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Indian cricket team in Australia in 2011–12

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Indian cricket team in Australia in 2011–12
 
 AustraliaIndia
Dates15 December 2011 – 28 February 2012
CaptainsMichael Clarke (Tests)
George Bailey (T20Is)
MS Dhoni (1st–3rd Tests/T20Is)
Virender Sehwag (4th Test)
Test series
ResultAustralia won the 4-match series 4–0
Most runsMichael Clarke (626)Virat Kohli (300)
Most wicketsBen Hilfenhaus (27)Zaheer Khan (15)
Player of the seriesMichael Clarke (Aus)
Twenty20 International series
Results2-match series drawn 1–1
Most runsMatthew Wade (104)Gautam Gambhir (76)
Most wicketsDaniel Christian (2)
David Hussey (2)
Brad Hogg (2)
Rahul Sharma (3)

TheIndian cricket team touredAustralia from 15 December 2011 to 28 February 2012.[1] The tour included fourTests to contest theBorder–Gavaskar Trophy (which was held by India at the start of the tour),[2] twoTwenty20s (T20Is),[3][4] and eight ODIs as part of theCommonwealth Bank Tri-Series which also involvedSri Lanka.[5]

Australian won the four Test series in a 4–0 whitewash to regain the Border–Gavaskar Trophy. Australian captainMichael Clarke was named the player of the series, having scored 626 runs at anaverage of 125.20. In the second Test match, Clarke, with 329 not out, scored the 25thtriple century in Test match cricket. The third Test match sawDavid Warner bring up a century in just 69 deliveries, setting a new record for the fastest Test century by an opening batsman. In the fourth Test, Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke compiled a fourth wicket partnership of 386 runs, the highest partnership in Tests between Australia and India, or in Tests at the Adelaide Oval. Following the Test series, The T20I series was held which was drawn 1–1. The tour concluded with the ODI tri-series with India finishing last in the ODI tri-series, with three wins, one tie and four losses from its eight ODIs and did not make it to the best of three finals.

Background

[edit]

By mid-2011, theIndian cricket team was enjoying unprecedented success, winning the2011 Cricket World Cup held at home, while also being the No. 1 Test team, which they had achieved in 2009.[6] They proved to be unbeatable in favourable home conditions, but also enjoyed unusual success away, especially beyond thesubcontinent such as inSouth Africa in late 2010, where for the first time ever, the Indian cricket team did not lose a Test series, drawing 1-1. The team, led bywicketkeeper-batsmanMahendra Singh Dhoni, was widely praised by media and former cricketers, and Dhoni's captaincy was also considered by some experts to be one of the reasons for India's success alongside their record breaking ageing batsmen. However, this success was reversed in their tour toEngland in 2011. It was widely expected by Indians that India would win the Test and ODI series there. However, their weaknesses in their ageing bowling and batting were completely exposed by theEnglishmen and they lost all the 4 Tests, losing their No. 1 Test status to England.[7] Despite the debacle in England, it was widely expected by Indians that India would retain the Border–Gavaskar Trophy after the series in Australia. Though the team's previous two tours Down Under were middling, achieving only one Test victory in each, the Australian cricket team was notably weaker than in the 2000s. The nucleus of the Indian side selected for the tour had a number of experienced players who had a good record in Australia. India had most recently won a five-match ODI home series against England 5–0 in October and a three-Test home series against the very weakWest Indies 2–0 in November, improving expectations.

The Australian team was undergoing a period of transition, with many of their successful players likeShane Warne,Adam Gilchrist,Matthew Hayden andGlenn McGrath having retired after the 2006/7 Ashes and former captain and ageing batting mainstayRicky Ponting woefully out-of-form. The team was now captained byMichael Clarke and had many inexperienced players. Australia's recent record was not inspiring, meekly losing the home 2010/11Ashes series, failing to reach the semifinals of theCricket World Cup for the first time since 1992, and drawing two recent Test series inSouth Africa away and home againstNew Zealand at home.[8] Their coachTim Nielsen had been sacked[9] and replaced with formerSouth African coachMickey Arthur.[10] Not many cricket experts and media, even in Australia, were expecting an Australian resurgence against a very formidable India.

