Showing posts with label Virat Kohli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virat Kohli. Show all posts

Wickets falls after Dhoni, Kohli big stand on Day 3


4th Test, India Vs England, Day 3
Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground, Nagpur
December 13-17, 2012

England won the toss and elected to bat first

1st Innings: England 330/10

Joseph Root 73
Kevin Pietersen 73
Matt Prior 57
Graeme Swann 56

Piyush Chawla 4-69
Ishant Sharma 3-49

1st Innings: India 297/8 at Stumps

Virat Kohli 103
MS Dhoni 99

James Anderson 4-68

India trail by 33 runs

Virat Kohli sets up to India win over Pakistan in Super Eights


India needed a win to keep their chances of making thir semi finals. India thrash Pakistan by eight wickets in ICC World Twenty20 2012 Super Eight match at Colombo on Sunday.

After Five bowler flop from previous match. India made some changes in the side. Vireder Sehwag and L Balaji comes into the side. Pakistan batting collapsed from fine Indian bowling attack. Pakistan was bowled out for 128 in 19.4 overs. L Balaji take 3 wickets for 22 runs. Ashwin and Yuvraj take two wickets each.

In the chasing target of 129, Gautam Gambhir lost his wicket in very first over. Virender Sehwag and Virat Kohli batting towards the target. Sehwag got out for 29 But this wicket late for Pakistan. Virat Kohli star for India with unbeaten 78 runs and consists of eight fours and two sixes. India reached the Target in 17 overs. Virat Kohli awarded as the player of the match.


Spinners help India to 90 runs win over England



Harbhajan Singh's 4 for 12 and Rohit Sharma half century helped India to beat England by 90 runs in ICC World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka on Sunday.

Chasing big total of 171 England were allout for 80 runs in 14.4 overs This is the England lowest total in T20 internationals.Harbhajan take 4 wikets for 12 runs and Piyush Chawla and Irfan pathan got two wickets each. Craig Kiewetter top scorer for England with 35 runs.

Earlier Rohit Sharma unbeaten 55 from 33 balls. Gautam Gambhir made 45 runs and Virat Kohli scored 40 runs helped to India post 170 for 4 in 20 overs. Harbhajan Singh named as the Man of the Match for his best bowling figures. 

England and India are already qualified Super Eight stage.


Yuvraj, Balaji stars as India beat Afghanistan by 23 runs.


2012 ICC World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka

India beat spirited Afghanistan by 23 runs in colombo. L Balaji and Yuvraj Singh took three wickets each as Afghanistan were bowled out for 136 in 19.3 overs.

Balaji got first wicket in the fourth over. The middle order batsman Mohammad Nabi give fight to the India with his 31 from 17 balls. this upset India, Ashwin got Mohammad Nabi wicket and then then the task become too big. Yuvraj took 3-24, and Balaji finished Afghanistan innings with 3 for 19.

Earlier Virat Kohli scored brilliant half century well suported by Yuvraj and Suresh Raina. Kohli made 50 from 39 balls , Dhoni quikfire 18 to post India 159 for 5 in 20 overs.

Virat Kohli now completed hatrick T20 international half centuries. and also he awarded as the Man of the Match.


Virat Kohli wins ICC ODI Cricketer of the Year 2012 Award

Colombo: India's middle-order batsman Virat Kohli has been named ICC ODI Cricketer of the Year 2012 at the LG ICC Awards in Colombo. During the performance period, he played 31 ODIs and compiled 1,733 runs at an average of 66.65, including eight centuries and six half-centuries. His highest score, 183, came against Pakistan in the Asia Cup on 18 March 2012.
The independent voting academy of 32 highly credentialed cricket experts put Kohli first, ahead of such talented and in-form players as Sri Lanka’s Kumar Sangakkara and Lasith Malinga as well as Kohli’s India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni.
Kohli said upon receiving the honour said, "I think I have tried to keep things as simple as possible and it's worked for me on the field."
"This year has been a learning curve along the way from the seniors in the team. It's been an all-round effort and I'm very happy to have won this award.
"It's always nice to be recognised by the ICC and it's a great feeling and it's the first time I've won one of these awards and it feels great," he added.



Kohli, Dhoni star in India Test series win

India survived a mini collapse to sweep the series against a fighting New Zealand with a five-wicket victory on the penultimate day of the second and final Test in Bangalore on Monday.
The hosts slipped from 152-2 to 166-5 before achieving their 261-run target in the final session, thanks to a 96-run stand between man-of-the-match Virat Kohli (51 not out) and skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni (48 not out) under pressure.
India won the opening Test by an innings and 115 runs in Hyderabad.
New Zealand fought well as they twice neutralised India's advantage to storm back into the match on a good pitch before Dhoni and Kohli steered their team home, much to the delight of the nearly 15,000 spectators.

