Virat Kohli’s love affair with Adelaide Oval continued as he made a classy 74 but his untimely run-out triggered a batting collapse as India ended the opening day at 233/6 against Australia in the opening pink-ball Test on Thursday.
Kohli, who looked in complete command, was run out when his deputy Ajinkya Rahane backed out after calling for a single, ending his stay just before the second new ball was taken.
Watch: Virat Kohli is run out on 74 after horror mix-up with Ajinkya Rahane in Adelaide Test
From a comfortable 188/3, India slumped to 206/6 as Rahane and Hanuma Vihari (16) found the pace and swing generated by the pink ball under lights too hot to handle. Ravichandran Ashwin (15, batting) and Wriddhiman Saha (9, batting) saw off the final few overs.
In conditions, which can’t exactly be called batting friendly, Kohli blended the right amount of caution and aggression in his 180-ball innings. If Cheteshwar Pujara (43 off 160 balls) let bowlers dictate terms with an ultra-defensive approach, his skipper gave opposition the respect it deserved but also played his shots to drive home a point.
His 88-run partnership with Rahane (42 off 91 balls) during the final session nearly put India on even keel but fortunes tilted once Kohli was back in the pavilion. Rahane was soon snapped with the second new ball by Mitchell Starc (2/49), easily the best bowler in action.
The knock will certainly be among the Indian captain’s favourites as he hit three kinds of pull-shots to the pacers – two off Starc and one off Josh Hazlewood.
One of the pulls off Starc was a check shot for which just rolled his wrists to the ball to the square leg boundary. Then there was one off Hazlewood where he again rolled his wrists but the ball went to the front of square. Another pull was where he got under the ball and hit it to the mid-wicket fence. There was a classical cover-drive that brought his half-century.
Earlier, Pujara’s defensive approach became his own undoing as India literally crawled during the first two sessions. Even a 68-run stand for the third wicket with Kohli couldn’t release pressure going into the second break of the evening.
Not often does one find a batsman take 148 balls to score a boundary and it became a battle of attrition between Pujara and star spinner Nathan Lyon (1/68 in 21 overs) during the post-dinner session.
It made for a fascinating hour of Test cricket, a throwback to the good old days when batsmen would plonk their front-foot with a big stride forward and use their pads as the first line of defence.
He did hit Lyon for a couple of boundaries trying to break the shackles but then came a classical off-break which had both turn and bounce. Tat-pad fielder Marnus Labuschagne, at leg-gully, lunged forward to take an easy catch.
When Pujara used more pads against Lyon, Kohli played the copybook forward defence, presenting his bat first. When an opportunity came along, he punched over Lyon’s head for a boundary.
In the morning, Prithvi Shaw’s (0) poor technique was once again exposed by Starc while Mayank Agarwal (17) got a beauty from Pat Cummins. It was another disappointing mode of dismissal for Shaw, who was considered a rather surprising selection over an in-form Shubman Gill.
The Australian pace troika of Starc (2/49 in 19 overs), Josh Hazlewood (1/47 in 20 overs) and Pat Cummins (1/42 in 19 overs) bowled a very steady line comprising mostly of fuller deliveries.
Starc kept a full delivery, which slightly shaped in, and the opener, having faced one delivery, went for an expansive drive, playing away from his body only to drag it back onto the stumps.
Agarwal was a bit adventurous as he found India’s first boundary with a cover drive off Hazlewood. An uppish square drive off Starc got him a second one.
But Cummins produced one that was fast and moved off the track and Agarwal was beaten for pace as replays showed that he couldn’t even complete landing on his front-foot.
With PTI Inputs