Indian cricket team in Australia in 2007–08

Indian cricket team in Australia in 2007–08
India
Australia
Dates 20 December 2007 – 4 March 2008
Captains Anil Kumble
MS Dhoni (ODIs and T20Is)
Ricky Ponting
Test series
Result Australia won the 4-match series 2–1
Most runs Sachin Tendulkar (493) Matthew Hayden (410)
Most wickets Anil Kumble (20) Brett Lee (24)
Player of the series Brett Lee (Aus)
Twenty20 International series
Result Australia won the 1-match series 1–0
Most runs Irfan Pathan (26) Michael Clarke (37)
Most wickets Praveen Kumar (1) Nathan Bracken (3)
Player of the series Michael Clarke (Aus)

The Indian cricket team began a tour of Australia in December 2007, playing the 4 match Test series for the Border Gavaskar Trophy, followed by a single Twenty20 match on 1 February 2008. They also participated in the Commonwealth Bank tri-series against Australia and Sri Lanka from 3 February to 4 March.

Squads

Test squads ODIs and Twenty20 squads
 India  Australia  India [1]  Australia [2]
Anil Kumble (c) Ricky Ponting (c) M S Dhoni (c & wk) Ricky Ponting (c)
M S Dhoni (wk) Adam Gilchrist (wk) Sachin Tendulkar Adam Gilchrist (wk)
Gautam Gambhir Phil Jaques Yuvraj Singh Nathan Bracken
Rahul Dravid Matthew Hayden Virender Sehwag Michael Clarke
Sourav Ganguly Michael Hussey Dinesh Karthik Ben Hilfenhaus
Harbhajan Singh Andrew Symonds Robin Uthappa Brad Hodge
Wasim Jaffer Mitchell Johnson Gautam Gambhir James Hopes
Irfan Pathan Stuart Clark Suresh Raina David Hussey
Zaheer Khan Brett Lee Rohit Sharma Michael Hussey
V. V. S. Laxman Shaun Tait Irfan Pathan Brett Lee
Pankaj Singh Brad Hogg Praveen Kumar Ashley Noffke
Ishant Sharma Michael Clarke Munaf Patel Andrew Symonds
R. P. Singh Chris Rogers Ishant Sharma Adam Voges
Virender Sehwag Sreesanth
Sachin Tendulkar Harbhajan Singh
Yuvraj Singh Piyush Chawla
V. R. V. Singh Manoj Tiwary

Tour matches

1st tour match

20 December - 22 December
scorecard
v
133/4 (48 overs)
Sourav Ganguly 59 (99)
Allan Wise 4-37 (15.0)
Match drawn
Junction Oval, Melbourne, Australia
Umpires: PR Reiffel and JD Ward
  • Days 1 and 2 reduced due to rain, no play 3rd day due to rain

2nd tour match

10 January - 12 January
(scorecard)
v
325/9 dec. (84 overs)
W Jaffer 92 (191)
LC Swards 3-45 (17 overs)
292/8 dec. (93 overs)
JW Rogers 98 (190)
I Sharma 3-26 (11 overs)
281/4 dec. (58 overs)
V Sehwag 113 (78)
RW Bulger 2-120 (24 overs)
60/3 (17 overs)
CJL Rogers 17 (10)
Pankaj Singh 2-21 (5 overs)
Match Drawn
Manuka Oval, Canberra, Australia
Umpires: RD Goodger and RJ Tucker

Test series

1st Test

26 December - 30 December
scorecard
v
343 (92.4 overs)
Matthew Hayden 124 (183)
Anil Kumble 5-84 (25 overs)
196 (71.5 overs)
Sachin Tendulkar 62 (77)
Stuart Clark 4-28 (15 overs)
351/7 dec. (88 overs)
Michael Clarke 73 (113)
Harbhajan Singh 3-101 (26 overs)
161 (74.0 overs)
VVS Laxman 42 (112)
Mitchell Johnson 3-21 (15 overs)
 Australia won by 337 runs
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Australia Att: Day1: 68,778 Day2: 44,797 Day3: 36,346 Day4: 16,742
Umpires: Mark Benson and Billy Bowden
Player of the match: Matthew Hayden

Day One Australia won the toss and elected to bat and after surviving playing and missing and edging some balls through the cordon, built a strong platform with a century opening stand before Phil Jaques was stumped on 66. Ponting and Hussey got out shortly after falling for 4 and 2 respectively. Hayden brought up another Boxing Day a hundred after hitting a four. India then picked up the wicket of a struggling Clarke for 20. Kumble then picked up the wickets of Symonds and Gilchrist. Lee fell for a duck and Hogg was also out leaving Australia 9/323.