The Indian captain finished the match with a six over mid-wicket off off-spinner Jeetan Patel, who took three wickets. Dhoni hit two sixes and three fours, while Kohli cracked nine fours.
India were 77 without loss after brisk knocks from Virender Sehwag (38) and Gautam Gambhir (34) and then 152-2 following a 69-run stand between Cheteshwar Pujara (48) and Sachin Tendulkar (27) before New Zealand struck back.
The tourists came back strongly after tea, which was taken early due to rain, as they dismissed well-set Pujara, Tendulkar and Suresh Raina (0) in the space of 14 runs.
The 39-year-old Tendulkar was bowled for a third successive innings in the series, this time by fast bowler Tim Southee, after hitting five fours in his 34-ball knock.

The world's leading scorer in both Test and one-day cricket with an unprecedented 100 international centuries, Tendulkar finished the series without a half-century in three innings.
Patel had Pujara caught by Daniel Flynn, who ran backwards from forward short-leg to take a superb diving catch, and then bowled Raina.
Tendulkar and Pujara steadied the innings after Sehwag and Gambhir had fallen in the morning in the space of six runs.
Pujara, who scored a solid 159 in the first Test, was on 37 when he survived a stumping chance off Patel as wicket-keeper Brendon McCullum failed to collect the ball.
McCullum kept wicket in place of Kruger van Wyk, who was injured after being struck on the arm by a delivery from paceman Umesh Yadav while batting on Sunday.

New Zealand skipper Ross Taylor pressed Patel into the attack in the 12th over after pacemen Trent Boult, Southee and Doug Bracewell had failed to provide the breakthrough in overcast conditions.
Sehwag lofted Patel over long-off, the first six of the innings, and then cut him for a four before falling in the same over. He stepped out to try another big shot, but missed the line and was bowled.
He smashed one six and seven fours in his 33-ball knock.
Gambhir went for his shots early in the innings, hitting Boult and Bracewell each for two successive fours before falling to a loose shot.
He was caught by Taylor at first slip off Boult after hitting seven fours in his 58-ball knock.
New Zealand were earlier bowled out for 248 in their second innings, adding 16 runs to their overnight total of 232-9.
Patel (22), the last man out, looked unhappy with the decision when given caught behind off left-arm paceman Zaheer Khan, as the TV replays suggested he had missed the ball.
Off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin finished with 5-69, his third five-wicket haul in four innings against New Zealand. He was named man of the series.


2nd Test: NZ 232/9 at stumps, lead by 244

Bangalore: New Zealand were 232 for 9 at stumps on day three of the second Test at here against India with a lead of 244 runs.
India resumed from overnight score of 283 for 5 and Virat Kohli, who was unbeaten on 93 at stumps on day two, soon notched up his second Test century by flicking Trent Boult for a boundary through mid-wicket. But the euphoria was short-lived as Southee trapped him plumb in front of the wickets for 103. Kohli padded the ball which was angling in after pitching and was adjudged lbw. Southee nipped out Dhoni in his next over to complete his five-wicket haul. The ball swung in and hit Dhoni's pad before brushing his bat. Dhoni made 62.

Zaheer Khan caned a six off the first ball he played but didn't last long. Southee dug in a short ball which Zaheer edged to the wicketkeeper Kruger van Wyk. In the same over, Southee also removed Pragyan Ojha, who edged an outswinger to van Wyk.
From 303 for 5, India were reduced to 320 for 9. The last-wicket stand between R Ashwin and Umesh Yadav frustrated the New Zealand bowlers for some time. Ashwin played an important innings of unbeaten 32. He shielded Yadav well by striking boundaries and taking singles on the last or second last ball of overs.

Yadav's resistance was ended by Boult who cleaned him up for 4. Ashwin and Yadav added 33 runs for the last wicket as India finished their first innings for 353, conceding a 12-run lead to New Zealand. Southee was the pick of the bowlers for New Zealand taking seven wickets for 64, which was the best spell by a New Zealander in India.
Brendon McCullum and Martin Guptill started off the visitors' second innings on a good note as New Zealand went to lunch at 29 for no loss.
Yadav removed openers Guptill and McCullum in quick succession after lunch. Guptill (7) was cleaned up by a yorker while MuCullum (23) edged the ball straight into Dhoni's gloves.

