directors suspended following lapses found in audit
The civil aviation regulator on Friday suspended Akasa Air's directors of operations and flight training for six months each after an audit found lapses.
Housing Financiers Chase Pot of Gold in Affordable Loans Segment
India's mortgage lenders are increasingly looking to finance affordable homes, betting on higher returns and backing from government housing schemes.
Services exports save the day for current account in Q2
A rise in services exports helped narrow India's current account deficit (CAD) in the September quarter, although this marked the second consecutive quarterly deficit after hitting a surplus in the final three months of FY24.
Rupee Falls to Record Low as Dollar Bids Spike
The rupee fell to an all-time low on Friday, as maturing non-deliverable forwards and currency futures boosted dollar demand, while the sharp fall led to panic dollar buying by importers.