This was ageing batting maestroSachin Tendulkar's fifth series in Australia, having been a member of the Indian side in its previous tours Down Under in 1991, 1999, 2003 and 2007.[11] At the beginning of the tour, Tendulkar had scored 99 centuries in international cricket; the tour gave him the long overdue and agonisingly absent opportunity to become the first player in the history of the sport to reach score his hundredth international century, if across two widely differing formats.[12]

India made two changes to its bowling attack from the third Test of the West Indies series, with pacemenZaheer Khan andUmesh Yadav replacing pacemanVarun Aaron and spinnerPragyan Ojha, and fielding an unchanged batting lineup.Harbhajan Singh, who had previously taken the wicket ofPonting ten times in his career, was not selected.

In the Limited Overs squad,Praveen Kumar returned to the squad after recovering from afractured rib.Sachin Tendulkar was also in the squad, although he had not played an ODI since the final of theWorld Cup in April 2011.

Australian T20I captainCameron White was dropped from the T20I team due to poor form at domestic level; he was replaced in the team, and replaced as captain, byGeorge Bailey, who made his international debut. Australian spinnerBrad Hogg came out of retirement at the age of 41 to play the T20Is.

TestsODIsT20Is
 Australia India Australia India Australia India

Tour matches

[edit]

Chairman's XI vs Indians

[edit]
15–16 December 2011
Scorecard
Cricket Australia Chairman's XI
v
6/398d (86 overs)
Tom Cooper 182* (194)
Umesh Yadav 3/39 (15 overs)
6/320 (83.1 overs)
Sachin Tendulkar 92 (132)
Cameron Boyce 2/72 (18 overs)
Match drawn
Manuka Oval,Canberra
Umpires: Mick Martell and John Ward (Both Aus)
  • Indians won the toss and elected to field
  • Match delayed by rain on Day 2
  • Tendulkar and Laxmanretired out on 92 and 57 respectively

Chairman's XI vs Indians

[edit]
19–21 December 2011
Scorecard
v
Cricket Australia Chairman's XI
269 (79.1 overs)
Virat Kohli 132 (171)
Jon Holland 6/70 (17 overs)
7/215d (59 overs)
Ed Cowan 109 (154)
Ravichandran Ashwin 3/52 (14 overs)
2/90d (30 overs)
Gautam Gambhir 42* (98)
Peter George 1/12 (7 overs)
0/100 (30 overs)
Usman Khawaja 56* (84)
Match drawn
Manuka Oval,Canberra
Umpires: Mick Martell and John Ward (Both Aus)
  • Indians won the toss and elected to bat
  • Match delayed by rain and bad light on Day 1

Test series (Border–Gavaskar Trophy)

[edit]
Main article:Border–Gavaskar Trophy

Trophy background

[edit]

Entering the series, India held the Border–Gavaskar Trophy after winning the previous two Test series between the countries, both of which were held in India: 2–0 from four Tests in2008–09, and 2–0 from two Tests in2010–11.

Decision Review System (DRS)

[edit]

The series was played without the players having access to thedecision review system (DRS). At the time, the DRS could be used in any Test series at the agreement of both participating cricket boards, but theBoard of Control for Cricket in India opposed its use in this series. Umpires could still initiate reviews to the third umpire for run out, stumping and no ball decisions.[17]