Kane Williamson could only muster 13 runs before a straight-ball from Ashwin took an edge of his bat and Virender Sehwag at first slip grabbed another neat catch.
Ross Taylor played some fine shots but a premeditated sweep shot off Ojha ended his stay at the crease. He made 35 runs.
Daniel Flynn and James Franklin didn't let India make further inroads and took their team to 123 for 4 at tea.
New Zealand kept losing wickets at regular intervals after tea though Franklin and van Wyk added 55 runs for sixth wicket to steer their team close to 200. Ashwin broke van Wyk's defiance by trapping him lbw.
Franklin played a rash shot soon after, charging down the track to Ashwin but didn't reach the length of the ball as it turned away from him and Dhoni did the rest. He made 41, the highest score of New Zealand innings.
Southee and Bracewell didn't last long. Ashwin castled Southee to complete the five-wicket haul.
Jeetan Patel and Boult were at the crease when the day was called.



2nd Test: Kohli, Dhoni propel India to 283/5

Bangalore: Virat Kohli and MS Dhoni compiled an unbeaten 104-run partnership for the sixth wicket as India reached 283 for 5 at the end of day two of the second Test against New Zealand, just 82 behind the visitors' first innings score.
Kohli and Dhoni were batting on 93 and 46 respectively when stumps were drawn on Saturday. Tim Southee and Doug Bracewell chalked up three and two wickets respectively for New Zealand.
Kohli came to the crease when India were tottering at 67 for 3 and then lost Sachin Tendulkar when the score was 80. But Suresh Raina and Kohli forged a fine partnership of 99 runs to pull India out of the woods.

Raina was more aggressive in his approach as he smashed a flurry of boundaries and a six over extra cover. He launched a stunning assault on Bracewell and hit three boundaries in his over.
Kohli played responsibly and steadied the shaky Indian innings along with Raina. At tea, Raina and Kohli were unbeaten on 51 and 32 respectively.
Raina (55) fell soon after tea, edging a ball to wicketkeeper Kruger van Wyk. Dhoni was in imperious touch from the word go as he bludgeoned a couple of sixes off consecutive balls from Jeetan Patel and later cracked a couple of boundaries in the offspinner's one over.
Dhoni didn't throw away the good start and became watchful later in the innings to remain not out, along with Kohli, at stumps.

Earlier, New Zealand could add just 37 runs to their overnight score of 328 for 6 before India wrapped up the innings 45 minutes into the morning session.
The first wicket came when Suresh Raina took a diving catch at second slip off Zaheer Khan to put an end to a breezy 71-run knock from Van Wyk.
Van Wyk added 99 for the seventh wicket with Bracewell, who was unlucky to be run out for 43 when the ball burst through Zaheer's hand to hit the stumps at the non-striker's end with the batsman short of his crease. Pragyan Ojha then snared Southee to finish the New Zealand innings and complete his five-wicket haul.

India's chase of New Zealand first innings' score of 365 started on the wrong foot, with the hosts losing the wickets of Gautam Gambhir and Cheteshwar Pujara early. Southee took both the wickets. Gambhir was cleaned up shouldering arms to a straight ball while Pujara miscued a pull and was caught out at long leg by Trent Boult.
Sehwag unfurled a string of boundaries after an anxious start while Tendulkar dug in to make scratchy 4 off 41 balls at lunch. Boult troubled Tendulkar on a couple of occasions and bowled exceptionally well.
After lunch, Bracewell prised out Sehwag and Tendulkar in consecutive overs to leave India reeling at 80 for 4. Sehwag flicked the ball in the air and Daniel Flynn grabbed a fine catch at square leg. He made 43 runs. Tendulkar cracked a spectacular straight drive off Bracewell but the bowler roared back and rattled Tendulkar's stumps on the next ball as the master batsman played across the line. He mustered 17 runs off 50 balls.



IPL 5: Gayle ton guides RCB to easy win vs DD

Riding on Chris Gayle’s unbeaten knock of 128 off 62 balls and then a brilliant bowling performance helped Royal Challengers Bangalore to beat Delhi Daredevils by 21 runs to keep their playoff hopes alive on Thursday.
The Feroz Shah Kotla crowd got the worth of their money by some blazing batting by both sides. Ross Taylor and Andre Russell’s late surge gave Delhi a chance for a win, but Bangalore well led by Virat Kohli managed to pick up wickets at regular intervals to leave them at 194 for 9. For Bangalore, Zaheer Khan took 3 for 38, Prasanth Parameswaran claimed 3 for 30 and Vinay Kumar chipped in with 2 for 35.
Chasing a huge total of 216, Delhi’s hope rested on David Warner (15), who started with two successive boundaries off Tillakaratne Dilshan, but in the second over Zaheer had the better of him. Warner trying to pull one short delivery off Zaheer loses his bat while playing the shot and the ball balloons to mid-off.

