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New Zealand beat Australia by six runs in first one-day international – as it happened

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  • New Zealand 286-9; Australia 280 (47 overs); New Zealand win by six runs
  • Marcus Stoinis’ 146 not out not enough as Australia’s run chase falls short

New Zealand 286/9 def Australia 280 (47.0 ov) by six runs

It was a thriller at Eden Park that manifested from nowhere. At the forty over mark Australia needed somewhere approaching 110 with two wickets in hand, and about forty minutes later were poised for victory. It wasn’t to be, however, as the ice-veined Williamson corrected the wrongs of an earlier run out attempt with a pinpoint diving finish from short mid-on. While much of the conversation will be about how Australia almost pulled off a miracle, it should be remembered that in a critical moment Tim Southee nailed a yorker and Williamson made the crucial play. They were just about worthy winners, New Zealand.

Related: Marcus Stoinis heroics not enough as Australia fall to New Zealand in first ODI

Need to take a breath after that

Will compose myself and gather some thoughts to summarise. From the top of my head (as ever), this was one of the all-time great ODI performances by an Australian. It will only be soured by the result. It was excellent fielding from Williamson there, who only moments earlier had missed an opportunity to ice the match with a similar run out from the other side. Will be back shortly with some concluding remarks.

GAME OVER - NEW ZEALAND WIN!

The final ball of the over sees Stoinis miscue a drive to short mid on. Hazlewood takes off instinctively for the run but it’s suicidal. By the time he turns to recover his ground, Williamson has already underarmed and this time hit the stumps! He was aiming at about one and a half of them - he dived full length and underarmed with precision. Hazlewood was about half a metre out of his crease, and pandemonium ensues. New Zealand win by six runs. An incredible finish.

47th over: Australia 268-9 (Stoinis 134, Hazlewood 0) *287 to win

Australia need 19 from 24 at the start of the over. It’s Southee to Stoinis - it’s full, Stoinis goes straight, but he miscues it. It rolls out to mid wicket for no run. Stoinis then gets every piece of one over Southee’s head but it’s saved by Neil Broom out on the boundary. What an outstanding piece of fielding. Stoinis is playing for sixes here. He only needs three or four. He then hits Southee for six over cover! This is outrageous. THE NEXT BALL GOES FOR SIX OVER MID OFF! This is one of the great innings in the modern era. Move over Mitch Marsh, Moses, Cartwright, whoever...this is extremely special stuff. Twelve off the over, one ball left. The field’s up. What does Stoinis do?...

What an unbelievable game from @MStoinis... Huge 100* & 3fa. This would be one of the great wins... #NZvAUS

46th over: Australia 268-9 (Stoinis 134, Hazlewood 0) *287 to win

Stoinis finds two to wide long on as he drags one out there. He slashes the next and nearly beats the third man boundary rider, but it’s saved so he decides not to run. Stoinis, who is hammering everything offered to him, then blazes one straight to cover, so there’s no run there. Boult’s in again - Stoinis is back and trying to pull him but it’s too quick - it fires into his hand and that’s hurt him. He faces up again and finds the boundary! The shot was similar to the one he attempted the ball previous, but this time he nailed it. This is brilliant stuff from the man they call ‘Stoyne’. It’s six off the over with one ball to go before the requisite team conference. Boult heads in...Stoinis appears to miss it but the Black Caps appeal, it’s given not out but they review!...stand by. The Aussies scampered one anyway. Stonis was jamming his bat down on the ball and the question is whether the ball hit the pad or the bat. To me it looks as though the snicko vibration is ‘thud-ish’, but I hear the umpire saying he ‘sees a spike’. He goes on to say that ‘he sees no conclusive evidence of bat’, so they do not overturn the decision. Stoinis is not out, and the match carries on. What drama.

45th over: Australia 261-9 (Stoinis 128, Hazlewood 0) *287 to win

We start the over with 43 from 36 balls, and one wicket in hand. Stoinis doesn’t take the single early, and both batsmen are in conference after every ball. He then gets one in the slot and hits another six over cow corner! It was a slower ball but Stoinis saw it. Next ball is cut over short third manfor four! Here comes Australia! It’s 33 from 33 for Australia now, unbelievable stuff. Can Stoinis stay the journey? Can Hazlewood? He then hits another one for six over mid on! He leans back and just golf swings it all the way. Incredible. 27 from 32. Stoinis toes a rank full toss for no runs the next ball, making for an interesting conversation ahead of the final delivery. Does he take a single or carry on? Do New Zealand bring the field in? They leave it, wisely. Or is it? Stoinis hits the ball straight to short cover, takes off, and Williamson runs directly to the stumps but misses with the underarm! He probably could have run all the way and taken them, but the pressure told. Stoinis retains the strike and we carry on.

44th over: Australia 244-9 (Stoinis 111, Hazlewood 0) *287 to win

Another eventful one! Stoinis farms the strike, ignoring a few singles early before standing prone as five wides go over his head. He follows that with two sixes way over Boult’s head, before taking another single to hold on to the strike next over. The run rate is now eminently achievable for Australia, it’s just the wickets that hurt. It will be Southee from the other end.

What a magnificent innings from Marcus Stoinis. In only his second match for Australia, he’s led the way with a combination of patience and power. He brings up the milestone with a huge, straight six over Tim Southee’s head, meaning it comes as better than a run-a-ball pace. He kisses his helmet, beats his heart and salutes the change room. What a knock.

43rd over: Australia 226-9 (Stoinis 98, Hazlewood 0) *287 to win

Stoinis cuts Santner behind point for a boundary from Santner’s first ball, taking him to 96. He takes a single the next which brings Starc on strike. He just needs to get off strike but he does better than that and jams his bat down on one, gets a thick edge and takes two. He then gets off strike the following ball with a cut to the boundary rider. Stoinis takes a single before Starc holes out to mid wicket! Description below, Hazlewood is the last man and last wicket.

Australia had done so well that over, but from the final ball Starc tried to slog sweep Santner over mid wicket for six. He instead mistimes it and the ball flies comfortably to Neesham on the boundary. A shame, as something was building there. They’ve crossed too, I think, meaning Hazlewood takes the strike. He’ll be disappointed with that, Starc.

42nd over: Australia 217-8 (Stoinis 92, Starc 0) *287 to win

Huge over from Australia here! A wide, then 6, then wide, then 6, then a dot starts things off. Stoinis hit the first one over cover then the next one over mid on. He then clobbers another one straight back over his head! The equation closes! Stoinis then annihilates one to mid off and it’s dropped by Williamson! He really cracked that one, it would have been a stellar take. Wouldn’t be surprised if it’s broken his hand, it was hit that hard. One from the final ball and...is this match still on?

41st over: Australia 196-8 (Stoinis 73, Starc 0) *287 to win

There were a few nerves from the New Zealand radio commentators at the start of this over as they contemplated all manner of permutations. Santner ultimately did the job, bringing the Black Caps within touching distance of a well-earned win. He’s bowled well today. It’s Starc to the crease now.

Brilliant bowling from Santner, who floated a ball high and wide to the advancing Australian, beating him comprehensively, before Latham did the rest. It was a wicket borne from pressure early in the over. He’d only conceded four singles heading into the last ball, forcing Cummins into risky business. He succumbed, bringing to a close a pretty entertaining knock.

40th over: Australia 193-7 (Stoinis 71, Cummins 35) *287 to win

A top edge to Cummins from Ferguson brings him another boundary via the keepers head. Two balls later the same man swings him lustily over mid wicket for six! Cummins continues in the same vein, and is almost caught by a superman-leaping Guptill, who almost claims a beauty with his outstretched right hand before grassing it. Would have been a classic, now just an excellent save. Cummins then nearly pierces point and cover but more brilliant fielding prevents a boundary. High quality cricket this over. Cummins is batting exceptionally well.