1st Test

[edit]
26–29 December 2011
Scorecard
v
333 (110 overs)
Ed Cowan 68 (177)
Zaheer Khan 4/77 (31 Overs)
282 (94.1 overs)
Sachin Tendulkar 73 (98)
Ben Hilfenhaus 5/75 (26 Overs)
240 (76.3 overs)
Michael Hussey 89 (134)
Umesh Yadav 4/49 (15 Overs)
169 (47.5 overs)
Sachin Tendulkar 32 (46)
James Pattinson 4/53 (15 Overs)
 Australia won by 122 runs
Melbourne Cricket Ground,Melbourne
Umpires:Marais Erasmus (SA) andIan Gould (Eng)
Player of the match:James Pattinson (Aus)
  • Australia won the toss and elected to bat.
  • Match delayed by rain on Day 1, one over lost
  • Test debut:Ed Cowan (Aus)

Match Report:

Day 1

Australia won the toss and batted first. Play was interrupted for around forty minutes after the lunch break, but only one over was lost after the day's play was extended.Ed Cowan scored 68 runs on debut;Ricky Ponting scored 62.[18] Australia suffered a middle order collapse, falling at one stage from 3/205 to 6/214, but Australia steadied to reach 6/277 at the end of Day 1. Television replays and technology cast doubt on the umpires' decisions to dismiss Cowan andMichael Husseycaught behind on the first day. A total of over 70,000 people attended theMelbourne Cricket Ground for the first day of theBoxing Day Test.

Day 2

Australia reached 333 before being bowled out before lunch. India started well in its first innings, with three of its senior batsmen —Virender Sehwag (67),Rahul Dravid (68) andSachin Tendulkar (73) — making half-centuries beforePeter Siddle claimed Tendulkar's wicket in the last over of the day's play, with India 214/3 at stumps.[19]

Day 3

India then suffered a batting collapse on the third morning, losing 7/68 in the morning session to be bowled out for 282.Ben Hilfenhaus collected the first five-wicket haul of his Test career (5/75).[20]Australia took a 51-run lead into the second innings, but suffered a top order collapse, falling to 4/27.Umesh Yadav took three of the early wickets, finishing the match with seven.Ricky Ponting (60) andMichael Hussey (89), both under pressure to maintain their positions in the team, salvaged the innings after the collapse, combining for a partnership of 115, but three more quick wickets in the afternoon saw Australia 8/179 at stumps. A strong contribution from the tail, most notablyJames Pattinson (37 not out).

Day 4

Australia added a further 61 runs, to be dismissed for 240, a lead of 291 runs. India fell 123 runs short of the target, dismissed inside fifty overs on the fourth day for 169. Tendulkar was the top scorer with 32, and India was unable to compile any significant partnerships. All of the Australian fast bowlers took wickets, with four to Pattinson, three toPeter Siddle and two to Hilfenhaus.

James Pattinson was named player of the match, with bowling figures of 2/55 and 4/53, and useful batting contributions of 18* and 37*. It was Pattinson's second player of the match award in only the third Test match of his career.[21]

2nd Test

[edit]
3–6 January 2012
Scorecard
v
191 (59.3 overs)
Mahendra Singh Dhoni 57* (77)
James Pattinson 4/43 (14 overs)
4/659d (163 overs)
Michael Clarke 329* (468)
Zaheer Khan 3/122 (31 overs)
400 (110.5 overs)
Gautam Gambhir 83 (142)
Ben Hilfenhaus 5/106 (32.5 overs)
 Australia won by an innings and 68 runs
Sydney Cricket Ground,Sydney
Umpires:Marais Erasmus (SA) andIan Gould (Eng)
Player of the match:Michael Clarke (Aus)
  • India won the toss and elected to bat.
Man of the match Michael Clarke celebrates his 100th run, later to become the first person to score a triple century at the SCG

Match Report:

Day 1

Both teams were unchanged. India won the toss and chose to bat. The Australian bowlers dominated the Indian batsman, who lost wickets regularly through the day. The half-century partnership betweenRavichandran Ashwin (20) and top-scorerMS Dhoni (57*) for the seventh wicket provided the only resistance, and India was dismissed for 191 after tea.James Pattinson (4/43) was the top bowler for Australia, taking the wickets of four of India's top five batsmen.