Day Two The second day Johnson and Clark batted well before Clark got out leaving Australia with a healthy score of 343. The Indian team were sent into bat and Dravid and Jaffer batted very slowly before losing early wickets. Tendulkar was the highlight of the innings scoring 62 before being bowled by Clark. The rest of the batting line up fell cheaply all out for 196. Australia then went in to bat late in the day with Jaques and Hayden not out at the end of the day to put Australia in a healthy position at stumps.

Day Three Australia resumed play firmly on top with all the batsmen getting starts except Ponting with Clarke top scoring with 73. At 7/351 Ponting declared sending India in to bat with a near impossible target of 499 to win. Jaffer and Dravid survived until the end of the day giving India a slight chance of winning.

Day Four India lost early wickets on day four and only Laxman and Ganguly scored above 20. The Australian bowlers ripped through the middle order with Johnson getting three along with the match-ending wicket of RP Singh. India were all out for 161 with Australia winning by 337 runs with a day to spare going 1-0 up in the best of 4 series. This also brought up 15 straight Test victories just one behind the record, held by Australia under the captaincy of Steve Waugh.

2nd Test

2 January - 6 January
(scorecard)
v
463 (112.3 overs)
A Symonds 162* (226)
A Kumble 4-106 (25.3 overs)
532 (138.2 overs)
SR Tendulkar 154* (243)
B Lee 5-119 (32.2 overs)
401/7 dec. (107 overs)
MEK Hussey 145* (259)
A Kumble 4-148 (40 overs)
210 (70.5 overs)
SC Ganguly 51 (56)
MJ Clarke 3-5 (1.5 overs)
 Australia won by 122 runs
Sydney Cricket Ground, Australia
Umpires: MR Benson (ENG), SA Bucknor (WIN)
Player of the match: A Symonds

Day One India lost the toss again and Australia elected to bat, R.P Singh took Jaques for 0 his first ever Test duck in front of his home crowd. This left Australia 1 wicket down with no runs scored. Hayden followed soon after leaving Ponting and Hussey at the crease. The two survived until lunch Ponting scoring a half century. Harbhajan dismissed Ponting again causing a middle order collapse to leave Australia 6/137. On 30, Symonds was clearly caught behind off the bowling of Sharma but umpire Steve Bucknor controversially did not give it out. Symonds then went on to make 162 not out, with Hogg also scoring his first Test 50.

Day Two India dismissed the lower order in the morning with Australia all out for 463. Brett Lee bowled Jaffer before the partnership of Dravid and Laxman took over the crease. Laxman looked to play shots while Dravid was on the defence. Dravid made 55 while Laxman scored his second century at the SCG. Australian took late wickets leaving Tendulkar and Ganguly at the crease at stumps.

Day Three Tendulkar made another SCG century scoring 154 not out with the rest of the batsman contributing healthy scores. India held a 69 run lead, quite remarkable considering the position they were in after day one. Hayden and Jaques were unbeaten at stumps.

Day Four Jaques was out to Kumble shortly after regaining the lead. Ponting was caught off Harbhajan sparking major celebrations among the Indians. Hayden and Hussey took over the crease with Hayden scoring another hundred. Hayden had to get Ricky Ponting as a runner due to an injury, and was eventually dismissed of Kumble for 123. On the next ball Kumble claimed Clarke for a golden duck. On the hat trick ball Kumble hit Symonds on the pads, sparking a big appeal from the Indian team, but it was not given. Symonds and Hussey remained unbeaten at stumps.

Day Five Australia started the final day at a slower rate then what was expected. Hussey went on to make his first century against India ending on 145 not out. Symonds also scored a half century before getting out at slip. With two overs available to bowl before lunch, Australia declared setting India a target of 333 to win. Many commentators opined that Ponting had declared too late in the innings. The situation of the game meant that India needed a run rate of well over 4, nearly impossible on the decaying SCG pitch. Australia needed 10 wickets to win in a minimum of 72 overs. Before lunch Jaffer fell to Lee, as he had in all four innings to date on the tour. The rest of the top and middle order fell without a large change on the scoreboard. The highest score was that of Ganguly who fell to a debatable decision on 51. Captain Anil Kumble led by example after the Laxman dismissal scoring 45 not out and spending over 2 hours at the crease. With just 2 overs remaining on day 5, India had 3 wickets in hand and were 122 runs behind. The game looked destined to be a draw. However, Michael Clarke took 3 wickets in 5 balls to give Australia victory with just 7 balls remaining.

