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    Aussies crush lamentable India


    AFP, MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA
    Saturday, Feb 02, 2008, Page 20

    India fielders Harbhajan Singh, left, and Irfan Pathan both go for the same ball and end up dropping the shot by Australia's Michael Clarke during their Twenty20 match at the MCG in Melbourne, Australia, yesterday.
    PHOTO: AFP
    Australia crushed a lamentable India by nine wickets in front of a huge crowd in a Twenty20 international yesterday.

    After winning the toss and batting, the Indians managed just 74, their lowest score in Twenty20 cricket and just one higher than the lowest ever in an international.

    In reply, Australia cruised to victory in 11.2 overs, notching their first win in three Twenty20 matches against last year's inaugural World Cup winners.

    In his final Twenty20 game for Australia, retiring wicketkeeper-batsman Adam Gilchrist received a huge ovation when he came out to bat and again when he departed as the only man out.

    He was caught from the bowling of Praveen Kumar for 25 off 22 balls, the previous delivery a typically big six from the left-hander. Australian captain Michael Clarke, deputizing for an injured Ricky Ponting, finished on 37, with Brad Hodge on 10.

    With 84,041 people at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, India self-destructed almost from the moment they came out to bat.

    Clarke set the tone when he produced a stunning piece of fielding at point to stop a Virender Sehwag cut and then threw down the stumps at the non-striker's end to remove the Indian opener for a duck off the fifth ball.

    It sparked the Australians and by the end of the fourth over India had slumped to 20 for four, Brett Lee clean bowling Dinesh Karthik (8) with a thunderbolt and Nathan Bracken (3-11) picking up two early wickets.

    After coming together at 32 for five, Dhoni and Pathan briefly steadied the ship by putting on 17, before the former holed out on the mid-wicket boundary from debutant spin bowler David Hussey.

    Every Australian bowler tasted success, with part-time spinner Adam Voges on a hat-trick late in the India innings.

    Clarke took a stunning catch to remove Harbhajan and the following ball saw Shanth Sreesanth caught at point by a diving Hodge for a duck.

    India's No. 11 Ishant Sharma survived the hat-trick ball.

    India's shambles of an evening was summed up in a comical fielding mix-up that saw Pathan and Harbhajan unsuccessfully try to catch the ball and by the fact that the winning run came from a wide.
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