In reply, the Australian top order collapsed to 3/37, withZaheer Khan taking all three wickets and at one point on a hat-trick.Michael Clarke andRicky Ponting then steadied the Australian innings, adding 79 runs without loss to take Australia to 3/116 at stumps.

Day 2

Australian batting dominated the second day. Clarke and Ponting (134) batted together until after drinks in the afternoon session, adding a total of 288 runs for the fourth wicket before Ponting was caught at point.Michael Hussey and Clarke then batted for the rest of the day, guiding Australia to 4/482 at stumps. Altogether, Australia scored 366 runs for the loss of only one wicket during the day's play, at a healthy run rate of 4.07 runs per over. Clarke reached his first Test double century after the tea break, and finished the day 251*.

Day 3

Clarke (329*) and Hussey (150*) continued to bat through the morning, and Clarke reached the twenty-fifth Test triple century after the lunch break. Clarke eventually declared midway through the afternoon session at 4/659, for a lead of 468 runs. The unbroken partnership between Clarke and Hussey was worth 334 runs. The innings of Clarke is the highest score by an Australian Test skipper on home soil, surpassing theDonald Bradman's 270 at Melbourne in 1937.[22]

After losingVirender Sehwag (4) early,Gautam Gambhir andRahul Dravid (29) added 82 runs for the second wicket, before Dravid was dismissed late in the day. India finished 2/114 at stumps, withBen Hilfenhaus taking both third day wickets for Australia.

Day 4

India added 129 runs for the loss of only Gambhir (83) in the morning session to go to lunch at 3/243. From the loss ofSachin Tendulkar (80), India collapsed from 3/271 to 7/286. India added 114 runs for the final three wickets, before being dismissed for 400 midway through the evening session, 68 runs short of making Australia bat again. Hilfenhaus (5/106) was the best of the Australian bowlers.

Michael Clarke was named man of the match for his career best of 329*.[23] Clarke's innings is the highest score and the first Test triple century at theSCG, and third-highest score by an Australian captain in Test cricket, behindMark Taylor (334*) andSir Donald Bradman (334). Clarke also took Tendulkar's wicket in the second innings.

Ricky Ponting's 134 broke a slump of 31 Test innings without a century.

3rd Test

[edit]
13–15 January 2012
Scorecard
v
161 (60.2 overs)
Virat Kohli 44 (81)
Ben Hilfenhaus 4/43 (18 overs)
369 (76.2 overs)
David Warner 180 (159)
Umesh Yadav 5/93 (17 overs)
171 (63.2 overs)
Virat Kohli 75 (136)
Ben Hilfenhaus 4/54 (18 overs)
 Australia won by an innings and 37 runs
WACA Ground,Perth
Umpires:Aleem Dar (Pak) andKumar Dharmasena (SL)
Player of the match:David Warner (Aus)
  • Australia won the toss and elected to bowl.
  • Test debut:Vinay Kumar (Ind)
David Warner smashed his hundred from just 69 balls

On the eve of the test match, an Indian television network caught WACA ground staff drinking on the uncovered match pitch. Pitch curator Cameron Sutherland responded by claiming it was a traditional event for the ground staff which had occurred since Sutherland took over the job of curator.[24]

Both teams opted to play four fast bowlers, withMitchell Starc andRyan Harris replacing spinnerNathan Lyon and injured pacemanJames Pattinson for Australia, and debutanteVinay Kumar replacing spinnerRavichandran Ashwin for India.

Match Report:

Day 1

Australia won the toss and chose to bowl on a greenish pitch. Australia bowled well, and was able to take wickets regularly to dismiss India for 161 shortly after the tea break.VVS Laxman (31) and top scorerVirat Kohli (44) compiled the only half-century partnership (68 runs for the fifth wicket), and India lost its final six wickets for only thirty runs. The Australian bowlers shared the wickets, withBen Hilfenhaus (4/43) recording the best figures, andPeter Siddle taking three wickets. Australia limited India's run rate to only 2.66 runs per over.

