England beat India by 64 runs at
The Oval
London,
July 09:
Ronnie
Irani was the star of the show as England beat India by 64 runs
in their triangular tournament one-day international here at The
Oval on Tuesday.
Irani, out of international
cricket for five years before this series, tore the heart out of
India's innings, taking career best one-day international
figures of five for 26 as Sourav Ganguly's men slumped to 165
all out.
And, in what was a dress
rehearsal for Saturday's tournament final between these
countries at Lord's, Essex all-rounder Irani top scored with 53,
his first half century at this level, in England's 229 for
eight.
Irani later finished the match by
catching Ashish Nehra (24) on the long-on boundary off Alex
Tudor, leaving India all out with 17 balls remaining.
What made Irani's bowling figures
all the more impressive was that the 30-year-old medium pacer
was limited to seven overs after rain had reduced the game to a
32 overs per side contest.
Irani's final three wickets fell
in a five ball spell that saw no runs scored off the Essex
captain. His final analysis was 7-1-26-5.
Only Virender Sehwag (46) and
Sachin Tendulkar (36) were able to resist.
Anil Kumble (21 not out), batting
with a runner, and Nehra provided some tail-end heroics but it
was Irani's day.
India had already lost captain
Sourav Ganguly (six) when Irani struck with his third ball.
Sehwag, trying to steer the ball
down to third man, edged and saw veteran wicket-keeper Alec
Stewart, standing up to the stumps, take the catch.
Sehwag had faced 41 balls
including one six and eight fours, India 62 for two in the 10th
over.
But his departure slowed India's
progress and in the 15th over they were 78 for three.
Venkatsai Laxman (14), in his
first match of the series, saw frustration get the better of him
as he skied medium-pacer Paul Collingwood to Matthew Hoggard at
mid-off.
Irani and Stewart then combined
again to dismiss the dangerous Yuvraj Singh (five) in
controversial fashion.
Stewart appealed for a stumping
off a wide because even though Yuvraj's back foot was behind the
crease, it could have been in the air when the stumps were
broken.
The decision was handed over to
third umpire Neil Mallender, the Englishman taking several
minutes to give Yuvraj out even though replays did not appear
conclusive.
And Irani's day just got better
when he then reduced India to 114 for five, clean bowling
Mohammad Kaif for one run between bat and pad.
Then, in his final over, Irani
struck twice. First he had Ajay Ratra (two) caught behind by
Stewart and two balls later Ajit Agarkar (nought) turned a ball
off his legs straight to Collingwood at midwicket and India were
118 for seven.
Tendulkar had watched all this
from the other end and, running out of partners, in the next
over was caught behind off Hoggard for 36.
Tendulkar's 29 ball innings
included five fours but at 120 for eight the game was up.
Earlier all-rounders Irani and
Andrew Flintoff (51) were the major contributors to England's
total of 229 for eight.
The pair put on 67 for the third
wicket, Flintoff facing 38 balls including one six and six fours
and Irani batting for 55 balls including one six and two fours
before he was bowled by leg-spinner Kumble.
Teams:
England: Marcus Trescothick,
Nick Knight, Nasser Hussain (capt), Michael Vaughan, Alec
Stewart (wk), Ronnie Irani, Paul Collingwood, Andrew Flintoff,
Alex Tudor, Matthew Hoggard, Darren Gough
India: Virender Sehwag, Sourav
Ganguly (capt), VVS Laxman, Sachin Tendulkar, Yuvraj Singh,
Mohammad Kaif, Ajay Ratra (wk), Anil Kumble, Ajit Agarkar,
Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra.