India has a new batting hero after 21-year-old Nitish Kumar Reddy yesterday showed the poise of a veteran to score his maiden century, leading his team’s comeback against Australia on day three of the fourth Test.
At stumps at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, India (358-9) still trailed Australia (474) by 116 runs on the first innings, but it could have been much worse.
Reddy, playing in just his fourth Test and batting at No. 8, rescued India from a shaky 221-7, sharing a 127-run partnership with Washington Sundar (50).
Photo: EPA-EFE
The pair fell two runs shy of equaling the record for an eighth-wicket partnership for India versus Australia of 129, which was set by Harbhajan Singh and Sachin Tendulkar at the Sydney Cricket Ground in January 2008.
Spin-bowling allrounder Sundar offered a difficult chance off the back of his bat to second slip on 18, which was dropped by a diving Steve Smith as Mitchell Starc bowled the first over with the second new ball, one of the few chances for Australia’s bowlers.
Reddy was unbeaten on 85 at tea, with the score on 326-7.
Photo: AFP
With Reddy on 97, Sundar’s 162-ball innings finally ended when he was caught at slip off the bowling of spinner Nathan Lyon (2-88) at 348-8.
The patient Sundar struck just one boundary.
Reddy played a lofted drive to cover to move to 99, but lost tailender Jasprit Bumrah for a duck, caught at first slip off the bowling of captain Pat Cummins (3-86), in the following over at 350-9.
The tension was building as Mohammed Siraj survived three deliveries from Cummins, allowing Reddy to seize the moment and make the century in the following over with an on-drive to the boundary, leading to deafening roars from the thousands of India fans in the stands, including his father.
Reddy’s father, Mutyala, nervously watched from the stands as his son edged through the 90s, before wiping away tears of joy as he was mobbed by well-wishers in the MCG crowd.
“For our family, it’s a special day and we cannot forget this day in our life ... he has been performing well since the age group of 14-15, and now in international cricket, it’s a very special feeling,” Mutyala told hindustantimes.com. “I was very tense. Only the last wicket was remaining. Thankfully Siraj managed to survive.”
Reddy’s hundred came off 171 deliveries and included 10 fours and one six. Only nine more deliveries were bowled before play was delayed and then called off due to bad light and rain, with Reddy unbeaten on 105.
Sundar said he felt India were in a good position, despite still trailing by 116 runs.
“We will just fight, no matter what,” Sundar said. “Playing against Australia in a big series, you are always going to be up against a challenge.”
“I’m very, very happy for Nitish,” he said. “He got an unbelievable hundred and I’m sure this will be remembered forever. The way he went about his business today was amazing. This hundred will be talked about for a very long time.”
Resuming on 164-5, India had wobbled to 244-7 at lunch, losing the wickets of Rishabh Pant (28) and Ravindra Jadeja (17).
However, Australia’s hopes of quickly skittling India’s tail faded as 82 runs were added without loss in the post-lunch session.
SS Lazio on Monday fired the far-right sympathizer who handles their eagle mascot after he posted online a series of videos and pictures of his erect penis. Falconer Juan Bernabe, who has been present at Lazio home matches with Olimpia the eagle since the 2010-2011 season, posted the footage on social media after having surgery on Saturday to implant a penile prosthesis to improve his sexual performance. Lazio said that they had “terminated, with immediate effect” their relationship with Bernabe “due to the seriousness of his conduct,” adding that they were “shocked” by the images. The Serie A club added that Bernabe’s dismissal
Doping fears prevented former US Open champion Emma Raducanu from treating insect bites on the eve of the Australian Open, she said, with players increasingly wary about ingesting contaminated substances. The British player was speaking in the wake of high-profile doping cases involving Iga Swiatak and Jannik Sinner. “I would say all of us are probably quite sensitive to what we take on board, what we use,” the 22-year-old said, recalling an incident on Friday. “I got really badly bitten by, I don’t know what, like ants, mosquitoes, something. I’m allergic, I guess,” she added. The bites “flared up and swelled up really a
TWO IN A WEEK: Despite an undefeated start to the year playing alongside Jiang Xinyu of China, Wu Fang-hsien is to play the Australian Open with a Russian partner Taiwan’s Wu Fang-hsien yesterday triumphed at the Hobart International, winning the women’s doubles title at the US$275,094 outdoor hard-court tournament, while McCartney Kessler lifted the trophy in the women’s singles. Fourth-ranked Wu and partner Jiang Xinyu of China took 1 hour, 15 minutes to defeat Romania’s Monica Niculescu and Fanny Stollar of Hungary, 6-1, 7-6 (8/6) at the Hobart International Tennis Centre, their second title in a week. Wu and Jiang on Sunday won the women’s doubles title at the ASB Classic in Auckland, beating Serbia’s Aleksandra Krunic and Sabrina Santamaria of the US. Their winning ways continued in Australia as they stretched
Dubbed a “motorway for cyclists” where avid amateurs can chase Tadej Pogacar up mountains teeming with the highest concentration of professional cyclists per square kilometer in the world, Spain’s Costa Blanca has forged a new reputation for itself in the past few years. Long known as the ideal summer destination for those in search of sun, sea and sand, the stretch of coast between Valencia and Alicante now has a winter vocation too. During the season break in December and January, the region experiences an invasion of cyclists. Star names such as three-time Tour de France winner Pogacar, Remco Evenepoel and Julian Alaphilippe