In reply, Australia raced to 0/149 in just 23 overs before the close of play, at a run rate of 6.47 runs per over, with openerDavid Warner scoring a century from only 69 deliveries to finish on 104* at stumps; it set a new record for the fastest Test century by an opening batsman, breaking the previous record set byChris Gayle (70 balls) at the same venue in 2009–10. The century matchedShivnarine Chanderpaul to become the equal-fourth fastest Test century scored at that time.[25]

Day 2

Warner (180) and Cowan (74) batted for the first hour of the day's play, and reached 214 without loss, before Cowan was bowled shortly before drinks in the morning session. Australia then suffered a batting collapse, losing all ten wickets for only 155 runs, to be dismissed for 369 at tea, with a lead of 208.Umesh Yadav took five wickets for India, while tail-enderPeter Siddle (30) was the only Australian batsman other than the two openers to manage more than twenty runs.

In its second innings, India fell to 4/51 before finishing the day at 4/88, a deficit of 120 runs.[26]

Day 3

India reached 6/165 at lunch after an even morning session, but lost its last four wickets for no score to be dismissed shortly after the break for 171, 37 runs short of making Australia bat a second time. After lunch, Hilfenhaus took three wickets in an over and Siddle finished the match by dismissing Kohli. Hilfenhaus and Siddle took four and three wickets respectively. Kohli (75) top-scored for the second time in the match for India.

The innings victory gave Australia a 3–0 lead in the series, ensuring that Australia would win the series and regain the Border–Gavaskar Trophy for the first time in 4 years.

David Warner was named Man of the Match.[27] MS Dhoni (the Captain of India) was suspended for one match after he was found guilty of a slow over-rate for the second time in twelve months. He was fined 40% of his match fee and the rest of the Indian team was fined 20%.[28]

4th Test

[edit]
24–28 January 2012
Scorecard
v
7/604d (157 overs)
Ricky Ponting 221 (404)
Ravichandran Ashwin 3/194 (53 overs)
272 (95.1 overs)
Virat Kohli 116 (213)
Peter Siddle 5/49 (15 overs)
5/167d (46 overs)
Ricky Ponting 60* (96)
Ravichandran Ashwin 2/73 (20 overs)
201 (67.4 overs)
Virender Sehwag 62 (53)
Nathan Lyon 4/63 (21.4 overs)
 Australia won by 298 runs
Adelaide Oval,Adelaide
Umpires:Aleem Dar (Pak) andKumar Dharmasena (SL)
Player of the match:Peter Siddle (Aus)
  • Australia won the toss and elected to bat.
  • Rahul Dravid &VVS Laxman (Ind) played their last international match.

Match Report:

Day 1

Australia made one change to their lineup, with spinnerNathan Lyon for pacemanMitchell Starc. India made two changes withRavichandran Ashwin back replacingVinay Kumar. The Indian captainMS Dhoni was replaced byWriddhiman Saha andVirender Sehwag replaced him as captain.

Australia won the toss and chose to bat on a good pitch for batting. India reduced Australia to 3/84, with spinner Ravichandran Ashwin coming into the attack early and taking two wickets.Michael Clarke andRicky Ponting then combined to put on an unbeaten partnership of 251 before the end of the day, with both men making centuries. In the process, Ponting passed 13,000 Test runs, becoming the third batsman, and the first Australian batsman, to reach the milestone. Australia finished the day at 335/3.[29]

Day 2

Ponting (221) and Clarke (210) put on a further 135 runs on Day 2, with both men making double centuries, before the partnership was broken. The 386-run partnership is the highest in Tests between Australia and India, the highest ever at the Adelaide Oval, and the highest Australian Test partnership to not featureDonald Bradman.[30] Australia continued to bat until early in the evening session, Michael Clarke declaring at 7/604. In reply, India lost two early wickets, to finish on 61/2 at stumps.