After that youngster Unmukt Chand (18) showed some spark by hitting two fours and a six, but then perished in the fifth over to Vinay Kumar. However, Bangalore continued to take wickets at regular intervals to keep Delhi on the back foot in their chase.
Coming on to bowl his first over, left-arm pace bowler Parameswaran induces an edge off Jayawardene (9) and AB de Villiers does the rest. When Taylor arrived at the crease he got into action straightaway and with Venugopal Rao tried to repair the innings. But Rao (36) couldn’t resist a tossed up ball from Muttiah Muralitharan and played straight down the throat of Harshal Patel at long-off.
With Taylor going ballistic in the middle overs that definitely gave Bangalore some scare, who made a quick-fire 55 off 25 balls which included seven fours and two sixes. Until Taylor was out there in the middle, Delhi sensed an outside chance of sneaking in a win but the fall of Taylor in the 17th over ended all hopes.

Earlier, Mahela Jayawardene made the mistake by asking Bangalore to bat and from then it was all Gayle show. The big West Indian batsman was in different mood at Kotla as he slammed an unbeaten 128 of 62 balls which was studded with 13 sixes and seven fours to take the visiting team to a mammoth 215 for 1.
Jayawardene who was in charge of Delhi in the absence of Virender Sehwag was at his wit’s end how to control Gayle. At the start, Gayle took some time to settle down and played 17 balls for his first 10 runs, but after that he got 90 in just 35 balls.
With Kohli (73 not out), Gayle put up a 204-run stand to go into the record books as the highest partnership in this season of IPL. Kohli looked in great touch and his unbeaten knock included 10 fours and one six.
All the Delhi bowlers went for runs and they surely missed the services of Morne Morkel, who was rested. Varun Aaron was the only successful bowler for Delhi, who claimed the lone wicket of Tillakaratne Dilshan (10) caught at mid-on by Irfan Pathan.
Delhi failed to put on brakes on Gayle whirlwind, as the left-handed batsman scored three sixes off Pathan and Pawan Negi, as Bangalore plundered 78 runs in the last five overs.




IPL 5: RCB ride on Gayle's blitz to hammer MI

Mumbai: Chris Gayle's powerful hitting helped Royal Challengers Bangalore crush Mumbai Indians by nine wickets in the 54th Indian Premier League match season five at Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. Gayle scored 82 off 59 balls and along with Virat Kohli (36 off 25) ensured that RCB won with 2 overs to spare. The emphatic win takes RCB to fourth position in the points table while Mumbai Indians occupy the third spot.

Chasing 142 runs to win, Gayle remained quite in the early part but exploded later on, hitting five fours and six sixes. Gayle was though lucky early in his innings as he was dropped by Dwayne Smith off the bowling of R P Singh when he was on 21.
Skipper Kohli, remained not out on 36 while Tillakaratne Dilshan, with whom Gayle shared 48 runs for the first wicket, scored 19. Gayle and Kohli ensured the visitors' victory with an unbeaten second wicket partnership of 94 runs in just 58 balls. Gayle's 59-ball blitz was his fourth 80-plus knock this IPL season. Gayle reached his fifty with a huge six of Pragyan Ojha in the 11th over. He struck Ojha for three successive sixes in that over.


Earlier, Bangalore bowlers dominated in the first innings as they restricted the Mumbai Indians to 141 for 6 in their quota of overs. Opting to bowl first, Bangalore struck two early blows to Mumbai as Vinay Kumar got rid of James Franklin and Rohit Sharma in the second over of the innings with scored board reading 2 for 2.

Dinesh Karthik then joined Sachin Tendulkar in the middle and the duo then tried to stabilise the batting as Tendulkar, who hit four fours in his knock shared 39 runs with Karthik. But Tendulkar's knock of 24 off 27 balls came to an end when he tried to pull Harshal from outside off stump and could only sky a return catch to the 21-year-old. Mumbai were tottering at 41 for 3 in the ninth over.

But Karthik and Ambati Rayudu consolidated with a stand of 44 in five-and-a-half overs, before Rayudu slapped Harshal to long-off to be dismissed for 22. Soon Karthik had to take long walk back to the pavilion as he was dismissed by Muttiah Muralitharan in the sixteenth over after making valiant 44 runs. Hero of the last match, Dwayne Smith was sent back in the next delivery as he gave a catch to Vinay Kumar and Mumbai were in deep trouble at 100 for 6.

