Mohali: India wrapped
up the two-match Test series against England
with a 1-0 margin as the second and final
Test ended in a tame draw here on Tuesday
with the hosts preferring to play it safe
rather than push for an improbable victory.
After being set a near-impossible
target of 403 from 43 overs, England scored
64 for one in their second innings to bring
the curtains down on an emotional series which
got under way barely two weeks after the Mumbai
terror attacks.
With the fog robbing
away much of the opening session's play on
most of the days, a draw appeared to be the
likely result as both teams took the field
on the last day.
With the Indians in no
mood to take any risks, the final day's play
turned out to be quite boring with Gautam
Gambhir (97) and Yuvraj Singh (86) briefly
providing the sparks before the belated Indian
declaration came shortly after the lunch break.
Resuming on overnight
134 for four, India declared at 251 for seven
wickets in the post-lunch session, a total
they owed to the 153-run stand between Gambhir
and Yuvraj.
It was the second successive
Test series triumph for the Indians after
beating Australia 2-0 in the four-match series
in October-November.
But more than the result,
the series will be remembered for reasons
beyond cricket as it was played under the
shadow of terrorism in the aftermath of the
Mumbai carnage.I
With no possibility of
an outright result, both the sides decided
to stop the pointless exercise an hour before
its schedule close.
To inject some life into
the dull match, India captain Mahendra Singh
Dhoni took his pads off and bowled the last
over with VVS Laxman donning the wicketkeeper's
gloves.
This was the first time
that India drew under Dhoni's captaincy. It
was a sharp contrast to the epic first Test
in Chennai where India had successfully chased
down 387 runs for a memorable win.
The 153-run stand between
a sedate Gambhir and a sizzling Yuvraj was
the lone highlight of India's second innings.
A thick fog that became
a ritual in the match once again threw the
schedule in complete disarray and play finally
got underway at 1130 hrs with a one hour morning
session.
That India would not
go out of the way to press for a win was completely
evident as the hosts batted on. By the time
India declared following Gambhir's dismissal
some 10 overs after lunch, the prospect of
a result had long gone up in smoke.
The only point of interest
seemed whether Gambhir could notch up his
second century of the match which the pint-sized
left-hander from Delhi could not, falling
three runs shy of the milestone.
It still turned out to
be a memorable match for the diminutive Delhi
player, who had scored 179 in the first innings.
On a dull gloomy day
when the hosts, despite dominating the proceedings,
decided to play it safe and even an otherwise
attacking Gambhir retreated into a shell,
it was Yuvraj Singhs scintillating strokemaking
which lit up the sparse crowd who had braved
the fog and chill to throng the Punjab Cricket
Association Stadium.
Both the Indian overnight
batsman began on a cautious note before Yuvraj
broke free and hit the England bowlers all
over the park as the hosts clobbered 82 runs
in 13 overs in the hour-long morning session.
India's first boundary
of the day came in the fifth over when Yuvraj
slog-swept Graeme Swann and a single in the
same over brought up the left-hander's fifty.
Overtaken by Yuvraj,
Gambhir too reached his fifty with a single
off Stuart Broad and the celebration came
in the form of a four off Anderson.
Yuvraj then took centre
stage and hit Broad for back-to-back sixes
to refresh the memories of the Twenty20 World
Cup in which he had hit the lanky seamer for
six sixes in an over. Broad, however, escaped
the trauma this time even though the over
cost him 15 runs.
Matt Prior also bore
the brunt of Yuvrajs attack and took a body
blow when the left-hander reverse swept Swann
and the ball hit the England stumper on his
collar bone. Prior needed medical attention
before resuming duty behind the stumps.
It was rather surprising
to see both Yuvraj and Gambhir returning to
continue from where they had left and by then
it was clear that Mahendra Singh Dhoni's men
were playing for a draw.
Playing without a purpose,
India suddenly lost three wickets in six overs
before Dhoni felt it was safe to set England
on a chase.
An almighty mix-up with
Gambhir saw Yuvraj falling short of the crease
as Ian Bell's direct throw broke the stumps.
It was a sad end to Yuvraj's entertaining
93-ball 86 which was studded with four sixes
and six fours.
Dhonis was a two-ball
duck as the Indian captain offered a tame
catch to Monty Panesar and Gambhir then fell
to Swann in the 73rd over when Bell took a
brilliant catch at backward point.
It was an uncharacteristically
patient knock by Gambhir, who spent five-and-half
hours in the middle, facing 229 balls, five
of which was hit to the fence.
For England, James Anderson,
Stuart Broad, Monty Panesar and Graeme Swann
got one wicket apiece.
With India not interested
in a win and an England victory just not a
possibility, the only task at hand for the
visiting batsmen was to bat out the rest of
the day and return with honours even.
Opener Andrew Strauss
avoided the pair and remained not out on 21,
while Ian Bell was unbeaten on 24.