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Australia 163 for 5 at tea, trail India by 26 runs

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Press Trust of India Bengaluru
India grabbed three quick wickets in the second session with left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja claiming two of them as they reduced Australia to 163 for 5 at tea in second cricket Test here today.

After taking two Australian wickets for just 47 runs in the morning, the Indians took three wickets, including that of a determined opener Matt Renshaw (60), late in the post-lunch session to come back into the match.

Jadeja, who had picked up a wicket in the morning session, bagged two more, including that of Renshaw, in nine overs while conceding 19 runs.

At the end of the second session, Jadeja's figures were three wickets for 32 runs in 13 overs, a bowling performance which helped India to bounce back into the game.
 

The other wicket taker was Ishant Sharma who dismissed Mitchell Marsh for a duck at the stroke of tea.

Australia could muster 76 runs while losing three wickets in 35 overs in the session. Shaun Marsh was batting on 38 from 127 balls at the break.

The Indians toiled hard for more than 20 overs in the second session without any success with young opener Matt Renshaw and Shaun Marsh showing tremendous application on a turning track for a 50-plus partnership.

The Australian duo's doggedness looked like taking away the momentum from the fired-up Indians who showed a lot of intent today and the visitors were inching towards the home side first innings total of 189.

Renshaw, who stitched 52 runs for the third wicket with Shaun Marsh, departed in the 67th over and that changed the scenario as Australia lost three wickets in 13.3 overs for the addition of just 29 runs.

Peter Handscomb (16) and Mitchell Marsh (0) were out in the space of 3.2 overs. Renshaw's 60 came from 196 balls and he hit five fours and a six.

Australia now trail by 26 runs with five first innings wickets in hand on a difficult Chinnaswamy Stadium pitch where run-making has been extremely hard.

Renshaw, who dropped anchor to build a solid innings, took his time to score runs. He reached to his third half century when he clipped Ravichandran Ashwin through mid-wicket for a couple of runs.

Renshaw's fifty came in 240 minutes of 183 balls with five boundaries to his name. His fifth boundary came after facing 71 balls.

Jadeja had the last laugh as he forced Renshaw, who had belted the same bowler over his head for a magnificent six, to come outside the crease to play the ball. The batsman missed it completely and Wriddhiman Saha dismantled the bails before the opener could get in.

Jadeja then removed Peter Handscomb, after the batsman scored 16 runs of 30 balls with two boundaries. He came down the track and tried to flick it but failed to get contact as the ball went straight towards Ashwin at mid-wicket.

Ashwin dived towards his right and got his hand to it, the ball fumbled out but luckily it again hit his arm and bounced again which helped him gather it in the second chance.
(REOPENS DEL23)

Earlier, India removed dangerous opener David Warner and in-form captain Steve Smith cheaply as Australia reached 87 for 2 at lunch.

Warner (33) and Smith (8) fell to Ravichandran Ashwin (1/22) and Ravindra Jadeja (1/11) respectively as the Indian bowlers, especially the spinners, made it difficult for the Australians to score runs on a turning track which had a lot of cracks.

Ashwin, who opened the bowling with Ishant Sharma, gave India the breakthrough in the sixth over of the day and third of his own as a gem of delivery knocked off Warner's off-stump as the batsman was completely beaten by the extravagant turn of ball after landing outside the leg. Warner's 33 came from 67 balls and contained three fours.

Smith, who had scored a brilliant century in the first Test which Australia won by 333 runs, fell three overs before lunch after he consumed 52 deliveries for his eight runs which did not have any shot to the boundary.

Opener Renshaw, who was dropped by Indian captain Virat Kohli at slips off Umesh Yadav's bowling, was batting on 40 off 144 deliveries at the lunch break after starting the day on 15.

Australia, who were 40 for 2 overnight, could only add 47 runs from 29 overs while losing two important wickets.

India, who were shot out for a paltry 189 in the first innings, showed a lot of intent and they were fired up for most part of the morning session.

The session belonged to India as they put shackles around the Australian batsmen by not allowing them to score freely. The crucial session also saw a lot of theatrics and verbal sparrings between the players of the two sides.

Ishant and Smith were involved in some theatrics with the India pacer making faces on quite a few occasions to the visiting captain after his shout for an LBW was turned down by the umpire. Kohli was also seen enjoying the moment as he wore a smile from behind to what Ishant was doing.

Smith looked like amused initially but later retorted in his own way. The Australian captain also survived a close LBW decision. India asked for a DRS referral but to no avail.

The Australian captain was not to play a long innings today as he succumbed to the intense Indian pressure in the 42nd over as his defensive shot off Jadeja hit the inside edge of his bat and the pad before wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha took a fine diving catch.

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First Published: Mar 05 2017 | 2:57 PM IST

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