But from there Kieron Pollard (21 not out) hammered two sixes in the final over of the innings. He shared an unbroken stand of 41 in 4.1 overs with Harbhajan Singh (20 not out) to help Mumbai Indians post a respectable total of 141 on the board.

Bangladesh beat India after Sachin's 100th

Mirpur: The most-awaited 100th international century by Sachin Tendulkar went in vain as India lost to Bangladesh by five wickets in their Asia Cup encounter on Friday.
Tendulkar's hundred (114), which came in 147 deliveries, took the Indian score to 289 and it looked a daunting total till a series of blitz by Shakib Al Hasan (49 off 31), Nasir Hossain (54 off 58) and skipper Mushfiqur Rahim (46 off 25) blew away the Indian challenge. Tamim Iqbal's knock of 70 and his 113-run partnership with Jahurul Islam (53 off 68) for the third wicket laid a solid foundation for Bangladesh.
After his 64 against Pakistan, Shakib once again shone with the bat, taking charge of the Bangladesh chase when things were looking difficult for the hosts. Just like Shakib, Hossain, too, was extremely impressive, taking the attack to the Indian bowlers from the beginning.
Opening the innings for Bangladesh, Tamim hit his second consecutive half-century. Praveen Kumar gave India an early breakthrough, picking up the wicket of Nazimmudin (5 off 15). But Jahurul, playing his 8th match, mixed aggression with caution. He got to his maiden fifty, before being caught at mid-wicket by Rohit Sharma off Ravindra Jadeja.

Hossain picked up where Jahurul left, clobbering the Indian bowlers from the outset. The wicket of Tamim although gave India a chance to claw their way back, an onslaught by Shakib took the game away from them. His partnership of 68 off just 48 balls with Hossain turned the game in Bangladesh favour.
Huge blows (3 fours, 3 sixes) by skipper Rahim towards the end of the innings sealed the victory for the home side. Indian bowlers went for plenty in death overs, leaking 36 runs off the last 14 balls.
Earlier, Sachin reached the much-awaited 100th century. A sigh of relief was palpable on the face of the veteran batsman who kissed the India emblem on his helmet after waving his bat towards his teammates.
He and Virat Kohli, who came together after the dismissal of Gautam Gambhir (11), shared 147 runs for the second wicket before Kohli was bowled by Abdur Razzak for 66. Suresh Raina was sent ahead of Rohit and the left-hander wasted no time in displaying his array of attacking strokes. His 51 off 38 balls gave the much-needed impetus to the Indian innings, which seemed to have lost momentum as Tendulkar neared the milestone. Rohit was run out while stealing a two at death.
Skipper Dhoni remained unbeaten on 21, along with Jadeja who contributed with 4. Mashrafe Mortaza, who picked up the wickets of Raina and Tendulkar in consecutive deliveries, was the best bowler for Bangladesh.
India will play archrival Pakistan, who have already reached the final, in a must-win game on Sunday.



Bowlers script 50-run victory for India

Mirpur: Irfan Pathan led the Indian attack with a four-wicket haul with R Ashwin and Vinay Kumar taking three wickets apiece, which scripted a middle-order collapse for Sri Lanka to help India recover and register a 50-run victory in their first match of the Asia Cup on Tuesday.
Sri Lanka were on course to chase down India's 304 as they reached 196 for 3 in 35 overs, but losing 4 wickets for 31 runs in the batting powerplay proved decisive in the end. Ashwin (3 for 39) and Vinay (3 for 55) took two wickets each in that period to reduce the Lankans to 227 for 7 in 40 overs. Pathan then returned in the final overs to take his tally to 4 for 32 with the last Sri Lankan wicket of Seekkuge Prasanna
Earlier, India's twin centurions Virat Kohli (108) and Gautam Gambhir (100) put up a 205-run stand for the second wicket to set India up for a huge total. En route his century, Kohli became the fastest man to reach 10 ODI centuries, reaching the landmark in his 83rd match.