The umpiring was heavily criticised after the match, with India believing they had a too-large share of bad decisions. After the match the Indian team sought to replace one of the umpires for the 3rd Test, going against a prior agreement stating that "Neither team has a right to object to an umpire's appointment." [3]

3rd Test

16 January - 20 January
(scorecard)
v
330 (98.2 overs)
R Dravid 93 (183)
MG Johnson 4-86 (28.2 overs)
212 (50 overs)
A Symonds 66 (70)
RP Singh 4-68 (14 overs)
294 (80.4 overs)
VVS Laxman 79 (156)
SR Clark 4-61 (19 overs)
340 (86.5 overs)
MJ Clarke 81 (134)
Irfan Pathan 3-54 (16 overs)
 India won by 72 runs
WACA Ground, Perth, Australia
Umpires: Asad Rauf (PAK) and Billy Bowden (NZ)
Player of the match: IK Pathan
Irfan Pathan

Day One India won the toss for the first time in the series, and elected to bat first. Virender Sehwag got his first chance in the series and played a typically attacking innings, providing the team with a good start along with Wasim Jaffer. Both openers went within two runs of each other and Australia slowed the scoring for some time. Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid then came in and steadied the ship, taking the team to a relatively safe score with individual fifties before being dismissed, Dravid missing his century by seven runs. Australia took a few wickets at the end of the day to leave the day's honours even with India batting at 297/6 at the end of the day's play. Stuart Clark and Brett Lee were the standout performers for Australia.

Day Two The Indian batsmen took a few runs before Australia took four wickets for just two runs, closing the innings at 330. In reply, India's young pace attack kept Australia down with some fine swing bowling, pushing Australia down to 5/61. Andrew Symonds and Adam Gilchrist then put up an attacking 102 run partnership to engineer an Australian revival but were soon dismissed in quick succession. Indian captain Anil Kumble claimed Symonds as his 600th Test wicket. The pacers then cleaned up the tail, overcoming a few minor scares from tailenders Mitchell Johnson and Shaun Tait. Australia finished at 212, 118 runs behind, leaving the Indian batsmen to negotiate the last hour of the day's play. Stuart Clark took an early wicket, dismissing Wasim Jaffer, leaving India with a lead of 170 with nine wickets remaining at stumps with Sehwag and nightwatchman Irfan Pathan at the crease.

Day Three The morning session was finely balanced, with Australia reducing India to 125 for 5. Sehwag fell to Clark, while Brett Lee took the wickets of Rahul Dravid and Tendulkar, and Mitchell Johnson dismissed Sourav Ganguly. India's day was saved by the lower order, led by the 79 of VVS Laxman. Pathan finished on 46 and Mahendra Singh Dhoni a gritty 38, but the biggest irritant to Australia proved to be RP Singh, who scored a career-high 30 as part of a 51-run ninth-wicket partnership with Laxman that took the India lead over 400 runs. India were finally dismissed for 294 when Laxman edged a Lee delivery to Gilchrist. Australia were set a daunting target of 413 to win—greater than all but one successful run chase in Test history to date. Pathan took the wickets of Chris Rogers and Phil Jaques before stumps, leaving Australia on 65/2.

Day Four Ricky Ponting and Mike Hussey stayed at the crease for a major part of the morning session. Ishant Sharma troubled Ponting throughout this period, with the Australian captain unable to take control. After a seven-over spell, Anil Kumble was about to replace Sharma with RP Singh, when Virender Sehwag asked him to retain Sharma.[4] The ploy worked and Ponting was dismissed off the first ball of that over. This triggered the fall of the Australian resistance, as they lost four wickets in the session after lunch (including the contentious dismissals of Hussey and Andrew Symonds). Sehwag was brought in to bowl and responded with the prize scalps of Adam Gilchrist and Brett Lee. Towards the end, Michael Clarke (61) kept up the resistance in partnerships of 50 and 24 with Gilchrist and Mitchell Johnson. Johnson himself made his first Test fifty and was involved in a whirlwind partnership of 74 with Stuart Clark, but once last man Shaun Tait came in at the fall of Clark, it was only a matter of time before India took the match; RP Singh did the honours with a yorker that went hit Tait's foot outside the leg stump and rolled onto his stumps, half an hour before the close of the day's play.

