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India v England, 2nd Test, Mohali, 3rd day
Inching forward in the gloom
Paul Coupar in Mohali
March 11, 2006

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Test cricket: a tea party it is not
© David Betts
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During the 1989 Ashes, Robin Smith grew thirsty while batting, and asked
for a glass of water. "No, you can't have a glass of water," spluttered an
enraged Allan Border. "You can wait like all the rest of us. What do you
think this is, a tea party?" Quite right. Test cricket is not a tea party.
England rediscovered that this afternoon and took control of the Mohali
Test.
After two rainy days the game was caught in what Ken Barrington would
have called 'two-man's land'. Now England have begun to inch forward.
Given early strikes and quick runs tomorrow, they will have about a day to
budge India for a second time - and secure an improbable victory. "We've
got the seam bowlers to exploit the conditions," said an optimistic Steve
Harmison at the close. But within an hour of those comments, it was
raining again, and the match could still disappear into drizzle.
However, zooming out to take in the bigger picture, it was a better day
for both sides than the scorecard suggested. England found some oomph.
And India found a quick bowler.
The evening session, where throat balls and sharp fielding left India 149
for 4, was a relief for England supporters, who were beginning to worry
that the Ashes win had left appetites sated. That thought loomed large
during a peculiarly bloodless England display in the afternoon, during
which they leaked 96 runs for one wicket. The fielders looked listless.
Noise and urgency were missing. The game was stuck in cruise control. The
fanatical intensity of last summer, when Harmison gashed Ricky
Ponting's cheek and fielders had the batsmen sweating in a pressure-cooker
atmosphere, seemed a distant memory, despite Harmison's muscular
efforts.

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Scorching speedster: India seem to have found a quick bowler in Munaf Patel
© Getty Images
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Maintaining hunger after spectacular success is Australia's great
achievement and England's pressing task. It was hard to pin it down, but
there was a limpness to England's early work in the field. The best sides
make a batsman feel like a high-altitude mountaineer: lonely, wind-blasted
and a long way from home. This was a bit too much like a stroll in the
park. England missed their chief aggro-merchant, Simon Jones.
However, as the shadows grew longer, menace emerged. Sachin Tendulkar will
not be talking of his opponents' lack of hunger after a vicious and fatal
bouncer from Flintoff. Nor Yuvraj Singh, brilliantly caught by a flying
Ian Bell at short extra cover.
It was high praise to say that Munaf Patel looked almost as menacing.
Patel grew up in a rural part of Gujarat, an area with almost no cricket
culture. He was not fluent in the nuances of the game; he didn't need to
be. He just ran up, mane flowing behind him and hurled the ball down in a
cyclone of arms and legs. Today he married 90mph pace with precision,
fooling Flintoff and prising out Plunkett, in a superb burst of
reverse-swing. After a spell that straddled lunch, he took his sunhat with
figures of 5-2-8-2.
In the scrap to become the world's No. 2, the weapon India have lacked is
pace. Patel is about two yards quicker than Irfan Pathan and could yet
provide the cutting edge. Then came the calm before the storm.
Paul Coupar is assistant editor of The Wisden Cricketer and will be covering the first two Tests for Cricinfo
© Cricinfo

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