MS Dhoni (46 not out off 26 balls) and Suresh Raina (30 not out off 17 balls) then hammered the Lankan attack for 78 runs in the final 7.1 overs to cross the 300-run mark with a six from Raina off the last ball of the 50th over.
Sachin Tendulkar (6) fell early after Sri Lanka put India in to bat. He hit a full toss straight to Jayawardene in short cover; however, the maestro wasn't convinced if the catch was clean and stood his ground. The umpires brought the third umpire into play, who upheld the decision after replays showed nothing wrong with the dismissal.
Thereafter, it was a Kohli-Gambhir show as they stole the limelight by bringing up the 10th ODI centuries of their respective careers.
The Sri Lankan bowlers had no answers for Kohli who scored his second consecutive century in Mirpur after punishing the Bangladeshis in the World Cup opener last year. He and Gambhir fell soon after reaching the landmark but Dhoni and Raina ensured boundaries came thick and fast in the last seven overs to take India's total to 304 for 3.

The islanders lost Tillakaratne Dilshan (7) early in their chase but Jayawardene played a captain's knock of 78 in just 59 balls, which included 10 fours and two sixes. After Dilshan was sent back by Pathan, Jayawardene joined hands with Kumar Sangakkara for a 93-run second-wicket partnership in a 14-over period that saw some delectable strokeplay, especially from the skipper.
The Sri Lankans merrily moved to 124 for 1 in just the 19th over when Jayawardene's cheeky glide led to his downfall. The delivery from Pathan kissed the face of his bat to settle inside the gloves of a diving Dhoni. The wicket got India a foot inside the door as they struck 28 runs later when Ashwin foxed Dinesh Chandimal (13) to bowl him with his carrom ball.
At 152 for 3, Sangakkara found an ally in Lahiru Thirimanne and the duo started bringing the chase back on track by milking the Indian spinners. It was evident that Sri Lanka were eyeing the batting powerplay, especially in the way they approached the chase from that point on.
However, Ashwin sent Sangakkara (65) and Thirimanne (29) back in the first over of the powerplay, while Vinay took care of Nuwan Kulasekara (11) and Chamara Kapugedara (0) in the fourth. Maharoof tried to be a bit adventurous; however, it proved to be futile in the end.
The defending champions will next take on Bangladesh, who lost to Pakistan in the opening match, on March 16.



India win with bonus point, keep tri-series finals door open

Hobart: Chasing a stiff target of 321 in 40 overs to take the bonus point, India, powered by an outstanding century from Virat Kohli pulled off an incredible win at the Bellerive Oval on Tuesday to keep alive their hopes of making the CB Series finals.
Where their bowling had been decidedly lackluster in allowing Sri Lanka to post 320 with centuries to Tillakaratne Dilshan and Kumar Sangakkara, India’s batting was outstanding. Leading the way was Kohli with an unbeaten 133 off 86 balls – his ninth ODI century – and Gautam Gambhir, whose 64-ball 63 helped India raise 115 for the third wicket. When Gambhir was run out in the 28th over India were 120 runs away from their target, but up stepped Suresh Raina with his most significant contribution all series.

The night, however, belonged to Kohli who timed his innings to perfection. After pacing himself early on, through smart singles and brisk running, Kohli teed off with an array of shots that found the boundary with alarming regularity. His fifty took 44 balls but his next 83 needed just 42 balls as Kohli stunned Sri Lanka with a brilliant innings full of dazzling shots. He saved his best for the woeful Lasith Malinga, who he hit for 44 runs in 15 deliveries. Consecutive boundaries off Malinga in the 37th over sealed the most incredible of chases, meaning India will now await keenly the result of Australia’s clash with Sri Lanka on Friday. Should Australia win, they will face India in the best-of-three finals.
When they came out to bat after a disappointing display, the challenge ahead was monumental. But somehow the two out of form openers, Virender Sehwag and Sachin Tendulkar, rallied to give the team a stand of 54 in 38 balls. This despite a power failure at Bellerive Oval that took out one of the floodlight towers. Sehwag sped to 30 off 16 balls before miscuing a pull shot to mid-on, after which Tendulkar kept the tempo up with a stroke-filled 39 off 30 balls. His dismissal, out lbw walking across his stumps to Malinga in the 10th over, ushered in the partnership of the match.

Gambhir and Kohli worked the ball into the gaps expertly and even when boundaries weren’t available – India once played out 35 balls without a four - they ensured the asking rate didn’t escalate to unmanageable levels with deft placement and harried running between the wickets.
Gambhir worked away at the gaps on the leg side with trademark whips, offsetting the bowlers by shuffling around his crease. Kohli too preferred the leg side, but whenever the ball was pitched short he slapped it into the off-side gaps. The pair ticked along purposefully to reach their respective half-centuries by the mid-point of India’s innings.
When Gambhir was caught short of his crease coming back for the second, Sri Lanka were in with an opportunity. Raina had been a failure all series, and there were questions raised as to why MS Dhoni had not promoted himself. But Raina proved an able ally to Kohli, whipping away anything on the pads – and there was plenty – to give his partner confidence. One off-drive off Nuwan Kulasekara was stunning, and when Raina clipped Thissara Perera for six the momentum had truly been snatched from Sri Lanka.

