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October
12
West Indies crash as India
gain control in first Test
MUMBAI: Fast bowler Zaheer Khan threatened to ruin Carl
Hooper's special match with a career-best 4 for 41 as
India gained an upper hand in the first Test against the
West Indies on Friday.
The 24-year-old left-arm seamer sparked a West Indies
collapse with three wickets in four overs in the
post-lunch session to help India gain a massive 300-run
lead on the third day at the Wankhede Stadium. All out
for 157 in the fourth over after tea in reply to India's
457, the tourists also failed to avoid the follow-on
mark of 258.
The West Indies lost free-stroking opener Wavell Hinds
(40) before reaching 91 for 1 in their second innings at
stumps. Hinds hit nine fours in his 34-ball knock before
being bowled round the legs by off-spinner Harbhajan
Singh. Chris Gayle (34) and Ramnaresh Sarwan (9) were
the not out batsmen as the West Indies required 209 more
runs to make the hosts bat again. Shivnarine Chanderpaul
alone gave a good account of himself in a feeble West
Indian batting display in the first innings, defying the
Indian attack for 236 minutes to score 54 for his 28th
Test half-century in 59 matches. The gutsy left-hander
continued to haunt India for the second successive
series, having already made 562 in seven innings of a
five-Test home series in May with an average of 140.50.
He was dismissed just four times.
But there was little to cheer about for West Indies
skipper Hooper in his 100th Test as he contributed only
23 before becoming Zaheer's second victim. He then saw
his team face the daunting task of saving the match
after conceding a big lead.
Zaheer began the rout in his third over after lunch when
he removed Hooper and then went on to dismiss Ryan Hinds
and Ridley Jacobs in an impressive display of seam
bowling on a slow pitch. Hooper pulled straight to
Sanjay Bangar at square-leg. Hinds was trapped
leg-before for nine, while Jacobs was caught by a diving
Sourav Ganguly in the covers for no score.
Zaheer's three-wicket haul came for just 20 runs in his
first seven-over spell of the afternoon session, but he
still fell short of his maiden five-wicket bag. His
effort, however, was his best in 21 Tests, the previous
being 4-76 against Sri Lanka in Kandy last year.
The West Indies also failed to cope with spin on a slow
turning pitch as leg-spinner Anil Kumble troubled them
with is clever variations to finish with 4 for 51.
Barring Chanderpaul, none of the batsmen could apply
himself against a disciplined Indian pace-spin attack
after the tourists had resumed at 33 for 2.
The West Indies' woes began in overcast conditions when
they lost two quick wickets in the morning and continued
in the bright sunshine in the late afternoon. India
started with a double-spin attack and got a vital wicket
in the eighth over. Sarwan, a consistent run-getter,
added just two to his overnight 20 before being trapped
leg-before on the backfoot by Kumble with the one that
kept a bit low.
Nightwatchman Mervyn Dillon survived against spin, but
fell to pace after hitting a straight six off Kumble and
one four in his 21. Javagal Srinath, returning to Test
cricket after announcing his retirement in June, bowled
Dillon with a real cutter. Hooper played a couple of
attacking shots in the morning, pulling Zaheer for a
four and then lofting Harbhajan over mid-wicket for
another boundary before he fell playing one stroke too
many.
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