Day 3

Australia reduced India to 5/122 at lunch on Day 3, withPeter Siddle taking three of the Indian top order wickets. A 114-run partnership for the sixth wicket betweenVirat Kohli andWriddhiman Saha (35) took India to 5/225, before Saha was dismissed at tea. The final four wickets fell for 47 runs, and India was dismissed for 272, a deficit of 332 runs. Peter Siddle finished with 5/49, supported byBen Hilfenhaus' 3/62, whileVirat Kohli (116) scored his maiden Test century, and top-scored for the third consecutive innings.[31] Australia elected not to enforce thefollow-on, and lost early wickets to finish 50/3 at stumps.

Day 4

Australia batted until shortly after lunch on Day 4, declaring at 5/167, a lead of 499 runs. Ponting (60*) top-scored for the second time in the match; Ashwin's two wickets were the most by an Indian bowler. India finished the day at 6/166, withVirender Sehwag scoring a quick 62 from 53 deliveries,Nathan Lyon taking three wickets andRyan Harris taking two.[32]

Day 5

Australia took the remaining four wickets inside an hour of play, dismissing India for 201, for a 298-run victory. Nathan Lyon finished with four wickets, and Ryan Harris with three.[33]

Peter Siddle (5/49 & 1/47) won the Man of the Match award, after being the main wicket taker in the top order of India's first innings.

Player statistics

[edit]
Test Statistics
PlayerTestsRunsBatting averageWicketsBowling average
Michael ClarkeAustralia (c)4626125.20154.00
Mahendra Singh DhoniIndia (c/wk)310220.40
Brad HaddinAustralia (vc/wk)48628.66
Virender SehwagIndia (vc)419824.751157.00
Ravichandran AshwinIndia316332.60962.77
Ed CowanAustralia420634.33
Rahul DravidIndia419424.25
Gautam GambhirIndia418122.62
Ryan HarrisAustralia24444.00629.83
Ben HilfenhausAustralia43913.002717.22
Michael HusseyAustralia429358.600
Zaheer KhanIndia4698.621531.80
Virat KohliIndia430037.500
VVS LaxmanIndia415519.37
Nathan LyonAustralia363.00741.57
Shaun MarshAustralia4172.83
James PattinsonAustralia2551123.36
Ricky PontingAustralia4544108.80
Wriddhiman SahaIndia (wk)13819.00
Ishant SharmaIndia4497.00590.20
Peter SiddleAustralia47719.252318.65
Mitchell StarcAustralia115417.50
Sachin TendulkarIndia428735.87
R Vinay KumarIndia1115.50173.00
David WarnerAustralia426644.330
Umesh YadavIndia4289.331339.35

Twenty20 series

[edit]

1st T20I

[edit]
1 February 2012
Scorecard
Australia 
4/171 (20.0 overs)
v
 India
6/140 (20.0 overs)
Matthew Wade 72 (43)
Suresh Raina 1/22 (3 overs)
MS Dhoni 48* (43)
David Hussey 2/4 (2 overs)
 Australia won by 31 runs
Stadium Australia,Sydney
Attendance: 59,659
Umpires:Bruce Oxenford (Aus) andPaul Reiffel (Aus)
Player of the match:Matthew Wade (Aus)

Match Report:Matthew Wade's 72 off 43 deliveries propelled Australia to a score of 171.[34]

2nd T20I

[edit]
3 February 2012
Scorecard
Australia 
131 (19.4 overs)
v
 India
2/135 (19.4 overs)
Aaron Finch 36 (23)
Praveen Kumar 2/21 (3 overs)
Gautam Gambhir 56* (60)
Brad Hogg 1/19 (3 overs)
 India won by 8 wickets
Melbourne Cricket Ground,Melbourne
Attendance: 62,275
Umpires:Simon Fry (Aus) andBruce Oxenford (Aus)
Player of the match:Ravindra Jadeja (Ind)
  • Australia won the toss and elected to bat

Match Report:[35]

As a result of winning this match, India ended a 17 away international win drought.

