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Khawaja and Green chug along; Ashwin bags a six-for


Making merry: Green furthered the Australian dominance with the bat helping himself to a strokeful century. 

Making merry: Green furthered the Australian dominance with the bat helping himself to a strokeful century. 
| Photo Credit: VIJAY SONEJI

Usman Khawaja (180, 422b, 21×4) braved the sweltering conditions and batted for 611 minutes — a little more than five sessions — to guide Australia to 480 in the first innings on the second day of the fourth Test before R. Ashwin pulled things back with a six-wicket haul (six for 91), his 32nd five-for.

By the time India came out to bat, only 10 overs remained.

Openers Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill put on 36 without loss at the Narendra Modi Stadium here on Friday.

Maiden century

The first couple of sessions belonged to Khawaja and Cameron Green, who brought up his maiden Test century (114, 170b, 18×4).

Khawaja — the highest run-scorer in this edition of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy with 333 — started from where he left off on the opening day and ensured that Australia crossed the 400-run mark despite Ashwin’s relentless effort on a placid surface.

Khawaja held the fort while the tall Green — resuming the day on 49 — made the most of the surface where the ball came nicely onto the bat. He cut and drove fluently, putting on a mammoth 208-run stand with Khawaja.

Every time the Indian bowlers, who went wicketless in the first session, erred in lengths, the Aussie duo cashed in. Despite temperatures soaring, both Khawaja and Green looked calm as they extended the lead. On his first Test tour of India, Green picked up 18 boundaries en route his ton.

At a time when it seemed like a walk in the park for Australia, Ashwin struck. Attempting a sweep, Green was caught down the leg side by stumper K.S. Bharat, thus ending the long partnership.

Ashwin tightened the noose further, removing Alex Carey and Mitchell Starc in quick succession and went on to surpass Anil Kumble’s wicket tally (111) in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy with 113 scalps and join Nathan Lyon as the highest wicket-taker.

Quick wickets

Though Australia lost three wickets for nine runs, Khawaja looked unfazed. Becoming the first overseas batter to play 400 balls in an innings in India since 2010, Khawaja rebuilt before being trapped plumb in the front by Axar Patel, shortly after tea.

This was the second time this year that he missed out on scoring a double hundred despite coming close. As a dejected Khawaja walked back to the pavilion, there were apprehensions of Australia being bundled out soon.

But Lyon put on 70 for the ninth wicket with Todd Murphy before Ashwin dismissed the latter with a leg-before verdict. He then tempted Lyon to nick it to the slips, thus denying Australia a chance to go past 500.

India started aggressively, with Rohit hitting a couple of boundaries and Gill hammering a six.

However, with three full days of action remaining and the Australian total still 444 runs away, India has a long way to go.



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