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Dhawan's ton keeps India openers on toes

A cut between point and third-man fetched Shikhar Dhawan a six. That helped set the tone for Delhi's brilliant chase of 294, making sure England XI go into the ODI series after losing both their warm-up games. Khurram Habib reports.

Updated on: Jan 09, 2013 01:46 AM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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A cut between point and third-man fetched Shikhar Dhawan a six. That helped set the tone for Delhi's brilliant chase of 294, making sure England XI go into the ODI series after losing both their warm-up games.

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HT Image

Two days earlier, the visitors had come a cropper against India 'A', whose bowlers had pegged back a batting line-up that included Kevin Pietersen. On Tuesday, KP was rested and still England ran up a solid total that appeared good enough at the Ferozshah Kotla.

But Delhi's left-handed opener produced a blistering ton (off 98 balls with three sixes) to not just guide the chase but also make a strong claim for a spot in the national team struggling to find openers. Dhawan had scored runs in the Challenger Series, Duleep and Ranji Trophy and this effort will only add more weight to his claims.

Again in vain
Ian Bell, who scored 91 in the defeat against India 'A', followed it up with a century and the onus was on England's attack comprising tall and strong pacemen to get a rather youthful Delhi out cheaply.

With the India batsmen struggling, the performance of the England pacemen was closely followed. And Delhi coach Vijay Dahiya and chief selector Chetan Chauhan gave their verdict -- Pakistan were a better bowling side.

"The wickets in the Pakistan series though were more bowler-friendly," said Dahiya.

"We didn't execute our skills properly, bowl in the proper areas," bemoaned Tredwell. That could be a challenge, considering they play their first two games in Rajkot and Kochi, which are considered batsmen-friendly. While India are still coming to grips with changes in the ODI rules, Tredwell admitted that the new rule of having only four fielders outside the circle is something they will have to adapt to. Dahiya too felt it was a challenge and will remain so initially on batting surfaces.

Brief scores: England 294/5 in 50 overs (I Bell 108, E Morgan 52; V Sood 3/45); Delhi 295/4 in 48.3 overs (S Dhawan 110, M Kumar 78 no, R Bhatia 45 no; J Tredwell 2/49).

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Khurram Habib

Khurram Habib has been with the Delhi sports desk for over 13 years. He writes mainly on cricket.

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