Attendances

[edit]

Test series

[edit]
MatchDayAttendance
Melbourne[36]170,917
252,858
340,556
425,865
Match Total189,347
Sydney[37]135,510
230,077
331,644
417,881
Match Total115,112
Perth[38]117,956
217,194
314,352
Match Total49,502
Adelaide[39]121,480
219,671
335,081
417,408
Match Total93,640
Total15447,601
Average29,840

T20I series

[edit]
  • 1st T20I Attendance at ANZ, Sydney: 59,659
  • 2nd T20I Attendance at MCG, Melbourne: 62,275
  • Total Attendance:121,934
  • Average Attendance:60,967

Commonwealth Bank Series

[edit]
Main article:2011–12 Commonwealth Bank Series

The 2011–12 Commonwealth Bank Series was a triangularOne Day International cricket tournament, played by Australia, India andSri Lanka. The tournament was held in Australia from 5 February 2012 to 8 March 2012, and consisted of around robin stage, in which each nation played each of the others four times. The top two teams at the end of the round robin stage then participated in a best-of-three finals series.

In a close round robin, Sri Lanka and Australia qualified for the finals series, each with 19 points in the group stage; India finished last with 15 points, and did not qualify for the finals. Australia went on to beat Sri Lanka 2–1 in the finals.

Group Stage
PosTeamPWLTNRBPPointsNRRForAgainst
1 Sri Lanka84310119+0.1641977 (373.3)1920 (374.2)
2 Australia84400319+0.4541916 (373)1663 (355.1)
3 India83410115−0.5931793 (365)2103 (382)

For information about the tournament, including match results, see2011–12 Commonwealth Bank Series.

Aftermath

[edit]

The Indian cricket team, humiliated in all forms of the game in the tour, was the subject of ridicule from the media and former cricketers.The Australian wrote under the headline "India's pillars of strength reduced to useless rubble"

Dhoni is not the only shaky pillar of what only eight months ago was the number one cricket nation in the world. VVS Laxman, once the scourge of Australian bowlers, is being flayed himself at home after scores of 2,1, 2, 66, 31 and 0. Virender Sehwag, who warmed up for this series by scoring the fastest double century in One-Day International history, also is trending south faster than Scott and Amundsen, having followed up his whirlwind 67 in Melbourne with innings of 7, 30, 4, 0 and 10. Worst of all, Dhoni has failed with the bat. The Indian captain is no thunderer at the best of times – neither is coach Duncan Fletcher, which may be part of the problem – but how can he demand more of his batsmen when he has nowhere to hide behind scores of 6, 23, 57no, 2, 12 and 2? India has not had a single century-maker in the past three Tests,

TheDaily Telegraph said that India's performance was "so bad that the first question that came Michael Clarke's way at the press conference was 'did it feel as if you were playing Bangladesh?'". The newspaper also played up Dhoni's one-match ban due to the Indian team's slow over-rate in the third Test. Under the headline 'Dhoni dumped from Adelaide Test', the newspaper wrote, "India's shambolic tour of Australia plunged into unprecedented disarray when their captain MS Dhoni was sensationally banned from playing in the final Test due to slow over rates". TheHerald Sun wrote about how Australia built up a team after the Ashes humiliation last year while sarcastically mentioning the visiting players skipping practice sessions in the tour.

As painful as it was, getting flogged in last year's Ashes may be remembered as the recession Australia had to have. Nothing is being taken for granted in Australian cricket any more. The new coaching unit is working well under head coach Mickey Arthur and Australia has worked hard to freshen up every aspect of its game. India, by contrast, just lobs along, its players pocketing millions each year and too spoilt to make major sacrifices. It's appropriate that many Indian players spent a lot of time last week sitting under trees at training, because their entire Test match game is being left in the shade.

