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India wins by 37 runs in second Test
against West Indies
Port of Spain,
April 23:
With fortunes fluctuating constantly, India got the
better of West Indies in a battle of nerves on the tense fifth and
final day of the second cricket Test here today to record their first
victory in the Caribbean in 26 years.
It was a
see-saw battle in which India emerged the victor by 37 runs to go 1-0
up in the five-match series after West Indies faltered in their chase
of 313 runs and were out for 275 in their second innings.
It was just
the third victory for the Indians on the West Indian soil and all
three have come at this venue, the Queen's Park Oval.
India won here
in 1971 beating West Indies by four wickets in a series that saw the
emergence of the legendary Sunil Gavaskar, and five years later they
did it again, managing to overhaul a target of 404, which remains a
world record for the highest successful run-chase for a side batting
fourth.
It was another
thrilling encounter today at the Queen's Park Oval which has earned a
reputation for producing results in Test matches. West Indies, who
resumed at their overnight 131 for two, looked in total command so
long as their best batsmen Brian Lara and skipper Carl Hooper were at
the crease.
But the first
two overs from Ashish Nehra changed the entire complexion of the game.
Nehra dismissed both Lara and Hooper in consecutive overs to shift the
balance in India's favour.
However, all
was not over for West Indies. The home team, desperately looking for a
win after having come into the series with five straight losses,
bounced back into contention with a 73-run fifth wicket partnership
between Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who remained unbeaten on 67 thanks to
a controversial decision by third umpire Eddie Nichols, and Chris
Gayle.
Gayle, who had
retired hurt yesterday after complaining of cramps in his arms,
returned to bat today and produced a fine innings of 52 that raised
the hopes of West Indies.
Both Gayle and
Chanderpaul batted aggressively to take the score to 237 before Zaheer
Khan struck to mark another upswing in India's fortunes. Gayle was
caught by Harbhajan Singh at point while going for an ambitious drive
and that exposed the West Indian tail with 76 runs still needed for a
win.
India got
three quick wickets after that to reduce West Indies to 254 for eight
and make a final dash towards victory. But they had to wait for more
than one and a half hour as West Indies made a last ditch effort.
Chanderpaul,
who in the meanwhile had reached his half- century, resisted the
Indian bowlers stubbornly in the company of Adam Sanford and Cameron
Cuffy. Chanderpaul looked to have been caught by wicket-keeper Ajay
Ratra off Srinath when the total was 269 for nine but the third
umpire, to whom the diving catch was referred, ruled otherwise.
That delayed
the Indian celebration by about half an hour. The inevitable Indian
victory came when Cuffy gave a catch to Sanjay Bangar at point to give
Zaheer Khan his second wicket.
The job looked
extremely difficult for India at the start of the day when Lara and
Hooper resumed their third wicket partnership. Both the batsmen timed
the ball well and looked to be in control even though Lara did play
and miss on a couple of occasions.
Conscious of
the daunting task ahead, Lara even requested the spectators to stop
the music blaring in the stadium, a common practice in the West
Indies, so that he could concentrate on the job. But his fluency was
lacking and it looked that probably he was trying a bit too hard.
It was Hooper,
overnight on one, who did most of the scoring in the early hour. He
pulled Zaheer Khan to the long- on fence to bring up the first
boundary of the day. A similar shot against Javagal Srinath later
landed him in trouble when the miscued hit fell just out of reach Shiv
Sunder Das but Hooper remained unfazed. He hit two more fours and
looked well settled when disaster struck at the other end.
After being
hit for a straight four by Hooper off the first ball he bowled, Nehra
managed to induce an edge of Lara's bat that was gleefully accepted by
Rahul Dravid in the first slip. Lara could add only seven runs this
morning and was out ffor 168 minutes.
India could
not believe their luck when just an over later Hooper played a rare
irresponsible shot to get out for 22. Throwing all caution to wind,
Hooper tried to pull an outside-the-off-stump delivery to mid-wicket,
only to give an easy catch to Das. West Indies lost their fourth
wicket on 164.
That brought
Chanderpaul and Gayle together. Both batsmen looked unperturbed by the
quick loss of two big wickets and were remarkably positive in their
approach.
Chanderpaul
hit Harbhajan Singh for a boundary straight down the ground and
followed it up with a four to the fine leg off Nehra. Gayle hit
Harbhajan Singh for two fours in an over, first a glorious off drive
that probably was his best shot of the day and then a pull to
mid-wicket fence.
With runs
coming easily for West Indies, pressure began to show on the Indian
bowlers and they erred in line and length making it easy for the
batsmen.
West Indies
took lunch at 210 for four and the two batsmen continued with their
good work in the second session too before Zaheer Khan produced the
breakthrough. Gayle, who had batted for more than four hours and hit
eight boundaries, tried to drive a fuller delivery outside the
off-stump and was caught by Harbhajan Singh.
Junior Murray
(1), Mervyn Dillon (0) and Marlon Black (3) did not trouble the
Indians much and the visitors inched closer to their historic win.
But they were
made to work very hard towards the end as Sanford and Cuffy offered
dogged resistance.
India next
play a three-day game against Busta XI before moving to Barbados for
the third Test starting on May 2.
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