THE WORLD AT OUR FEET
Kings Of All They Survey: India Is No 1 In ODIs, Tests
Vikas Singh | TNN
The wait has ended, and a new legend has been born. Mahendra Singh Dhoni and his intrepid warriors now stand atop a pedestal hitherto occupied only by Kapil’s Devils, and India has become only the third country after Australia and the west Indies to win the World Cup more than once.
The glorious images of this magical evening at Mumbai are destined to be replayed millions of times on TV and the Net, and no matter what happens in Dhoni’s remarkable career from here, his place in the Indian cricketing pantheon is assured. Meanwhile, all of India exulted lustily on Saturday night, and the celebrations are going to continue for a long, long time. This, after all, is a party that was 28 years in the making.
After three successive damp squibs (in 1999, 2003 and 2007), Saturday finally produced a match worthy of a cup final. Team India created history by bucking it — not once but thrice over. No team had ever won a World Cup on home ground, no side had ever successfully chased a target in excess of 250 in a World Cup final, and no squad had ever won after a player in the opposite side had hit a century in a final. But there’s something about this squad — where previous teams would have crumbled, they soaked up the pressure. They took some body blows and they kept coming back, bloodied but unbowed, till the opposition finally blinked.
Set 274 to win after Mahela Jayawardene scored a sublime 103 off 88 balls, India stumbled as Sehwag was trapped LBW by Malinga off the very second ball of the innings. Sachin Tendulkar looked in sublime touch, racing to 18, but he then edged Malinga and Sangakkara came up with a peach of a catch. Tendulkar walked off to a standing ovation. A few hours later, he would be carried around, all teary-eyed, to a rapturous reception, but at that moment few would have bet on it.
The gutsy Gautam Gambhir and Virat Kohli then set about rebuilding the innings, while ensuring the asking rate never got out of hand. But the match still hung in the balance when Kohli fell to a superb return catch by Dilshan, with the score at 114/3. A quick wicket at this stage could have sent the Indian innings into a death spiral.
Enter Dhoni. The Indian skipper had struggled through the tournament.
Midas Singh Dhoni
Cometh the hour, cometh the man. Going through a prolonged slump in form, M S Dhoni promoted himself up the order and played a captain's knock, scoring an unbeaten 91 to guide the Indian chase. The man with the golden touch has now taken India to No. 1 status in Tests and ODIs, apart from the World T20 crown in 2007. What can we say but 'Dhoniabad'! Dhoni, Gambhir did the trick for India
But when the chips were down, he chose to make a statement of intent that resounded around the world. Dhoni’s move was backed by sound cricketing logic — it ensured that a left-right partnership would continue at the crease. Besides, having kept to Muralitharan and having played him in the nets during the legendary spinner’s stint with Chennai Super Kings, Dhoni was probably better equipped to handle him than Yuvraj. But it was still a gamble.
It worked — and won India the match. Dhoni nudged and nurdled, ran hard, played the occasional big shot and constantly talked to Gambhir, calming him down when the Delhi batsman played a risky shot. The two put on a century stand — India’s first ever in a World Cup final — and it looked as if India would canter home.
There was to be one more twist. Gambhir had some lucky moments, with Kulasekara dropping a tough chance when he was on 30, but had batted steadily to get to 97 when he played an ugly heave and was bowled. It was the highest score by an Indian on Saturday (incidentally, Gambhir had also top scored with 75 when India won the World T20) but his wicket at that stage gave Lanka a glimmer of hope.
It was a glimmer that man of the match Dhoni and man of the tournament Yuvraj snuffed out with brutal efficiency. There were some hiccups in the running between wickets, and Dhoni struggled with his back, but he was determined to see India home and he did — fittingly, with a magnificent six that showed he can still summon the dasher in him.
It was a fabulous ending to a day when much threatened to go wrong, starting with the toss. Both Dhoni and Sangakkara were convinced they had won the toss. Match referee Jeff Crowe, who had also presided over the farcical spectacle of the 2007 World Cup final ending in near darkness, said he hadn’t heard Sangakkara’s call. A re-toss took place, Sangakkara won and had no hesitation in batting first.
Given the fact that seven of the previous nine World Cup finals had been won by the team batting first, it was a cruel blow. India’s best hope now lay in keeping Sri Lanka down to a manageable total. But Mahela Jayawardene had other ideas. Playing perhaps the most important match of his life, the elegant veteran paced his innings superbly. He purred along, all silken grace, at a run a ball through most of his innings before exploding towards the end to bring up a well-deserved century.
It didn’t help that Sreesanth, picked ahead of Ashwin, leaked 52 runs from 8 overs. To make matters worse, Kulasekara slammed 32 off 30 balls and Perera bludgeoned 22 off just 9 as Lanka raced to 274/6 off 50 overs. A whopping 63 runs were scored in the batting Powerplay during overs 46-50, turning what would have been a par score into a daunting one.
It was the best batting Powerplay for the Lankans throughout the tournament. In a cruel irony, it was scored in the same match in which they scored their least runs during the mandatory Powerplay — just 31 runs coming off the first 10 overs as Zaheer befuddled the openers with a superb spell and induced a snick from Tharanga which was superbly snapped up by a diving Sehwag. Zaheer had three maidens in his first spell of 5 overs, in which he conceded just 6 runs while taking a wicket.
The other bowlers, with the exception of Sreesanth, put in disciplined spells and were backed up by some of the best fielding ever displayed by an Indian side.
Raina and Kohli were outstanding as usual, Yuvraj turned back the years with a superb show and even 38-year-old Tendulkar flung himself around to cut off boundaries with a zeal that would have done credit to someone half his age.
Unfortunately for India, Jayawardene went from strength to strength. He also got able support from Kulasekara and Perera, and the three combined to wreck Zaheer’s figures. Seventeen runs came off Zaheer’s ninth over and 18 off his 10th, including a last-ball six by Perera that rubbed salt into gaping wounds. For eight years, Zaheer has been haunted by the ghosts of the 2003 final, in which he conceded 15 runs off his very first over, and 67 off 7 overs. He finished this Cup final with 2 wickets for 60 runs off 10 overs, but this time, there was to be a happy ending both for him and India.
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