India 209 for 8 (Suryakumar 80, Kishan 58, Sangha 2-47) beat Australia 208 for 3 (Inglis 110, Smith 52, Krishna 1-50) by two wickets
Just four days after being part of Australia’s World Cup title, Inglis tore apart a new-look India attack in batting friendly conditions in Visakhapatnam with 110 off 50 balls.
But Suryakumar also shrugged off World Cup weariness with a belligerent 80 off 42 balls. There was a late twist after Suryakumar’s dismissal with India losing a slew of wickets and they needed one run off the final delivery.
Inglis equals Finch’s record
The tight scheduling of this series has been widely mocked and underscored by both teams fielding second-string teams. But with the T20 World Cup just over six months away, there was plenty at stake for a number of players.
Smith and Inglis had points to prove. Smith has openly stated his desire to bat at the top having auditioned for the role late in last season’s BBL and peeling off consecutive centuries.
Opening a T20I for the first time, Smith relished a grassless surface and quick outfield with three boundaries through the off-side in his first eight deliveries.
But he was completely overtaken by a rampaging Inglis, who came in at No.3 after the wicket of opener Matthew Short in the fifth over. Playing as a specialist batter, with skipper Matthew Wade taking the gloves, Inglis hit a boundary off his first ball and didn’t slow down from there.
He toyed with the quicks and spinners by unleashing his full range of strokes around the wicket. Inglis’ superb knock was highlighted by pinpoint placement, while he showcased a liking to get deep into his crease and hit over extra cover.
Having reached his century off 47 balls, Inglis equalled Aaron Finch’s record that had been set a decade ago.
Tough captaincy start for Suryakumar
After a remarkable lapped reverse to the boundary from Inglis, all Suryakumar could do was grin. It was a tough initiation for Suryakumar, who was captaining India for the first time having been in charge of Mumbai 36 times across formats in domestic cricket.
He was proactive and rotated his bowlers in the powerplay, getting spinners Axar Patel and Ravi Bishnoi into the attack. But nothing worked amid Inglis’ onslaught as Suyakumar resorted to giving his team a pep talk during the drinks break.
Things could have been more grim had it not been for seamer Mukesh Kumar, who bowled superbly at the death.
But Suryakumar stands up with bat
Suryakumar did not enjoy batting on a slow Ahmedabad surface in the World Cup final. He was unable to do much against Australia’s clever tactics of bowling slower bouncers.
Suryakumar much preferred this harder surface, while facing up to a second-string Australia attack. He hit two sixes off his first six balls to get India back on track after the early wickets of Yashasvi Jaiswal and Ruturaj Gaikwad, who was run out without facing a delivery.
On such a flat surface, Australia didn’t revert often to their slower ball bouncer tactic, but Suryakumar almost holed out on one such delivery bowled by left-arm quick Jason Behrendorff.
Sangha impresses under pressure
With Adam Zampa resting, legspinner Tanveer Sangha had his opportunity after not being used during the World Cup.
It loomed as a baptism of fire with Sangha copping a thumping from Kishan in the ninth over. Wade boldly reintroduced Sangha four overs later with Kishan and Suryakumar well set.
But Kishan could only hit straight to deep extra cover after Sangha changed his line and Wade decided to stick with him for the 15th over. Sangha repaid the faith by removing Tilak Varma with a googly to finish with 2 for 47 from 4 overs.
However, Suryakumar kept the required rate under control, taking India to 194 in the 18th over before being dismissed by Behrendorff, with Aaron Hardie taking a great catch at mid on.
With just seven needed off the final over, Rinku seemed to have all but sealed the win when he flashed the first ball over point for four. India were left with just three to get off five deliveries, but Abbott had Axar Patel caught off his own bowling in the third ball. Ravi Bishnoi and Arshdeep Singh were both run out off the next two deliveries, leaving a nervous India needing one run off the last ball.
Rinku, though, showed no nerves, lofting Abbott down the ground for maximum; replays, however, confirmed that the bowler had overstepped, meaning the win had been sealed with the no-ball.
Tristan Lavalette is a journalist based in Perth
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