@sjjperry is there such a thing as a non-naked streaker?

39th over: Australia 179-7 (Stoinis 70, Cummins 22) *287 to win

Stoinis takes one to mid off before Cummins crunches one over cover for four. Williamson nearly reeled it in, but replays showed his leg touching the rope at the critical moment. Despite the miss, New Zealand have been exemplary in the field - a notable difference from Australia’s most recent opponents. Cummins takes one from the last ball.

38th over: Australia 173-7 (Stoinis 69, Cummins 17) *287 to win

Further respect shown for Ferguson, whose offerings are good enough to prevent too much damage early in the over. Stoinis then gets some luck after he canes one with a flat bat down the ground - Southee slid in on the circle to stop it, but the ball just rolled over him and continued on its way to the boundary. There was a broken bat in there too, and Stoinis retained the strike heading into Southee’s next over.

37th over: Australia 166-7 (Stoinis 63, Cummins 16) *287 to win

Williamson continues to trust Munro, whose driven handsomely over wide mid on for four from Cummins’ blade. Both batsmen then tick over the strike before Cummins again lifts Munro over mid off for another boundary. A really good shot from the Australian quick. There’s almost a mix up on the final ball, but Cummins sends Stoinis back and there’s no run added.

36th over: Australia 155-7 (Stoinis 61, Cummins 7) *287 to win

Smelling Australian blood, Williamson brings back Lockie Ferguson, who’s probably been their best today. He hurries up Cummins with typical pace early, catching his splice as he attempt to pull him. He defends the next, then leaves(!) another one. Wonder if there’s an edict from stand-in coach Langer to build an innings. If so, only Stoinis and Faulkner can lay claim to have followed orders. Cummins then edges one past the outstretched hand of Williamson for four.

35th over: Australia 149-7 (Stoinis 61, Cummins 1) *287 to win

I’m getting a cult-hero vibe from Colin Munro, his celebration was enthusiastically elaborate. His first ball to Cummins shapes away beautifully and beats the New South Welshman’s bat. He finds a run to finish the over. New Zealand are closing in.

Partnership broken! Faulkner tries to heave Munro over midwicket but misses entirely. He’s clean bowled by the ecstatic Munro, whose delivery clipped the top of off. Now seven down, the end is nigh for Australia.

34th over: Australia 146-6 (Stoinis 60, Faulkner 24) *287 to win

Santner, so economical early, is now the subject of aggression as Stoinis lifts him over the offside for two, then a single, which brings Faulkner on to strike. Santner’s still giving the ball plenty of air which is encouraging to an old spinning sympathiser, and it seems to lock Faulkner in to his crease. There’s five off the over leading into the last delivery. Stoinis tries to sweep Santner powerfully from outside the off-stump but mistimes it. He takes off for one but is promptly sent back by his partner, diving into his crease with enough time to render the whole event fairly innocuous. A good one from Santner there. Taking predictions now: can Australia run this close? 90 balls, 151 runs.

33rd over: Australia 141-6 (Stoinis 57, Faulkner 23) *287 to win

It’s Colin Munro’s military mediums now - presumably Williamson wants to soak up a few more overs before bringing back the big guns. The offerings look exceptionally palatable, but maybe that’s the point? The Australian’s seem to hedge their bets in the same way I am, as a smattering of singles and two wides greet the first part of the over. Faulkner seemed to dummy Munro into the second one - feinting toward leg before moving back inside inside it. All singles otherwise as the partnership moves to 74.

32nd over: Australia 135-6 (Stoinis 55, Faulkner 21) *287 to win

Neesham is withdrawn for Santner; Williamson probably sensed danger there. Can Santner pick up where he left off? Initially no, as Stoinis crunches his first ball for six - a diving Munro couldn’t prevent it, as the ball cannons into the rope, flat, for what some annoying people continually describe as a maximum. Stoinis has signalled his intentions. The next one goes for six too, as he pulls a rank long hop over cow corner. That’s fifty for Stoinis, and a very good one too. A few singles follow, and that’s a good one for Australia. 14 from it and Stoinis adds a half century to his first innings haul of 3-fa.

31st over: Australia 121-6 (Stoinis 42, Faulkner 20) *287 to win

Thirty overs must’ve been a target for these two. Southee’s Test length doesn’t suffice early on, as Stoinis clubs a low forehand back past the bowler for another early boundary. A single later and Faulkner’s now clearing his leg and cross-batting a ball for two down to mid wicket. It’s getting funky as they say. Fine leg comes up and mid wicket drops back for the last ball - Faulkner tries to work Southee for one or two to that newly created space, but botches the execution. No run. Seven off.

30th over: Australia 114-6 (Stoinis 37, Faulkner 18) *287 to win

Stoinis is 32 from 56 balls as the over starts, and while he’s been very solid it’s probably time he upped the ante. He does exactly that, giving himself room to pull Neesham over to cow corner for an early struck boundary. The next ball is wide but Stoinis can’t make contact. Stoinis brutalised the following delivery but can only hit long on along the ground for one. The tempo rises. Faulkner can’t get his first of the over away due to a well directed yorker, making the last ball crucial. Faulkner advances down the wicket and is able to split point and backward-point with a slash through the off side for four. A good one for Australia, they’ll need abundantly more.

29th over: Australia 105-6 (Stoinis 32, Faulkner 14) *287 to win

Southee 1-18 (5) rejoins the fray and picks up that off stump line again. It makes for an interesting contrast with typical Australian ODI bowling, which emphasises variety through slower balls, wide and straight yorkers and bouncers. Here Southee opts for either decent lengths or balls aimed at the shoulder. It speaks to the quality of the wicket. Southee wouldn’t retain these lengths unless he felt it was offering him something. He’s vindicated, as only three come from the over.

28th over: Australia 102-6 (Stoinis 29, Faulkner 14) *287 to win

Get the sense that Neesham is the guy Stoinis and Faulkner need to target. If they’re able to target anyone at all, of course. The game’s best tweeter is up to the task, conceding only two singles and a wide. Stoinis charges the fifth delivery but is tucked up like a vulnerable child - he scores zero from it. If not Neesham, then who? We’re entering wild risk territory soon...

27th over: Australia 97-6 (Stoinis 28, Faulkner 11) *287 to win

New Zealand have engineered themselves into the ultimate position here. They’re comfortable bowling tight to defensive fields, safe in the knowledge that Australia’s task is now such that major risks will need to be taken to bridge the almost insurmountable gap that’s been created. To that end, Boult further develops his relationship with fourth stump, and both Faulkner and Stoinis can only conjure one single. They have to move pretty soon, you’d think.

26th over: Australia 96-6 (Stoinis 28, Faulkner 10) *287 to win

We’re beyond the halfway point now. As the over commences, Australia need 193 and only have four wickets. Probably in greatest comeback of all time territory - which I say to highlight New Zealand’s ascendancy more than anything else. Neesham is tighter here, only conceding two to add some respectability to his loose start last over.

25th over: Australia 94-6 (Stoinis 27, Faulkner 9) *287 to win

Pace is Australia’s friend, as both Stoinis and Faulkner punch balls for a few singles to start the reintroduced Boult’s over. Faulkner’s then reaching to manipulate a ball through cover but it’s of the slower variety - it means Faulkner’s through his shot and it rolls down to fine leg. There’s at least a run off every ball before Boult beats Stoinis outside off stump with one that just tails away. Seven overs without a wicket - is this a rescue? RRQ now 7.72.

