Laxman stands firm to earn India thrilling win

MOHALI, India, (Reuters) – Vangipurappu Laxman  revived his role as Australia’s chief tormentor with a  magnificent unbeaten 73 to script India’s unlikely one-wicket  victory on the final afternoon of the first test yesterday.

Resuming on 55 for four and chasing a victory target of  216, India appeared dead and buried in the last hour before  lunch but an 81-run ninth wicket stand between Laxman and  Ishant Sharma set up the opening win of a two-test series.

India had lost a flurry of wickets to slip to 124-8 but  Sharma contributed 31 valuable runs in his partnership with  Laxman, who was batting with a runner due to a bad back, before  the hosts scrambled over the finish line in a frantic climax.

“One of the best, one of the most exciting test matches I  have played and I have played some 150 now,” Australia captain  Ricky Ponting said in the post-match presentation ceremony.

“The Ishant-Laxman partnership was outstanding, it made the  difference,” he added.
When play began, India needed 161 runs to win while  Australia required six wickets in an absorbing test but the  ever-reliable Laxman kept his head as wickets tumbled, managing  the tail to perfection in denying Ponting a first win in India  as skipper.

Yesterday’s innings adds to Laxman’s reputation as a thorn in  Australia’s side with all but one of his five 150-plus scores  coming against them, including a 281 in Kolkata nine years ago  that led a following-on India to a stunning win.

“He is a remarkable batsman. If he is at the crease,  whatever field you set, he can rotate strike, hit boundaries  and keep the scoreboard ticking. He is really an amazing  batsman… he was very special,” India captain Mahendra Singh  Dhoni said.

Going into the final day, local hopes rested on overnight  batsman Sachin Tendulkar (38) but the prolific and talismanic  batsman threw his wicket away with a poor shot to depart just  when his team needed him most.

Earlier, Nathan Hauritz had made Australia’s initial  breakthrough by ending overnight batsman Zaheer Khan’s 34-ball  vigil.
Paceman Doug Bollinger then took over, removing Tendulkar  and Harbhajan Singh, the latter wicket coming after Dhoni had  ran himself out to compound the home side’s crisis.

Laxman and Sharma, however, did not panic and played  deliveries on merit as the hosts eventually completed what is  the fourth-highest successful chase on Indian soil.

Dhoni echoed Ponting’s sentiments in rating the match as  one of the best he had played in and said the India-Australia  rivalry was always capable of reaching such heights.

“Heartbeat goes up, a typical thing. I think that’s what  make test cricket interesting,” Dhoni added.
“When the match started, no one expected a result within  four-and-half days but bowlers from both sides forced one.”
Khan, who was named man of the match for his eight-wicket  haul, felt India had played marginally the better in clinching  a contest that had numerous momentum swings throughout the  course of the five days.

“It was a great game of cricket. Australia fought really  hard and we did just enough to be on the winning side,” said  the pacer, the latest member of the 250-test wicket club.
Bangalore hosts the second test from Oct. 9.

Scoreboard
Australia first innings 428 (S.Watson 126, R.Ponting 71,  T.Paine 92; Zaheer Khan 5-94)
India first innings  405 (S.Tendulkar 98, S.Raina 86,  R.Dravid 77; M.Johnson 5-64)

Australia second innings: 192 (S.Watson 56)

India second innings: (overnight 55-4)
G. Gambhir lbw b Hilfenhaus                                  0
V. Sehwag c Hussey b Hilfenhaus                       17
R. Dravid c Paine b Bollinger                                13
S. Tendulkar c Hussey b Bollinger                      38
S. Raina c North b Hilfenhaus                                 0
Z. Khan c Clarke b Hauritz                                      10
V. Laxman not out                                                     73
MS Dhoni run out                                                          2

H. Singh c Ponting b Bollinger                                2
I. Sharma lbw b Hilfenhaus                                    31
P. Ojha not out                                                               5
Extras: (b-10, lb-8, w-6, nb-1)                            25
Total: (nine wickets; 58.4 overs)                      216
Fall of wickets: 1-0 2-31 3-48 4-48 5-76 6-119 7-122 8-124  9-205.
Bowling: Hilfenhaus 19-3-57-4, Bollinger 8-0-32-3, Johnson  16.4-2-50-0, Hauritz 9-1-45-1, North 4-0-8-0, Watson 2-0-6-0.