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November
02
Windies move ahead after
Chanderpaul century
KOLKATA: Shivnarine Chanderpaul cracked an unbeaten 136
as West Indies moved ahead of India on day three of the
third and final Test on Friday.
The gritty left-hander's sixth Test century, made from
255 balls and including 16 fours and six, helped the
tourists amass a total of 446 for five at the close, 88
runs ahead.
Chanderpaul, who has now made five centuries against
India, shared an unbroken 191-run sixth-wicket stand
with Marlon Samuels, who was on a career-best 89 in his
first appearance of the tour.
The two rescued West Indies after they lost two wickets
in the morning session.
Chanderpaul reached his century, his first in Tests
outside the Caribbean, off 179 balls by hitting veteran
seamer Javagal Srinath for two to deep point, and he
celebrated by lifting both arms in the air, hugging
Samuels and kneeling to kiss the pitch. The 28-year-old
had started slowly, getting his first 42 runs up to
lunch off 104 balls, but cut loose in the second
session. Chanderpaul punished India's bowlers to all
corners of Eden Gardens as runs came at a brisk rate,
Samuels joining in with some lusty blows.
The pair were particularly harsh on leg-spinner Anil
Kumble, who Chanderpaul hammered him for three
boundaries through the on-side in one over and a four
and a six over mid-wicket off successive balls in the
next.
Samuels drove seamer Ashish Nehra over extra cover for
two fours and hit Kumble for on-side boundaries before
raising his 50 from 116 balls.
He became more aggressive in the last hour as the light
faded, ending the with 15 boundaries in his 167-ball
knock that came in just under four hours at the crease.
Play was called off 25 minutes ahead of schedule again
due to bad light on the third day, which India had
started on a confident note. Opener Chris Gayle, on 80
overnight, hit Srinath for a straight boundary but
Kumble trapped him for 88, inducing a bat-pad catch at
forward short-leg as the left-hander pushed forward
defensively.
Gayle, whose 172-run opening partnership with fellow
Jamaican Wavell Hinds (100) had lifted his side on the
second day, hit 15 fours and a six facing 229 balls in
five-and-a-half hours at the crease.
Skipper Carl Hooper struggled against Kumble's googlies
but twice lofted the bowler over extra-cover and mid-off
for fours to play himself in and then hit Nehra's first
delivery of the morning past extra cover.
But Nehra provided the breakthrough when he forced
Hooper to edge an angled delivery and young wicketkeeper
Parthiv Patel took a low catch diving to his right as
West Indies slipped from 189 for three overnight to 255
for five.
Hooper struck three fours in his 74-ball 19. But just
when it looked as though India would press home the
advantage as they had done when building a winning 2-0
lead in the series, Chanderpaul and Samuels defied the
odds with chanceless knocks.
Chanderpaul scored three centuries against India,
including a career-best 140 at Guyana, during West
Indies' 2-1 Test series win in the Caribbean earlier
this year.
The 21-year-old Samuels, who made his Test debut against
Australia at Adelaide in late 2000, was left out for
Ryan Hinds in the first two matches of this series.
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