The game was widely praised for the high standard of cricket on offer throughout. The Indians were particularly praised for coming back from two games down in the series to deny Australia a record seventeenth consecutive Test victory at a venue whose pitch has, over the years, proved to be the downfall of almost every visiting team. Indian captain Anil Kumble considered this win as his best win ever.[5]

4th Test

24 January - 28 January
(scorecard)
v
526 (152.5 overs)
SR Tendulkar 153 (205)
MG Johnson 4-126 (37.5 overs)
563 (181 overs)
RT Ponting 140 (266)
IK Pathan 3-112 (36 overs)
269/7 dec. (90 overs)
V Sehwag 151 (236)
MG Johnson 2-33 (16 overs)
Match drawn
Adelaide Oval, Australia
Umpires: Asad Rauf (PAK) and Billy Bowden (NZ)
Player of the match: Sachin Tendulkar

Day One India won the toss and elected to bat first. While India brought in Harbhajan Singh in place of Wasim Jaffer, Australia brought back Matthew Hayden and Brad Hogg replacing Chris Rogers and Shaun Tait. Irfan Pathan and Virender Sehwag opened the innings for India. At lunch, India were at 89/2 with Mitchell Johnson taking both the wickets of Irfan Pathan and Rahul Dravid. In the post-lunch session Sehwag (63) and Sourav Ganguly (7) got out, as India went to tea break at 187/4. In the final session of the day, Sachin Tendulkar scored his 39th Test a hundred, and VVS Laxman got out after scoring 51. At the end of the day's play, India were at 309/5 with Sachin and Dhoni remained as the not-out batsmen. Brett Lee and Mitchell Johnson both got 2 wickets, while Brad Hogg got the single wicket of Sourav Ganguly. Throughout the day, the bowling was at a slower rate, as Australia completed the day with having only 86 overs bowled, even after 30 minutes of additional play.

Day Two Tendulkar and Dhoni took the overnight score to 336 before Dhoni was out, caught by Symonds off the bowling of Johnson, early on the second day. India suffered a blow when Tendulkar's was the next wicket to fall, caught by Hogg off the bowling of Lee; his final score was 153. At lunch, India had reached 405/7 with Kumble and Harbhajan Singh at the crease. The pair ended up putting on a 107-run partnership when Harbhajan was finally out, caught by Gilchrist off Symonds, in the 131st over. Harbhajan's dismissal meant Gilchrist beat Mark Boucher's record for wicket-keeper dismissals; Gilchrist became the new record-holder with 414 dismissals. Following the day's play, Gilchrist announced that the Adelaide Test would be his last, effectively retiring from Test cricket and from all international cricket once the one-day series with India and Sri Lanka concluded in March. India were finally dismissed for 526 after tea on the second day, they now needing to dismiss Australia cheaply to be in a good position of winning the Test and thereby squaring the series. Johnson proved to be the most effective of the Australian bowlers, finishing up with innings figures of 4/126. With Australia having to face 21 overs before stumps on the second day, India were disappointed not to take a wicket, Australia ending the day on 62/0.

Day Three Any hope of an Indian breakthrough early on the third day soon evaporated as Australia's openers, Jaques and Hayden, continued to make runs. They batted cautiously, averaging 3 runs an over, and ended up putting on 159 for the first wicket. Kumble made the breakthrough not long after lunch when he bowled Jaques. Hayden was able to make his 30th Test century before he was bowled by Sharma on 103. Ponting and Hussey then guided Australia safely to 225/2 at tea, making the most of the placid pitch. Pathan then bowled Hussey shortly after tea and Australia's score was 241/3. Ponting and Clarke batted out the rest of the day, however, and with Australia finishing on 322/3, a draw was looking the most likely result.

Day Four The Adelaide pitch continued to hold up for the batsmen and Ponting and Clarke took off largely from where they left the previous day. The pair ended up making a 210-run partnership before Ponting was bowled by Sehwag after lunch on the fourth day. He had ended up with 140 runs off 396 balls, the cautious batting reflecting Australia's desire not to be dismissed cheaply and risk losing the Test and a series victory. Clarke had become the fourth batsman in the Test to make a century after he reached 100 in the over where Ponting was dismissed; he was out finally to Sharma, caught by Laxman, on 118 and Australia's score was 490/5. His dismissal brought Gilchrist to the crease in what was looking increasingly like his last Test innings given that it was the fourth day and India were still to bat again. However, any hope of final innings glory was dashed when Gilchrist was dismissed cheaply by a catch from Sehwag in the covers off the bowling of Pathan. His final Test score was 14 and he finished up with career figures of 5,570 runs at an average of 47.60. The score was now 506/6 and 30 from Symonds, with some late contributions from Hogg and Johnson, allowed Australia's innings to conclude at 563, a slight first innings lead of 37. The wickets were spread relatively evenly among India's bowlers, with both Pathan and Sharma taking three wickets each. With a further 17 overs to play, India started their second innings and had reached 45/1 at stumps on the fourth day.

