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Home > Sports News > Cricket News > Article > Australia are in Kuldeep trouble

Australia are in Kul(deep) trouble

Updated on: 26 March,2017 06:06 AM IST  | 
Ashwin Ferro | ashwin.ferro@mid-day.com

Chinaman bowler Yadav takes four wickets in debut Test as India bowl out Oz for 300 on Day 1

Australia are in Kul(deep) trouble

Ecstatic Kuldeep Yadav celebrates the wicket of Glenn Maxwell with Umesh Yadav on Day One of the fourth Test against Australia on Saturday. Pic/PTIEcstatic Kuldeep Yadav celebrates the wicket of Glenn Maxwell with Umesh Yadav on Day One of the fourth Test against Australia on Saturday. Pic/PTI


Day One of the fourth and final series-deciding Test between India and Australia began and ended with enough drama that only promises a lot more excitement in the next four days.


Off the very first delivery of the match, Bhuvneswar Kumar, picked in place of 77-Test old Ishant Sharma, got David Warner edging an away singer to second slip only for Karun Nair to spill it. Then, in the last three minutes of the day's play, India's KL Rahul survived some vicious bounce and swing extracted by visiting pacer Josh Hazlewood in the only over that India had to bat to finish on 0-0 following Australia's 300 all out moments earlier.


Here comes Kuldeep
In between, one of Indian Test cricket's most impressive debuts in recent times unfolded in the form of young Kanpur-based Chinaman bowler Kuldeep Yadav.

Introduced in the 29th over of the day, Kuldeep began brilliantly with some short, sharp turn and variation, leaving opener David Warner guessing more often than not. And as expected, it was the left-hander, who was Kuldeep's first victim on the first ball of the fourth over after lunch. As Kuldeep would reveal later, he dismissed this Australian with a weapon (flipper) he'd picked up from his mentor and another Australian (Shane Warne). The injured Virat Kohli, who made way for Kuldeep here, also couldn't contain his excitement and came to the boundary ropes to congratulate his young bowler. Kuldeep had three more dismissals in the day, and all three were sheer beauties. He then had Peter Handscomb clean bowled for eight off the conventional Chinaman as Australia suddenly began feeling the jitters at 168-4 though skipper Steven Smith was into the nervous nineties at the other end.

No Maxi touch
Kuldeep then brought up what has to be the wicket of the day. Just four overs after Handscomb's dismissal, Kuldeep got a taste of Glenn Maxwell's aggressive side when the big-hitter lofted him for a four over mid-on. Not one to be bogged down, the 22-year-old showed immense maturity when, only two balls later, he foxed Maxwell into playing against the wrong 'un and clean bowled him. Wicket No. 4 for Kuldeep was a sweet caught and bowled off a tossed up delivery to the unpredictable Pat Cummins (21 in 40 balls, 3x4, 1x6). At 245-7, the Aussies were now reeling and eventually crumbled 55 runs later for 300, at least a good 50 runs short of what they should have had on the board had it not been for a certain Kuldeep Yadav.

What you need to know about the chinaman

  • It's a delivery bowled by a left-arm slow bowler which turns into the right-handed batsman. In other words, it is a left-arm leg spinner.
  • The delivery was named after left-arm spinner Puss Achong, who played for the West Indies from 1930 to 1935. Achong was the first player of Chinese extraction to play Test cricket.
  • Chinaman exponents: Garry Sobers, Paul Adams, and Michael Bevan and Brad Hogg
  • During the England vs WI Test at Old Trafford in 1933, Achong bowled a delivery that got Walter Robins stumped. He walked back to the dressing room and remarked, "Fancy being done by a bloody Chinaman."

79 No. of wickets by spinner R Ashwin in Tests during the ongoing season, the most by any bowler in one season
54 No. of consecutive Tests played by Kohli before missing Saturday's match

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