The Indian tour to Australia was the last international series for Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman. Dravid announced his retirement from international cricket soon after the tour[40] and Laxman announced his retirement after he was selected for the two match home series against New-Zealand in August 2012.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Indian cricket team in Australia 2011–12ESPNcricinfo Retrieved 4 August 2011.
  2. ^Border–Gavaskar Trophy 2010/11
  3. ^"India tour of Australia 2011/12". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved21 June 2011.
  4. ^Indian cricket team in Australia 2011/12Archived 25 September 2011 at theWayback Machine Retrieved 4 August 2011.
  5. ^Tri-series returns to Australia Retrieved 17 December 2011
  6. ^imesofindia.indiatimes.com/sports/cricket/series-tournament/sri-lanka-in-india-2009/top-stories/Finally-Team-India-is-No-1-in-Test-cricket/articleshow/5308844.cms
  7. ^"Huge win secures England top spot".BBC Sport.
  8. ^Gleeson, Michael (26 December 2011)."Controversial dismissals leave India with the momentum".Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved28 December 2011.
  9. ^"Motorsport Video |Motorsport Highlights, Replays, News, Clips".
  10. ^"Arthur picked as Australia's new head cricket coach". 22 November 2011.
  11. ^Deba Prasad Dhar (25 December 2011)."Will Tendulkar, Dravid, Laxman write a better end for themselves?".Daily News & Analysis. Retrieved30 December 2011.
  12. ^Conn, Malcolm (31 December 2011)."Sachin Tendulkar tipped to score 100th century at the SCG".Herald Sun. Retrieved30 December 2011.
  13. ^Injured Pattinson out of series
  14. ^Vinay replaces injured Aaron for Australia Tests
  15. ^Mithun replaces Praveen for Australia tour
  16. ^Lee out of tri-series with broken foot
  17. ^Coverdale, Byron (26 December 2011)."Cowan calls for uniformity in DRS use".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved28 December 2011.
  18. ^Brettig, Daniel (26 December 2011)."Cowan, Yadav shine on see-saw day".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved28 December 2011.
  19. ^Brettig, Daniel (27 December 2011)."Dravid, Tendulkar lead strong reply".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved29 December 2011.
  20. ^Brettig, Daniel (28 December 2011)."Hilfenhaus, Yadav shine on bowlers' day".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved29 December 2011.
  21. ^Brettig, Daniel (29 December 2011)."Quicks fire Australia to 122-run win".ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved29 December 2011.
  22. ^"Clarke hits landmark triple ton".BBC Sport. Retrieved23 September 2021.
  23. ^Hilfenhaus takes five in Australia's innings win
  24. ^'Traditional' pitch drinks caught on camera
  25. ^Warner's blazing ton destroys India
  26. ^Australia storming towards 3–0 lead
  27. ^Australia demolish India by an innings Dhoni banned from Adelaide Test for slow over-rate
  28. ^Dhoni banned from Adelaide Test for slow over-rate
  29. ^Ponting and Clarke demoralise India again
  30. ^Clarke and Ponting double-tons keep Australia on top
  31. ^Australia in control despite Kohli ton
  32. ^Australia four wickets from a 4–0 whitewash
  33. ^Australia wrap up 4–0 whitewash
  34. ^Matthew Wade fifty sets up Australia win
  35. ^Sparkling India level T20 series
  36. ^"1st Test Report". Retrieved5 November 2014.
  37. ^"2nd Test Report". Retrieved5 November 2014.
  38. ^"3rd Test Report". Retrieved5 November 2014.
  39. ^"4th Test Report". Retrieved5 November 2014.
  40. ^Rahul Dravid Announces His Retirement

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