24th over: Australia 88-6 (Stoinis 23, Faulkner 7) *287 to win

So Santner gets a rest as the straight and upright Neesham is introduced. I would have thought Santner’s economy might have necessitated a continuation of his services. Anyway, Neesham concedes consecutive singles before Stoinis top edges a pull over Latham for four. They’re definitely adopting a short-ball approach to Stoinis, who’s dealt with it pretty well thus far. Neesham attacks there again but it’s a wide, and another short one is in the perfect zone for a Stoinis pull shot. It hurtles past mid wicket and long on for four, signalling Australia’s best over of the innings. Twelve off.

23rd over: Australia 76-6 (Stoinis 14, Faulkner 5) *287 to win

Further consolidation for Australia through a leg bye, bouncer evasion, and a couple of singles down to the boundary. Ferguson is still bowling with great heat, and was lucky to avoid a wide for one that screamed over Stoinis’ shoulder. It will be Neesham now from the other end as we near the official halfway mark of the innings.

22nd over: Australia 73-6 (Stoinis 13, Faulkner 4) *287 to win

Santner’s through again quickly in a relatively non-eventful set of six. Singles to long leg tell the story, as it’s all looking very economical for the Black Caps.

21st over: Australia 70-6 (Stoinis 12, Faulkner 1) *287 to win

Great opportunity for Ferguson to polish up his figures here. Both Faulkner and Stoinis are still fending and prodding and pushing their way through the over. There’s a grand total of two runs, both singles - one behind square and one to mid wicket.

20th over: Australia 68-6 (Stoinis 10, Faulkner 1) *287 to win

First maiden of the innings, delivered by Santner. Faulkner is treading water for Australia here, who obviously stand no chance without batting deep into the innings. The Taswegian does strike me as the likeliest prospect to engineer an Australian recovery, but there feels to be a pattern to this capitulation.

19th over: Australia 68-6 (Stoinis 10, Faulkner 1) *287 to win

Heazlett goes, Ferguson’s wonderful spell continues and Faulkner grabs a single after sighting the first couple.

Now Heazlett’s gone! He’s back and across trying to punch Ferguson through the off-side but he’s well beaten for pace by the NZ quick, who’s bowling exceptionally well. Heazlett nicks through to Latham to complete a pretty disappointing innings, it must be said. Another nothing shot from a member of the Aussie top order.

18th over: Australia 66-5 (Stoinis 10, Heazlett 4) *287 to win

Did you have a drink? I barely caught up there. Five wickets in 17 overs will do nothing to assuage the view that Smith and Warner really do hold the key to Australia’s batting.

#PredictViz is putting up a 100-run for NZ from this position (Aus 58-5, need 287 to win) #NZvAUS

17th over: Australia 60-5 (Stoinis 5, Heazlett 3) *287 to win

Stoinis is upright, chesty, powerful and correct here. A quintessential athletic cricketing prototype at first glance. He does, I should add, appear to be better equipped to handle Ferguson, who’s targeting his bench-pressed chest regularly. Stoinis is chewing up deliveries, but at this stage he has to. How responsible! He tucks one around the corner for two, and almost chops one on to finish the over. He survives, and it’s time for a drink.

16th over: Australia 58-5 (Stoinis 3, Heazlett 3) *287 to win

Santner’s doing his best Travis Head impersonation (probably the other way around, to be fair), and Heazlett is struggling to get off strike. Stoinis found a single earlier in the piece but that’s it. The squeeze is well and truly on for these two.

15th over: Australia 57-5 (Stoinis 3, Heazlett 2) *287 to win

The Ferguson thunderbolts continue as Eden Park raises its non-existent roof. There’s a leg gully, but the barrel-chested Stoinis negotiates Ferguson pretty well. He flays him down to third man to get himself off-strike, and that’s all she wrote for the over

14th over: Australia 56-5 (Stoinis 1, Heazlett 2) *287 to win

Santner races through this one, and two singles come from it. Has there been two less experienced Australian players batting together in an international fixture? If ever there was a test of Australian depth, it’s now.

13th over: Australia 54-5 (Stoinis 0, Heazlett 2) *287 to win

So Australia lose five wickets in 13 overs, it’s incredible stuff. Ferguson was very quick this over, and got his reward. He’s up around 150km/hr - fairly frightening stuff. Stoinis is now to the crease.

Australia in all sorts now. Ferguson has Maxwell merely fending well outside his body, and he gets a regulation outside edge through to Latham. He’d been climbing all over Maxwell with pace up until that point, so you’d have to say it’s well deserved. Pretty incredible scenes here - you can just feel the recriminations bubbling.

12th over: Australia 44-4 (Maxwell 16, Heazlett 1) *287 to win

Replays showing that Marsh just played ‘all around that’. A more accurate way to put it is that he played for zero spin. He left a major gap between bat and pad, and the ball spun through. In short, he disrespected Santner’s revs. And now it’s the rawest of raw debutants, Sam Heazlett, to the crease. A wonderful over from Santner, and New Zealand are well on their way.

Spin does the job! Now Marsh departs, stumped by Latham and completely beaten by spin and flight by the new bowler, Santner. He advanced down the deck and looked to work the left-armer with the spin through mid wicket. Santner’s angle may have done for him though, as the ball spins inside the bat for Latham to complete the stumping.

11th over: Australia 48-3 (Maxwell 16, Marsh 16) *287 to win

NZs gunslinger, Lachie Ferguson, is now into the attack and hits that mid-140s pace straight away. It looks reasonably straight at this stage, and Maxwell’s able to lean into one and grab a single to wide mid-on. Marsh does similarly to third man before Ferguson beats Maxwell with an absolute ripsnorter (is that a Rugby League term?). He has Maxwell hopping as the ball rears up past his chin and hurtles through to Latham. Great wheels, as they say. Three off.

10th over: Australia 45-3 (Maxwell 15, Marsh 14) *287 to win

NZ are fielding well here - Maxwell tries to slash Boult through cover point but De Grandhomme dives full stretch to prevent a run. It was one of those stops that engenders full and physical demonstrations of praise from his team mates - about four of them ran over to pat him on various parts of his body. Maxwell defies my earlier comment by producing a textbook on-drive for four, followed by a couple off his pads to complete the over.

9th over: Australia 36-3 (Maxwell 6, Marsh 14) *287 to win

It can’t ever be a conventional boundary for Maxwell. This time he’s jump-pulling Southee behind square for four. He doesn’t turn with the ball as most do when playing the shot - he almost turns himself further side on upon playing the shot. He finds another single and Marsh is happy to see it out from there.

8th over: Australia 36-3 (Maxwell 6, Marsh 14) *287 to win

So the ICCs number one ODI bowler, Boult, is miserly here for the majority of the over, keeping Marsh largely defending for the most part. Marsh then manages to work him around his hip and it’s too fine for the man at short fine leg, and it’s four. Marsh then edges one ala Handscomb but gets a little more on it - it flies over first slip for another boundary. A win to Australia, but one more mistake would render them almost kaput.

7th over: Australia 27-3 (Maxwell 5, Marsh 6) *287 to win

After Handscomb’s dismissal Maxwell, the new batsman, is obviously off the mark with a swivel-pull boundary that just evades keeper Latham at 18-3. A single later and Marsh is gracefully pushing one past the bowler to the mid-off boundary. Two Australian batting enigmas with a lot of work to do now.

Now Handscomb goes! He’s back and across to an away-swinging Southee delivery and offering half a shot well away from his body. He succeeds only in nicking the ball via the corner toe of his bat through to Latham. The umpire says not out but a review proves otherwise. Interestingly nothing registered on hot spot, but RTS gives Handscomb away. It was probably a little full to be running down to third man.