Kohli, at the other end, was unstoppable. He took three consecutive boundaries off Kulasekara in the 31st over to reduce the target to 73 in nine overs, but was at his best against Malinga in the 35th over. In six deliveries, Kohli slammed 24 runs: a flick past midwicket for two brought him a century off 76 balls, the next ball was flicked for six, a lofted drive over extra-cover brought four, and the next three balls disappeared to the deep square leg fence as Malinga veered onto the pads.
Few could have envisioned this at the half-way mark of the match, after Sri Lanka posted a big total. Needing to keep Sri Lanka to an attainable total, India’s bowlers instead fed with them with loose deliveries and two former captains, Dilshan and Sangakkara, replied with superb centuries.
Dilshan overcame some early jitters to a career-best 160 not out off 165 balls, while Sangakkara shrugged off an indifferent run with 105 off 87 balls. The pair joined forces in the 12th over after Mahela Jayawardene (22) steered Ravindra Jadeja to Sehwag at slip, and immediately set into their paces.

Taking full toll of an insipid bowling performance, Dilshan and Sangakkara picked the gaps and ran brilliantly between the wickets. They made sure the bad balls were hammered away, with Dilshan taking a liking to Umesh Yadav who went for 56 in eight overs. With Jadeja and R Ashwin dropping short too often, the Sri Lankan pair was able to rock back and slice or pull the ball.
Dilshan raised three figures in the 41st over, and Sangakkara followed with his century off 84 balls. He was out soon after, bowled by Praveen Kumar, and even a brief collapse didn’t reflect much on the scorecard as Dilshan stuck around to the end.
Unfortunately for Sri Lanka, it wasn’t to be their day. Having batted so well, their bowlers turned in a terrible performance and the fielders fumbled and allowed too many boundaries. Malinga was the worst hit, conceding 96 runs in 7.4 overs, and the manner in which he was dismantled highlighted the desire burning inside India’s batsmen.



CB Series: Sri Lanka beat India by 51 runs

Brisbane: A spineless batting display which was preceded by some inexplicable moments on the field saw India crash to a 51-run defeat against Sri Lanka in match eight of the CB series at the Gabba on Tuesday.
Chasing 290 for victory, the Indian innings folded at 238 in 45.1 overs which saw them slump to their third defeat in six outings, and fall behind Australia and Sri Lanka in the points table.
While the Australians lead the points table with 14 points from five matches, the Lankans with the same number of matches lie second with 11 points, and India who have played an extra game find themselves at third place with 10 points.
The Indian innings got off to a shocker of a start, when stand-in captain Virender Sehwag lunged out to a wide delivery by Lasith Malinga off the very second ball; the result was a fine running catch by Nuwan Kulasekara at third man which sent Sehwag back in the hut for a duck.

Sachin Tendulkar - like so many times on the current tour - looked to be in imperious touch at the start of his innings. Some glorious shots on the off side followed by a delightful flick off the pads seemed to have set the tempo before he chopped one on to his stumps on 22, in an attempt to leave one from Kulasekara (38 for 2).
Gautam Gambhir who had struck four boundaries during his innings of 29, was the next to go. The left-hander - batting way outside his crease in an attempt to unsettle the bowler - only succeeded in unsettling himself as he played away from his body, and Thisara Perera at gully took a fine catch diving forward to give Kulasekara his second wicket.
Virat Kohli and Suresh Raina then put on 92 for the fourth wicket with the aid of Dinesh Chandimal fielding at deep midwicket, who dropped a couple of sitters to the relief of the Indians.

However, Farveez Maharoof provided his team with the all-important breakthrough by sending back a well-settled Raina. Raina made 32 off 55 balls before he guided a ball that bounced on him into the hands of Lahiru Thirimanne at short cover. Kohli, who had brought up his 20th ODI fifty, followed suit soon after for 66 when he perished to Perera, with Kulasekara at mid-on taking a simple catch off a mistimed pull shot.
It was an uphill task and a downhill battle for India from then on but Irfan Pathan with a few lusty blows down the order gave his side an outside chance of an unlikely victory. With wickets falling at the other end, Irfan soon ran out of options and was the last man to fall when he hit one straight back to Perera who finished with figures of 4 for 37 off 7.1 overs.
Earlier, Thirimanne struck his maiden half-century in his fifth ODI, and Tillakaratne Dilshan contributed with 51 as Sri Lanka finished with a highly competitive total of 289 for 6. Mahela Jayawardene and Dilshan put on 95 for the first wicket before Jayawardene fell for 45 to Irfan.
Wickets at regular intervals got the world champions back in the match before the Lankans added 94 runs in the last 11 overs as the Indian bowlers failed to come up with the goods. How helpless captain Sehwag felt in the middle was epitomised in the 50th over when Kohli was called up to bowl the last six deliveries which went for 14 runs.



