Spinner Kuldeep Yadav led an inspired bowling effort to help India down Australia by nine wickets in the rain-shortened first Twenty20 international in Ranchi on Saturday.
Chasing a revised target of 48 runs in six overs, the hosts achieved the win with three balls to spare. Opener Shikhar Dhawan, on 15, and skipper Virat Kohli, on 22, remained unbeaten.
But it was left-arm wrist spinner Yadav who set up India’s 1-0 lead in the three-match series as he returned figures of 2-16 to restrict Australia to 118-8 in 18.4 overs when rain stopped play for about two hours.
Opener Aaron Finch’s 30-ball 42 was the only bright spark for the David Warner-led side. Australia were jolted ahead of the clash with regular regular skipper Steve Smith forced out of the series with a shoulder injury.
In reply, the hosts lost Rohit Sharma early after the opener was bowled by paceman Nathan Coulter-Nile for 11. He hit a four and a six during his seven-ball stay.
The left-right batting combination of Dhawan and Kohli then took the attack to the opposition as they hit six boundaries between them to ensure a big win.
Earlier the Indian bowlers never allowed the opposition batsmen to get going after being put into bat. Fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah backed up Yadav’s efforts with two strikes.
Warner was out in the first over after chopping a seaming delivery from fast bowler Bhuvneshwar Kumar onto his stumps. He made eight with the help of two boundaries.
Finch then put together a 47-run second-wicket stand with Glenn Maxwell to raise hopes of an Australian recovery but spinners soon turned on the heat.
Leg-spinner Yuzvendra Chahal got Maxwell for 17 and Yadav bowled Finch in the 10th over to rattle the visitors’ top order.
Bowlers kept coming on to get wickets at regular intervals to flatten the Australian batting.
The second T20 is scheduled on Tuesday in Guwahati.
Reading
-
1
‘The Shudra Rebellion’: Kancha Ilaiah Shepherd studies the vital role of oppressed castes in India
-
2
Did Indian culture recognise an independent field of study called philosophy?
-
3
The Carnatic world is dominated by vocalists. How can instrumentalists find larger audiences?
-
4
Upamanyu Chatterjee’s ‘Lorenzo Searches for the Meaning of Life’ wins the JCB Prize for Literature
-
5
How an Indian monk contributed to the understanding of Buddhism in China
-
6
Cash transfers, caste calculus: What was behind the Mahayuti’s sweep in Maharashtra?
-
7
Nepal should conduct ‘haze diplomacy’ to get India and Pakistan to cooperate on pollution control
-
8
‘Think Again’: Jaqueline Wilson’s novel grapples with the realities of being a late millennial
-
9
How CJ Chandrachud belied liberal hopes for a strong judiciary that could stand up to Modi
-
10
Jharkhand election: 8 factors that helped JMM-led alliance to beat out the BJP