6th over: Australia 18-2 (Handscomb 7, Marsh 2) *287 to win

Handscomb’s characteristically back in his crease here, all long sleeves and popped collar and neat, deliberate methodology. Just noting the Aussie guernsey doesn’t have buttons over the neck, instead it’s a zip. Handscomb’s is all the way up, Marsh’s the opposite. These things are important. Boult, who despite his two wickets has probably been bowling two lengths, is slashed over point for a boundary early on by Handscomb. He then takes another single to third man.

5th over: Australia 10-2 (Handscomb 1, Marsh 1) *287 to win

A couple of angled bats and balls run down to third man sees out Southee’s over, as Australia look to consolidate. This is Handscomb’s first real test as an ODI batsman, and Shaun Marsh’s first match in Australian colours for a while. Intriguing times - the first for a while, it must be said.

4th over: Australia 10-2 (Handscomb 0, Marsh 1) *287 to win

Well, what an over. Eden Park is rocking here with two dismissals and a near-run out. Head’s shot was the shot of a man perhaps used to fast, true wickets he could trust. As Geoff mentioned earlier this track isn’t quite that. He was severely unbalanced through the stroke, and now Australia is in trouble. Marsh and Handscomb to enact a little rescue here.

And another one! An extremely ordinary dismissal for the South Australian. Boult again offers him a bit of width but his feet are absolutely nowhere. He maneuvers his bat in a laboured arc and slices the ball high and long enough to Colin Munro on the third man boundary. There would have been a metre and a half between bat and head there (in both senses). Huge blow to Australia.

Finch is gone! He’s trying to heave a decent delivery from Boult away through square leg and Neesham takes a hot chance at chest height. Opportunity missed for Finch, and NZ has the early impetus they probably needed.

3rd over: Australia 9-0 (Head 5, Finch 4) *287 to win

Head fully capitalises on a ball just fractionally short from Southee, and he’s able to rock back and pull him forcefully over mid wicket for a one-bounce four. That sets up Head’s over nicely, but Southee’s able to correct his length and keep the South Australian in check for the over’s remainder. NZ have a Stephen Fleming-Damien Martyn-esque field here, with a fully stacked point region, including a man about 10 metres from Head’s bat.

2nd over: Australia 5-0 (Head 1, Finch 4) *287 to win

Boult offers width and Finch doesn’t hesitate; he flays the bat at it and gains a couple over cover-point. He clutches his left hamstring straight away , it looks like he’s done it as a result of the actual stroke, not when setting off for the run. He takes another single to gain himself a rest. Later on in the over Head similarly tries to flay Boult but only succeeds in an underedge. The next ball is hit crisply enough to manufacture a misfield and a single ensues.

1st over: Australia 1-0 (Head 0, Finch 1) *287 to win

Southee starts us off and elicits away-movement straight away. He’s got two slips and a gully and holds that good length-fourth stump line initially. Commentators are noting the relative inexperience of this Australian line-up. It’s hard not to be fractionally intrigued by it - not least due to the selectorial preference to anoint untested youth. Can the likes of Heazlett and Stoinis deliver today? Finch meanwhile gets off the mark with a bunted single to mid-wicket and Head absorbs the remainder for no run.

Should be a decent chase

Hello all and welcome to Australia’s second innings chase of New Zealand’s 286. Big thanks to Geoff for his first innings descriptions, erudite and compelling as per usual. Judging by his comments, NZs total appears pretty competitive. This new-look Australian side are away from home for the first time in a while, on a ground they’ve recently struggled on, at the end of an arduously long stretch of games. As ever, the early exchanges will be telling.

A substantial score, if not the massive one that looked on the cards when NZ was purring along early. This pitch might not be that simple to bat on, the slower bowlers and changes of pace seemed to go alright here today. And Australia has a new-look batting line-up: no Steve Smith, no David Warner, no Usman Khawaja. The recalled Aaron Finch will open with the still fairly new Travis Head, Shaun Marsh is another recall at 3, Handscomb has only played a couple of games, as has Stoinis, and Heazlett down at 7 hasn’t even played for Queensland before.

Guptill and Williamson did the early work for New Zealand today, Neesham kept things together through the middle, Broom played a brilliant solo hand to stop the end falling apart, and Boult applied the icing. Stoinis got his first international wickets and finished with three, Cummins got two but was expensive, while the other four bowlers picked up one wicket each.

50th over: New Zealand 286-9 (Ferguson 3, Boult 16)

Six! Trent Boult backs away, slaps at Cummins, and the bowler’s velocity is enough to see the ball carry third man. He clunks a pull way for a single, Ferguson drives one into the covers with less fuss. Boult then uses his patented version of backing away, sliding across the crease to get room and then crashing another one over midwicket for four more. Misses out on the fifth ball, very full, but collects the last ball of the innings, a basenall line drive down through long off for a final four. A burst of 16 from 7 balls from Boult right at the close, and honestly he could be batting ahead of Southee in terms of general usefulness.

49th over: New Zealand 270-9 (Ferguson 2, Boult 1)

NZ’s Last Stand. Boult at the crease, always entertaining. Lashes a single last ball of the over to keep the strike.

The Faulkner wrist-spin slower ball gets another victim, and Neil Broom’s fine innings comes to an end. Drags across the line after charging, looking for a boundary anywhere in any fashion, but it drops short at long-on and is held.

48th over: New Zealand 267-8 (Broom 72, Ferguson 1)

Whooshka. Broom is beaten by Cummins on the cut shot first ball, but the second is Slotto Lotto. Straight ball, short enough to get under, and Broom lifts it way over backward square into the stand for six. Takes a single, trusts Ferguson with the strike, and Ferguson doesn’t let him down - unruffled by a bouncer that whistles past his ear, then cuts a single next ball. Broom does the same at the end of the over to keep the bowling.

47th over: New Zealand 258-8 (Broom 64, Ferguson 0)

Starc finishes his 10 overs with 1 for 59, after a wide and another lofted cover drive for four by Broom. He’s going so well today. There’s a leg bye, Lachie Ferguson keeps out the last two balls, and Broom turns down a single from the last.

46th over: New Zealand 252-8 (Broom 60, Ferguson 0)

Two wickets and seven runs from the over, the latter largely thanks to another Handscomb mistake when he misreads Cummins’ slower ball, and it bounces in front of him but skips through for four byes.

Classic idiocy from Southee, for the millionth time in New Zealand colours. Has four and a bit overs to bat, needing to support a player who is striking the ball beautifully, and instead goes for a glory shot trying to ramp six over third man. Predictably, the word ‘over’ does not in this case apply.

Top work in the deep. Santner, the left-hander, slashes into the off side, and Maxwell runs a good distance to take a tumbling catch.

45th over: New Zealand 245-6 (Broom 57, Santner 7)

Well, it’s been a very important knock for New Zealand. Broom starts the over with a brutal lofted cover drive - and it is against Starc, so presumably Cummins will be the other death bowler. That boundary raises the 50 in style. The next is more fortunate but less dramatic. After a couple of dots, Broom pre-empts a short ball. He goes back in his crease, inverts the blade, and uppercuts high down to third man. Hazlewood is there, he’s airborne, he snares a ludicrous one-hander, but he comes down with the heel of his boot clipping the boundary rope. So a catch and a key dismissal becomes a six and extra momentum. All action: before that Australia used their DRS review on an lbw appeal that was going well down leg. The ball after, there’s another wide, 23 extras now. A single to close, and a dozen from the over.

44th over: New Zealand 233-6 (Broom 46, Santner 7)

Jeremy Coney is in full lyrical-wax mode on the radio about Neil Broom seeing off Josh Hazlewood. “He just needs to stay in for this over, and then play his shots and run like a hairy little velocipede.”Broom might need some of that waxing himself, by the sounds. A single from Santner first ball, skewed through the covers, then Broom is spooked by one that rips past his gloves, blocks out a couple, then is beaten again. He glides a single fromt he last after a couple of aborted attempts at the shot, and keeps the strike.