Day Five After the loss of the first wicket the previous day, India batted solidly and had made 128 before the loss of its second wicket, Tendulkar, shortly before lunch. With Australia needing a cheap dismissal of India to have any hope of winning the Test, Sehwag put paid to this outcome by making a commanding 151. By the time he was out after tea, India had made 253/6 and had put the Test out of danger. With a draw being the only possible result, Kumble did the inevitable and declared India's innings over at 269/7, causing play to finish early. The outcome of the Test reflected both the closeness of the series and the evenness between the two sides.

KFC Twenty20 International

1 February
(scorecard)
India 
74 (17.3 overs)
v
 Australia
75/1 (11.2 overs)
IK Pathan 26 (30)
NW Bracken 3-11 (2.3 overs)
MJ Clarke 37* (37)
P Kumar 1-15 (2 overs)
 Australia won by 9 wickets
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Australia Attendance: 85,000
Umpires: Simon Taufel (AUS) and Bruce Oxenford (AUS)
Player of the match: Michael Clarke

Commonwealth Bank Series

The 2007-08 edition of the Commonwealth Bank Series was a One Day International cricket tournament held in Australia. The Commonwealth Bank Series is an annual event involving the national teams of Australia, India and Sri Lanka. India won the event with a 2-0 sweep of the hosts in the final series.

The first two matches were shaping up for excellent contests after their first Innings. However heavy rain in Brisbane, caused by a cyclone in the Pacific ocean, saw the first two matches of the series abandoned. Australia was first to win a match in the series after a Sri Lanka collapsed in game 3.

Australia was the best team during the regular matches, taking 4 wins with bonus points. However, India defeated Australia 2-0 in the best of 3 final series to win the tournament. This is the second time in a row Australia has lost their home tri-nations' series. Last year they lost to England. Fast bowler Nathan Bracken was the leading wicket taker in the tournament with 21 wickets and was named Player of the Series. Australian wicketkeeper Adam Gilchrist and left-arm spinner Brad Hogg retired from One Day International after the second final.

Umpiring incidents

The 2nd Test match witnessed many controversial umpiring decisions from the two umpires - Steve Bucknor and Mark Benson and even the third Umpire. Three of Steve Bucknor's gaffes occurred when he did not give Andrew Symonds out caught behind at 30 when TV Replays clearly showed that the ball had passed through the bat's edge. The second one occurred when Bucknor did not refer a stumping call against Andrew Symonds to the third umpire. Replays showed the Australia all-rounder’s foot wasn't grounded inside the crease when the bails came off. This was a major boost for Australia as Symonds went on to make 162 not out and brought Australia back into the Game. After these incidents, Andrew Symonds said, "I was very lucky. I was out when I was 30, given not out. That's cricket though, I can sit here and tell you about my bad decisions as well - but I won't.""Luck Deserts India After Early Inroads Against Australia". Arab News. 2008-01-03.  On the fifth day, Bucknor declared Rahul Dravid out caught behind though television replays later showed the ball had brushed his pad without touching his bat.[6] [7][8] In response to an official about Bucknor's umpiring from the BCCI, the International Cricket Council (ICC) withdrew Steve Bucknor from umpiring in the third Test match, and assigned Billy Bowden as his replacement.[9] The other incident was when Mark Benson consulted the fielding captain, Ricky Ponting instead of third umpire on whether Michael Clarke completely took the catch of Sourav Ganguly. As Clarke appealed for a complete catch Mark Benson gave out but the replay showed that the ball was clearly touching the ground. These and some other umpiring errors created a huge backlash against the Australian cricket team for not playing in the spirit of the game.

Records

Series Statistics
Record Performance Player Country
Most runs
493 Sachin Tendulkar  India
410 Matthew Hayden  Australia
410 Andrew Symonds  Australia
Most wickets
24 Brett Lee  Australia
20 Anil Kumble  India
16 Mitchell Johnson  Australia
Most dismissals
(wicketkeeper)
25 (25 Ct + 0 St) Adam Gilchrist Australia
13 (10 Ct + 3 St) Mahendra Singh Dhoni India
Most catches
(fielder)
9 Rahul Dravid  India
8 Michael Hussey  Australia
6 Michael Clarke  Australia
Source: Cricinfo.com
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References

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