Australia lead by 382 despite Kohli's ton

Adelaide: Australia were 50 for 3 in their second innings at stumps on the third day of the fourth Test against India in Adelaide, and overall lead of 382 runs. Michael Clarke was on 9 and Ricky Ponting on 1 when the players left the field for the day.
Virender Sehwag rolled the dice and opened the bowling with R Ashwin and he did not disappoint the skipper. David Warner was the first batsmen to be dismissed, giving a return catch to Ashwin for 28.
Shaun Marsh, who has had a disastrous Test series with the bat against India, failed to open his account when he was trapped in front of the wickets by Zaheer Khan. Three balls later, Ashwin claimed his second wicket of the innings trapping Ed Cowan for 10 to leave Australia in a bit of a bother at 41 for 3. But then the star duo of Clarke and Ponting saw off the day without any fuss.

Earlier, Virat Kohli proved that there is some life in the Indian batting order with his maiden Test century. However, his effort went in vain as it was not enough to stop India from incurring a 332-run first-innings deficit. Kohli top-scored with 116 as Australia decided not to enforce the follow-on.
Destined to lose the series after humbling defeats in the first three Tests and chasing Australia's 604 for 7, Sachin Tendulkar, Gautam Gambhir and VVS Laxman departed before lunch and India looked to be flirting with the follow-on. Having seen his more experienced colleagues depart all too easily, Kohli - with some help from Wriddhiman Saha - provided some much-needed resistance. Kohli and Saha put on 114 for the sixth wicket and lasted all but the entire afternoon session.

The duo mixed up aggression with patience as they forced the Australian bowlers to toil in the afternoon heat. Such was the comfortable nature with which the batsmen progressed that Clarke was left rushing through part-timers and spinners in an effort to bring about the arrival of the second new ball.
Ryan Harris gave the home side a timely boost with the new ball by removing Saha when the batsman shouldered arms to an in-swinger which hit his off stump in the final over before tea. With the resistance broken, Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus ran through the remainder of the order, with the former picking up his first five-wicket haul of the series.
With the option of sending India back in to bat, Clarke decided against enforcing the follow-on.



India humbled by an innings and 37 runs

Perth: India's dismal run in the Test arena got worse in Perth on Sunday as Australia humbled the tourists by an innings and 37 runs to win the third Test inside three days and with that the series 3-0.
The end came swiftly after some fight was shown on the third morning by Rahul Dravid (47) and Virat Kohli, who was the last man out after scoring his Test best of 75. Ben Hilfenhaus (4 for 54) expedited India's end with three wickets in an over soon after lunch before Peter Siddle (3 for 43) took the last wicket of Kohli. Mitchell Starc (2 for 31) and Ryan Harris (1 for 34) were the other wicket-takers for Australia.
In the morning, Dravid and Kohli negotiated the first hour harmlessly before Harris broke India's vigil by disturbing Dravid's stumps. It earned Dravid an unwanted world record of 54 bowled dismissals in Test cricket, raising serious question marks over his coined name 'The Wall'. Six overs later, skipper MS Dhoni's bad patch was extended by Siddle, who had him caught by Ricky Ponting at second slip.

After his more illustrious team-mates failed to show some grit, Kohli showed how it was done by battling his way to a well-deserved half century that took India to 165 for 6 at lunch, still 43 runs in deficit after conceding a 208-run first innings lead. His leaves were as impressive as the eight boundaries he hit, indicating that the management didn't err in persisting with him after failures in Melbourne and Sydney.
But once the Australians broke Dravid and Kohli's 84-run stand, they wrapped it up in double quick time. It took the hosts just 3.2 overs after lunch to take the remaining four Indians wickets. Hilfenhaus' pace and swing was too much to handle for the tail as the quickie removed Vinay Kumar, Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma in the space of five balls. And when Siddle got a nick from Kohli, the Australians confirmed their redemption with an innings victory.
The last match of the series will be played in Adelaide from January 24.