43rd over: New Zealand 231-6 (Broom 45, Santner 6)

Starc will have two overs left after this one. Will he wait until the end to use them? It’s a better over for NZ, they get the four singles but Broom is also able to slash a boundary over point. Runs, vital vital runs.

42nd over: New Zealand 223-6 (Broom 39, Santner 4)

41st over: New Zealand 219-6 (Broom 37, Santner 2)

Plenty of pressure on Neil Broom, the 33-year-old who has just come back into the side on the back of his domestic form, with Santner still trying to play himself in. Broom gets a couple from Starc behind point, then keeps out a yorker to run another single, but Santner takes until the last ball of the over to get a run, inside edged to long leg.

40th over: New Zealand 215-6 (Broom 34, Santner 1)

Hazlewood, another tight over. Gives up a leg-side wide, but aside from that only three singles. New Zealand can’t over-attack now, they don’t have a lot of batting to come. Southee and Boult can clout, but you wouldn’t want to give them more than a couple of overs.

39th over: New Zealand 211-6 (Broom 32, Santner 0)

Starc back for his sixth over, and it’s a good one. Just one run from it, as Broom turns over the strike early, but the new man Santner is stuck against Starc’s accurate bowling.

38th over: New Zealand 210-6 (Broom 31)

I said wickets in hand, not catches in hand. broom starts the over beautifully by advancing to Hazlewood and driving a ball so straight that it smashes the electronic sightscreen. They have adelay to fix the rainbow pattern that are now standing out against the black screen. Then glides a single, Neesham clubs a couple wide of long-on. But then he goes for one cross-bat too many, and the high top edge is held in the deep.

37th over: New Zealand 201-5 (Broom 24, Neesham 46)

Four runs from Faulkner’s over - Neesham starts well with a brace, but struggles to get the strike turning over thereafter. Still, they’ll be starting the last 10 overs with more than 200 on the board, and are well set to push home that advantage if they can keep wickets in hand a bit longer. Santner is a fine finisher, did a great job here against Australia in 2016.

36th over: New Zealand 197-5 (Broom 23, Neesham 43)

There’s a wicket, for a moment, but then it’s overturned. Short ball missed on the pull. Handscomb scarcely appeals for a catch, though he should ask for anything after the day he’s had, but umpire Ruchira Palliyaguruge decides to throw him a bone. Broom challenges, and snicko shows no movement of the audio-tracking line as the ball passes bat. He lives. Escapes scrutiny via an STTM, then Neesham decides to celebrate the prrive on Broom’s behalf with a hefty pull shot for four, then another clouted through long-on. Hazlewood goes for some runs. Unheard of.

Not out! Nothing on snicko https://t.co/lNteZgu24o#NZvAUSpic.twitter.com/9uBZiHIvUm

35th over: New Zealand 187-5 (Broom 22, Neesham 34)

Faulkner helping turn the screws, just two from his over as he mixes slower balls with regular pace.

34th over: New Zealand 185-5 (Broom 21, Neesham 33)

The Aussies mean business now. Hazlewood is back, and is right back into his groove. No looseners here. Neesham scrambles a single from the inside edge, and that’s the only score from the over as Broom is trapped on strike.

33rd over: New Zealand 184-5 (Broom 21, Neesham 32)

Fair effort from Stoinis to bowl 10 overs straight through, he’ll be sore tomorrow. Another Victorian teammate of Finch, so I suppose today’s captain knows his bowler’s capabilities. Now Finch asks James Faulkner to come back on, and Broom takes full advantage of his loosener, enough width, and the late cut goes to the rope. The next is more on point, and point is where it goes via an edge. Neesham though gets confused by the slower balls, and it takes him four deliveries to next find a run.

32nd over: New Zealand 178-5 (Broom 16, Neesham 31)

Stoinis finishes his 10 with 3 for 49, which I suspect he would have taken if you’d offered it to him at the start of the day. Broom is doing his part well, tugging singles where on offer, then placing another square leg shot better for two. Neesham does the same to deep midwicket. Everything must go (to the leg side).

31st over: New Zealand 171-5 (Broom 12, Neesham 28)

Dropped! A relatively straightforward one, Marsh diving across at slip as Neesham drives off the edge, done by Cummins’ pace. They get a run, add three more singles thereafter.

Handscomb proving to be a seamless replacement for Wade behind the stumps. #NZvAUS

30th over: New Zealand 167-5 (Broom 10, Neesham 26)

Stoinis will probably just bowl out here. Ninth over. Broom goes straight to the field twice, then uppercuts in his effort to find a run. Neesham takes a break from composing hilarious tweets to crash another ball straight down the ground for four, then finds a run to farm the strike.

29th over: New Zealand 161-5 (Broom 9, Neesham 21)

Cummins back to hurry up the batsmen. Neesham copped an unpleasant blow to his arm during the series just past in December. The batsmen each get a single, hopping and deflected behind the wicket. The Neesham goes for a big pull shot and top-edges four. Over Handscomb again, add that to the tally of balls he’s seen fly by. Then inside edged for four more, just past the stumps this time. One over, two batting errors, 10 runs. What even is luck?

735 - Martin Guptill has now scored more ODI runs than any other batsman at Eden Park (735). Record. pic.twitter.com/Qs4oGs8ORj

28th over: New Zealand 151-5 (Broom 8, Neesham 12)

Stoinis finishes his eight, five singles as Neesham gets busy with three of them.

27th over: New Zealand 146-5 (Broom 6, Neesham 9)

A boundary! What is that? It’s been a while. Head floats one up, Neesham just straight-bats it down the ground for four. See? Simples. A few singles and that’s an eight-run over.

26th over: New Zealand 138-5 (Broom 4, Neesham 3)

Jimmy James Jiminy Jimmles Jamesons Neesham was batting up at No4 during the Chappell-Hadlee in Australia, but he’s back down at 7 today. Gets off the mark with a glance, Broom reciprocates, Neesham goes squarer for two runs. 7 overs, 3 for 31 for the Stoyne.

And well, that is an utter bin fire of a dismissal. Stoinis gets three, just a length ball, Munro slaps at it, wants to clear the infield but just skews it to the temporary Australian captain at mid-on. Plonk. The sound of something dropping into a toilet bowl.

25th over: New Zealand 134-4 (Broom 3, Munro 2)

Dropped! Was he? I think Handscomb has put Munro down, yes, a big nick there too fast for the keeper. Head’s off-break turned away from the left-hander. Handscomb might have actually missed Guptill earlier as well, that run that came off the keeper’s pad looked in retrospect like it might have been nicked as well. Let me reprise my comment from earlier about what we’d be saying if Wade had done the same. Fill-in keepers still aren’t the answer, it seems. As with every other time someone has asked the question. We’ll see how Latham goes. Another tidy over, anyway.

24th over: New Zealand 132-4 (Broom 2, Munro 1)

Colin Munro in next, who played a good cameo this season for the Sydney Sixers in the BBL. He’s off the mark with a flick off the pads.

Not sure about the on-screen graphics - like having a bright, enthusiastic child tugging at your coat with yet more info @GeoffLemonSport

Two in two. The big pair are gone, and it’s down to New Zealand’s lesser lights. Stoinis has got his pace up into the mid 130s, I was being mildly satirical in describing his bowling before. He’s turned in some fine shifts in the Big Bash the last two seasons. Today he gets one to nip back a touch, Guptill is slow coming forward, and it slips through the gate to take out his stumps.

23rd over: New Zealand 129-3 (Guptill 61, Broom 1)

Perhaps Neil Broom will be better at the sweep. Though perhaps he’d bristle at that joke. I don’t know, I don’t have a handle on him. Maybe he likes deadpan humour, or he’d just brush it off. He gets his first run through midwicket.

