Usually, Indian cricketers ply their trade in packed and raucous
concrete bowls and have to deal with a large media contingent. The
Harare Sports Club, in contrast, features vast grass banks, rudimentary
stands and is ringed by trees. Only a couple of Indian journalists have
made the trip to Zimbabwe to cover the series.
If that wasn't enough to ease the pressure on an Indian squad filled
with understudies, the cool weather on a sunny day, the toothless
Zimbabwe bowling and a benign pitch made them feel all the more
comfortable. With the schooldkids dancing in the stands and plenty of
fans having a leisurely lunch near the pavilion, the match seemed more
like a casual afternoon game in the park, rather than an international
encounter.
The intensity of the contest particularly dimmed once Virat Kohli took
charge of yet another chase. Over the past three years, Kohli has
developed into one of the leading batsmen in one-dayers, a reputation
forged on the back of several big centuries when hunting down targets,
but today's hundred - his 15th in ODIs, drawing him level with Virender
Sehwag and Mohammad Yousuf - could well have been his easiest in
international cricket.
The chase revolved around a 159-run stand for the third wicket between
debutant Ambati Rayudu and Kohli. Rayudu first came to national
attention a decade ago, when picked as a 17-year-old for an A tour of
the Caribbean and was touted as the next big thing in Indian cricket.
However, a tussle with his state association and a dalliance with the
unofficial Indian Cricket League combined to keep him out of the India
team for years. The friendly conditions were the perfect setting for
Rayudu to make his debut, and he helped himself to an unbeaten
half-century.
Rayudu and Kohli came together after India's opening pair of Shikhar
Dhawan and Rohit Sharma departed fairly early - Dhawan after failing to
control a hook, and Rohit after nicking a wide, amiable delivery to the
keeper. Kohli was fluent right from the start, highlighted by a
controlled drive through extra cover and a superbly timed flick to the
midwicket boundary. With the asking-rate well in hand, Rayudu took his
time early on to settle any nerves, mainly dealing in singles - he hit
just two fours till he reached his half-century.
With the pitch having dried out, and Zimbabwe's spinners not getting
much purchase, Prosper Utseya's late double-strike wasn't much more than
an opportunity for the crowd to cheer.
The gulf between the two sides was clearly in evidence, though it was
widened considerably by India winning the toss. The only time the pitch
encouraged the bowlers was soon after the 9am start, and India's
new-ball bowlers, Vinay Kumar and Shami Ahmed, had the ball swerving
around though they couldn't separate the dogged Zimbabwe opening pair of
Sikandar Raza and Vusi Sibanda. The openers, well aware of the early
danger, concentrated on keeping wickets in hand, not bothering about the
scoring rate which remained below three in the first hour.
Raza, the Sialkot-born batsman, shrugged off an indifferent start to his
international career with a watchful 82 that held the innings together.
The camera frequently panned to a man wearing a 'Team Raza' t-shirt,
and Raza didn't disappoint his fans. The run-rate may have been wanting,
and it wasn't until the 32nd over that he reached his half-century, but
he then showcased his repertoire of strokes, highlighted by two sixes
in the Powerplay - one a stunning straight hit over Vinay's head and the
other a muscular swat over midwicket for six more.
India's spinners kept the pressure on Zimbabwe's top order. Jadeja
continued to be in top form, with his steady spin fetching him 10-3-33-0
while legspinner Amit Mishra, playing his first ODI in more than two
years, got three wickets. His googly was going to be a big weapon
against a team that hasn't faced him too often, and it provided India
the first breakthrough, as Sibanda was lbw in the 22nd over.
The disciplined bowling meant that Zimbabwe struggled to lift the
scoring rate. It was only around the batting Powerplay, when Raza and
Brendan Taylor - Zimbabwe's best batsman, who walked out as late as the
34th over - piled on 43 runs in five overs, that the home side finally
got a move on. After Taylor departed, Raza followed, falling for 82 as
he missed a short ball from Mishra. He walked off dejected, and though
Elton Chigumbura reeled off a series of boundaries in an unbeaten 43 off
34 balls to lift the target to 229, it didn't prove much of a challenge
for India.
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