Cricket-crazy India erupted with joy on Monday as Mahendra Singh Dhoni's young team snatched the inaugural Twenty20 world title, defeating arch-rivals Pakistan by five runs in a nail-biting final.
Fans, who were glued to their television sets throughout the three-and-a-half hour game, set off firecrackers, danced and hugged each other as Shanthakumaran Sreesanth took a catch at fine leg to account for the last Pakistani wicket.
People crowded outside television shops in New Delhi, the western financial city of Mumbai and the southern high-tech hub of Bangalore in order to catch each moment of the thrilling match, witnesses said.
"It's a great victory," said 20-year-old Soumitra Mitra, a resident of the eastern city of Kolkata, who kept a fast and offered prayers at the Hindu Kalighat temple earlier on Monday before the match in South Africa.
Ajoy Mukherjee, the temple's priest, said scores of youths had stood in line in the driving rain to offer prayers before and during the match.
"Priests offered prayers as long as the match continued," he said.
Office workers fled their desks and shops closed early so the country's millions of fans could catch the action.
"They played well and made us all proud," Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh -- who watched the game with family members while recovering from prostate surgery -- was quoted as saying by his spokesman Sanjaya Baru.
Singh also complimented Pakistan for its fine play, Baru added.
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