That patience fails. Head is bowling around the wicket, lots of angle, Taylor tries a powerful sweep shot, and only under-edges the ball into his stumps.

22nd over: New Zealand 126-2 (Guptill 60, Taylor 15)

Stoinis, another to the extras tally with a bouncer called wide for height. Three singles aside from that. The slow-down continues through the middle overs. The patience period.

21st over: New Zealand 122-2 (Guptill 59, Taylor 13)

A single and a brace from Head’s over, Australia starting to turn the screws. The run rate is dipping below six an over, not bad, but after their fast start the batsmen might feel some frustration.

20th over: New Zealand 119-2 (Guptill 57, Taylor 12)

Run-out chance from the Stoinis over? How about three? Maxwell is fielding sharply at backward point, but not throwing sharply. Twice he throws at the striker’s end, once at the non-striker’s. Two are attempted runs that are abandoned, one is a single taken. All three are thrown to Ross Taylor’s end, and all three would have been close with a direct hit. Three singles from the over.

19th over: New Zealand 116-2 (Guptill 56, Taylor 10)

Travis Head on for his first bowl, not Maxwell, as discussed down the page. Left-arm batsman who bowls off-spin with the right. Head bowls a wide down leg side, trying to spear past Guptill’s pad, then Handscomb concedes four more runs in the form of byes, distracted by Guptill coming across in an attempted scoop shot, and the ball sneaks through the keeper’s legs. I wonder what we’d be saying about Matthew Wade if he’d had a day like this behind the stumps? There’s another single that ricochets off Handscomb’s pad after that, and another wide from Head, before Taylor breaks the trend by sweeping off the bat. Australia have conceded 19 extras in 116 runs.

18th over: New Zealand 107-2 (Guptill 55, Taylor 8)

Only four runs from the Stoinis over, including a fast-run two to Guptill’s back-foot push through point. If not for the five wides, Stoinis would have 1 for 13 from three.

17th over: New Zealand 103-2 (Guptill 52, Taylor 7)

Starc bowling his fifth, Guptill not entirely at ease even with 50 next to his name. Gets off strike streakily after a few balls with an imprecise bash into the covers. Ross Taylor faces up, the man who received that 160 km/h ball from Starc at the Waca ground in Perth last season. This time he’s flaying the second ball he faces square for four to raise the team century.

16th over: New Zealand 98-2 (Guptill 51, Taylor 3)

Guptill’s last few ODI innings against Australia: 90, 31, 59, 114, 45, 34, 50*. He employs the classic STTM (single to third man) for the milestone, then Stoinis celebrates by bashing a bouncer over Handscomb yet again for five wides. Taylor gets off the mark with his own STTM, Guptill nudges to return strike, then Taylor clips square for two runs.

Will Maxi get a bowl with Finch being captain today? #NZvAUS#ChappellHadlee

15th over: New Zealand 88-2 (Guptill 49, Taylor 0)

Mitchell Starc immediately back on, Finch wanting to attack and get another of New Zealand’s gun batsmen. But the new man Taylor isn’t on strike, and Guptill soaks up five balls before finding a single. I wonder if that was deliberate to frustrate the Australians? He didn’t look overly keen to score.

14th over: New Zealand 87-2 (Guptill 48)

Soft dismissal, and Stoinis gets his first international wicket. The NZ skipper just looking for a single towards midwicket, gets an inside edge into the thigh pad, and it loops up to Maxwell at gully who then tries to throw down the stumps just in case. It had been a nondescript over for NZ before that, four comfortable singles taken as they gauged Stoinis’ moderate medium pace. But his seeming innocuousness does the job from the final ball.

Maxwell tries to dismiss Williamson twice. #Maxwellball

13th over: New Zealand 83-1 (Guptill 46, Williamson 22)

Guptill misses out on another possible boundary via a leg glance, instead only harvesting a leg bye from the pad. but when Williamson gives him back the strike via an STTM glide, Faulkner drops one short outside his off stump and Guptill pounds it away for four. A couple more singles make the over a profitable one for 8 runs.

12th over: New Zealand 75-1 (Guptill 41, Williamson 20)

Cummins carrying on, still bowling fast, but Guptill is accustomed to and has decided to take advantage. Waits for the shorter ball, then uppercuts that over Peter Handscomb for four! He’s watched a lot of balls go past and over him, has the fill-in keeper.

11th over: New Zealand 69-1 (Guptill 36, Williamson 19)

James Faulkner on, could be hard to hit with his changes of pace. So it proves, a couple of singles, then Williamson mistimes a lash over point that could very nearly have been caught. Gets four streaky runs.

10th over: New Zealand 62-1 (Guptill 35, Williamson 13)

That is proper loose fast-bowling garbage from Cummins. Sends down a bouncer, likes the look of it, tries an even shorter one, and it soars over Guptill and wide of Handscomb for five wides. Love it. Guptill had already pulled two runs through square leg, then he guesses the extra ball will be short as well and pastes it through midwicket for four! Excellent first 10 overs for New Zealand.

9th over: New Zealand 51-1 (Guptill 29, Williamson 13)

Guptill is getting of strike with ease today. He’s so often disappointing against Australia, but has started to learn how to make runs against them in his last six or seven starts. In ODI cricket at least, never in Tests where his overall record is also pretty dire. Williamson defends a couple, then finds his first boundary with a pull through fine leg, as Hazlewood gave him the line to work with. There’s the 50 up within the first 10 overs.

8th over: New Zealand 46-1 (Guptill 28, Williamson 9)

Williamson getting a few wake-up calls from Cummins. One that crashes into his thigh for a leg bye, later a bouncer that zips past his helmet. This is good stuff. Williamson tugs a couple of runs through midwicket, then he tries to glide and very nearly directs the ball into his own stumps. This is a good contest, and the Australian bowlers are well in it early, make no mistake. You just get the feeling that if NZ can weather the storm, there’ll be plenty of chances to profit later.

7th over: New Zealand 42-1 (Guptill 27, Williamson 7)

Williamson knows that Hazlewood spells danger, I think, and just wants to see him off early. Leaves a couple, blocks a couple, and in the end a single from the last ball via a leg glance is the only profit for New Zealand.

6th over: New Zealand 41-1 (Guptill 27, Williamson 6)

Cummins on early for Hazlewood, to give him a chance at this relatively fresh pitch. Fair enough. The speedster works away on off stump, Williamson blocking the first couple before again using the escape shot of a nudge to midwicket. Guptill? Well, he’s motoring. Gets one too straight, glances through fine leg for another four. The run rate is nudging 7.

5th over: New Zealand 36-1 (Guptill 23, Williamson 5)

Guptill doesn’t quite nail his drive, Cummins doesn’t nail his save at mid-off. The result is four runs. Plenty of chat from Starc, suggests Bryan Waddle on the radio airwaves. “The gum is fresh in the mouth, you see,” deadpans his partner Jeremy Coney. “It has a springy quality, forcing the jaws apart.” The bowler has more to talk about after Guptill is dropped by Handscomb! High over his head, big top edge, and he very nearly parried that for six as it clipped his gloves and bounced down to long stop for four. Then four more as Guptill gives everything he has to this last ball, lashing it over cover. Top shot to follow a... less top one. An even dozen from the over.

4th over: New Zealand 24-1 (Guptill 11, Williamson 5)

Williamson looks first-rate today. Casually glances another couple of runs, this time from Hazlewood, who is attacking the stumps for both players. Guptill is being unusually circumspect, but eventually the levee breaks and he comes down the pitch to bash Hazlewood over cover for four. Disrespectful, tsk tsk. Hazlewood comes back by nailing Guptill on the pad, but the appeal is declined and the Australians don’t review. Maybe high, maybe leg side? Close.

3rd over: New Zealand 15-1 (Guptill 6, Williamson 2)

Williamson comes out with one ball to face, taps it through midwicket for a couple. The early blow that Finch was hoping for when he put New Zealand in. But, Guptill was the one who towelled the Aussies up here last year.

Not a great dismissal, but the bowler will take it. Latham has just driven Starc gorgeously through cover for four, but when Starc loses his line down leg side, Latham chases it and gloves it through to the stand-in keeper, who registers his first international dismissal.

2nd over: New Zealand 9-0 (Guptill 6, Latham 3)

Hazlewood, starting marginally shorter than Starc, but still pitching up enough. That perfect awkward length that he settles into so easily. Gee he’s become an outstanding bowler in the last year, even if he was very good already. Draws a genuine edge from Latham, and unlucky for it to cost him a run given there are two slips in thanks to Aaron Finch, but the edge goes just past them. That’s the ball after Guptill has edged one through gully. The right and left combo not fazing Hazlewood. Fazlewood? Four singles from the over.

1st over: New Zealand 5-0 (Guptill 4, Latham 1)

Mitchell Starc opening the bowling, as you’d expect with 125 ODI wickets to his name. He’s the only Mitchell in this side, which will not sit well, but he’ll be comforted by a couple incoming Mitchells for the Test squad via Swepson and Marsh. There is a Marsh in this side as well, to maintain that quota - Shaun is back in the side today given that Warner, Smith, and Khawaja are all off resting or preparing for India. Guptill is tested with the first two balls, both straight at the stumps, but he keeps them out. No swing as yet. Guptill’s third straight ball is turned through midwicket, nice outfield today and they’re back for three runs on the throw from the deep. Latham, the left-hander, drives one through cover, which is always his best spot. Guptill gets another to midwicket, and that did move a bit.

New Zealand
Guptill
Latham +
Williamson*
Taylor
Broom
Munro
Neesham
Santner
Ferguson
Southee
Boult

Australia
Finch*
Head
S. Marsh
Handscomb +
Maxwell
Stoinis
Heazlett
Faulkner
Starc
Cummins
Hazlewood

He might not have time to be overwhelmed, Aaron Finch. “I only found out about 10 minutes ago,” he says of becoming captain. He plans to bat first to see if his quicks can get anything out of this wicket first up, which Bryan Waddle on Radio Sport NZ says is very hard and looks like an excellent batting track. Kane Williamson says he would likely have bowled for the same reason. Not sure about that though, Australia won the toss in an ODI this time last year and sent NZ in, and the locals made over 300 before bowling Australia out for less than half that. From memory I think it was Australia’s shortest ever ODI innings? 24.2 overs, yes it was.

It’s 22 degrees over in Auckland, and tipped to be 38 in Melbourne where I’m writing this from. I’ll be taking refuge at the second and third games in person to help with that radio call and send you back the odd missive. It seems like a very sound travel plan when one eyes the forecasts.

Yes, you read that right. Matthew Wade had been named for the tour, but has had to withdraw with back spasms. So Finch, who was out of the side and the squad for the entire last series that Australia played, is not only back in the squad and back in the XI but in charge of this team for the first time. He has captained Australia’s T20 side before, and led the Melbourne Renegades in the Big Bash, so he shouldn’t be overwhelmed.

Good morning! Also evening, afternoon, supper, dawn, dusk, noon, nocturne and diurne, and BFG Witching Hour. The summer of cricket isn’t over yet. We’ve already had one Chappell-Hadlee series this season, back in early December in Australia, and now it’s time for the other half of that contest in New Zealand’s home territory. Auckland today, Napier on Thursday, and Hamilton on Sunday, all of those days in New Zealand local time.

Geoff will be here shortly. Before he gets here, a bit of team news in case you missed it.

Related: Matthew Wade to captain Australian ODI side after Steve Smith injury

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India v England: third T20 international – live!

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9th over: England 77-2 (Root 29, Morgan 13); target 203. Morgan finds a gap, driving a perfectly presentable delivery past the diving extra-cover for four. A deft reverse sweep off a ball pitched in the same area brings four more, and a repeat cover drive adds another couple. Three singles round off a necessarily productive over for England.

8th over: England 64-2 (Root 28, Morgan 1); target 203. Another new bowler, Pandya, is given a bruising introduction by Root, who clips his first ball high over deep midwicket for SIX, before being beaten outside off stump off the next. A lofted drive to long off brings another single and a slower cutter pins Morgan back on the defensive. Morgan gets off the mark with a single off the last ball of the over, which was a very good one after going for six first off.

7th over: England 56-2 (Root 21, Morgan 0); target 203. How dewey is it out there? We might be about to find out, as Mishra is the second spinner brought into the attack, and produces a superb over. And the change works: Roy, reprieved by the fielding miscall earlier, is sent packing after mistiming a sweep across the line and giving Dhoni an easy catch. A googly and a couple of probing accurate balls keep Root in check, and his sweep to deep square leg for one off the fifth ball is the only scoring shot of the over, which ends with Morgan cutting and missing outside off stump.

Roy mistimes a slower, tossed-up ball from Mishra and sweeps it straight up into the air for Dhoni to take

6th over: England 55-1 (Roy 32, Root 20); target 203. Nehra gets his third over in succession, which starts with a slow low-bouncing legside wide. Nehra then sends one through Root’s defences, an attempted legside swipe being completely missed. A quick single is followed by a crunching four from Roy, pulled in front of square on the legside, that brings up the 50. Another single and a beautiful lofted off drive from Root bring us to the end of the powerplay. Still anyone’s game, this.

5th over: England 44-1 (Roy 27, Root 15); target 203. Bumrah, the star of the last match, gets his first taste of the action, and Roy takes him on straight away, lofting a slower ball down the ground for four. The comeback ball is quicker and hurries Roy up, forcing a defensive dab and a dot ball. Roy, confronted with an offside-heavy field, manipulates the next one round the corner for a single off the back foot. Root is well tucked up by Bumrah’s speared-in back of a length bowling but shows his class to cut one through the gaps for four. A high-class bat v ball contest, this.

4th over: England 34-1 (Roy 22, Root 10); target 203. Roy sweeps high and confidently over backward square leg for four. But there’s still a sense Chahal can make things happen, and he confounds Roy’s attempted charge down the pitch with a pushed-through full-length delivery that the batsman scratchily inside edges past the keeper for two. Roy doesn’t look entirely happy with everything bowled at him but pushes down the ground for one and Root does likewise on the legside, again not quite timing or reading a tricky one out of the back of the hand.

3rd over: England 25-1 (Roy 14, Root 9); target 203. Roy pulls fine on the legside off Nehra and gets four. A single brings Root on strike and the Yorkshireman cracks a lovely square drive to the boundary for four. It’s a good battle between Nehra’s variations, slower balls and general accuracy, and Root’s class, which shows itself again off the final ball of the over, which is pulled effortlessly to square leg for four.

2nd over: England 12-1 (Roy 9, Root 1); target 203. Spin early on, with Chahal taking the new ball at the other end. And an incident-drenched over ensues. Roy confounds the entire ground with the most effortless, nonchalant, confident reverse sweep over square leg for SIX that you’d ever wish to see. A single brings Billings to the strike for the first, and last, time. He’s given out caught on review. And it should have been two wickets in two balls, as Roy hashes an attempted run off Root’s first ball. Roy charges down from the non-striker’s end, but the ball is thrown at the wrong end and the batsman gets back and gets away with it. The final ball of the over sees Mishra tumbling comically by the boundary to retrieve the ball as two are yielded.

Billings goes first ball – inside-edging the spinner low onto his boot and it bounces up for the diving Raina to take the catch, given on review.

1st over: England 1-0 (Roy 0, Billings 0); target 203. Drama straight up as Roy survies a fierce, nagging lbw appeal off the first ball from Nehra, but it was going down offside. But it’s a very good first over, that Roy can’t get away at all – the first five balls are all dots: again it’s the accurate just short-of-a-length stuff that does the trick on this surface. Only a scurried leg-bye off the final ball brings England anything. An excellent start for India.

So England have it all to do then, though this is by no means an abnormal target on this ground, and they do have the batting capable of chasing it. However, some occasional variable bounce and turn might encourage India. We shall see. I’m off for a brief coffee break and will be back in a bit. In the meantime, how about some interval reading? Here’s John Ashdown on the first floodlit cricket match, at the then scruffy old Stamford Bridge:

Related: The forgotten story of … Britain’s first floodlit cricket match | The Spin

20th over: India 202-6 (Pant 6, Pandya run out 11) The final over begins with an absolute howler of an offside wide from Jordan, whose next ball is met on the full by Dhoni and walloped to the long-off boundary for four. But he perishes next ball, top edging a pull round the corner into the hands of Rashid. The end of a characteristically smart innings. New man Pandya drives his first ball high towards deep point where it’s just about cut off by the ropes by Roy. But Roy suffers next ball though, not quite managing to get hold of another slog in the same area from Pandya and spilling it over the ropes for SIX. Two more follow to bring up the 200 before Pandya is run out trying to scurry back for two off the last ball, which was a better and more accurate slower ball from Jordan, who’s not had one of his better nights.

Jordan begins his over badly then makes amends by inducing a top-edged hook that Dhoni mistimes to short fine leg where Rashid pouches it.

19th over: India 186-4 (Dhoni 52, Pant 6) Yuvraj’s cameo is excellently brought to an end by Mills and he’s replaced by the wonderkid debutant Pant, who’s off the mark straight off with a flick to square leg for a single. Dhoni adds another. Pant makes a hash of a legside swipe but it’s called wide so he gets another go, but can only dig out a leg-bye. It’s a really good over, this, with pace taken off and backs of hand used, and there are no boundaries until Pant meets a slower ball with a determined pull to the square leg boundary for four off the last ball. And that ends Mills’ series with the ball – he’s been a real asset.

Brilliant comeback from Mills, spearing a slower ball into the rampant left-hander, who is completely fooled by it and dabs it behind to Buttler for an easy catch.

18th over: India 177-3 (Dhoni 50, Yuvraj 27) Utter carnage. India scoff at Jordan’s death-bowling reputation and take him to the cleaners. Dhoni begins the over by grubbing out a single to mid-on for a single to bring up that elusive T20 fifty. Yuvraj, who’d hitherto been quiet and largely off-strike, makes amends for all that by lofting the next two balls over long-on for sweetly timed SIXES. All about the timing, these – and they were only fractionally overpitched. A flick for four on the legside continues the carnage, before the next ball – again a little too full – is nonchalantly almost toe-ended straight down the ground for another SIX. A good yorker rounds off the over, and brings only a single.

17th over: India 153-3 (Dhoni 49, Yuvraj 4) Dhoni is batting with intelligence as well as aggression here, as so often, and he sends an accurate length ball from Stokes straight past him along the ground for four. A clip to wide long-on for two is followed by an excellent slow yorker which does that rare thing – flummoxes Dhoni, who misses it completely. He can’t stay on the defensive for long though, and sends another full ball skimming in the air through the onside for a four that wasn’t far off being six, bouncing just by the ropes. A single takes him to 49 – one short of his first (!) international T20 fifty. That’s what you get for batting down the order I guess. Stokes ends with figures of 1-32 from his four.

16th over: India 142-3 (Dhoni 38, Yuvraj 4) The openers are back to close it up: Mills returns to the attack, round the wicket at Dhoni, who punishes just the slightest straying of line by deflecting one down to the fine leg boundary for four. A square cut off a shorter ball brings a single before Yuvraj is also caught off balance by a shorter ball that dobs up off his bat handle; they still run one. Mills takes the pace off the next ball, restricting Dhoni to one, before conceding a legside wide. There are more singles and though it’s an expensive over, it’s still a pretty good one, technically.

15th over: India 132-3 (Dhoni 31, Yuvraj 2) Stokes bowls his third over, and it starts well enough, restricting India to three singles and a dot ball, before Dhoni finds a gap with an subtle and intelligent back-foot glide between third man and backward point for four. Another one takes Dhoni to 31 from 21 balls – and there I was thinking he’d begun slowly.

14th over: India 124-3 (Dhoni 25, Yuvraj 0) Plunkett comes back into the attack as the onslaught continues. Dhoni gets hold of a straight full-length delivery and sends it over the boundary for SIX more. Raina tries something similar off the third ball of the over, but slices it up in the air and is caught at point by Morgan. A good slower comeback ball. Dhoni, on strike as the batsmen crossed when Raina was out, adds a couple of well-run twos.

Raina’s excellent innings ends. He slices an attempted straight drive for six and it goes up and down for Morgan to take a simple catch

13th over: India 113-2 (Raina 63, Dhoni 21) Moeen hasn’t always been read and judged by the batsmen here but his first ball of this over is, and lofted with clinical ruthlessness straight down the ground for SIX. Four singles – including a fine diving stop at short fine leg from Mills – follow before Moeen completes his spell with a really sharp leg-break that beats both Raina and the wicketkeeper Buttler and runs straight down to the boundary for four byes. India’s spinners will have enjoyed that more than anyone else in the ground. Moeen ends with 4-0-30-0.

12th over: India 99-2 (Raina 55, Dhoni 12) DROP: Rashid does the first part well – inducing a mistimed straight drive from Raina – but bungles the key bit, spilling the ball when it goes straight at him. A single brings Dhoni to the strike and the former captain cuts loose for the first time, belting a length ball with the spin over long-on for SIX. A single is followed by Raina doing the same, bringing up his half-century by belting it over midwicket for SIX more. India are back on the charge.

11th over: India 84-2 (Raina 47, Dhoni 5) Moeen continues, economically, yielding three singles and frustrating the batsmen a touch with his back of a length testers. A tickle to fine leg by Raina brings two more but it’s a boundary-free over.

“We should be looking forward 30 years, not back,” writes modernity’s Andrew Benton, “will cricket in its present form exist in 2047? Will we? Future thinking, future planing, for the future we want! England victories, each and every time? Bails that not only don’t need their batteries changed, but don’t need batteries at all? What a future that would be! “

10th over: India 78-2 (Raina 43, Dhoni 3) Rashid comes into the attack for the first time, conceding a couple of singles with smart deliveries before Raina square cuts delicately and delightfully for four. Rashid’s variations look more likely to bring wickets but also concede runs, as Raina glides the subsequent ball down to third man for two. The final ball of the over demonstrates the fact – tossed-up, a little slower and almost dollied back to the bowler for a return catch but it bounces short of him. The groundstaff run on with their ropes to dew-sweep.

Replays are now showing that the ball from which Stokes dismissed Rahul was a front-foot no-ball. Unreferred and unappealed.

9th over: India 70-2 (Raina 36, Dhoni 2) Moeen continues, conceding a couple of singles, before tucking up Raina good and proper when he switches to round the wicket – it’s straight, accurate and not overpitched and three dots reward him before a hurried single completes a second consecutive good over for England.

8th over: India 67-2 (Raina 34, Dhoni 1) Raina glides a Stokes delivery down to wide third man for one before Rahul is cleaned up, slogging and missing at a straight one. Dhoni moves up the order and is in next, getting off the mark with a cut down to third man for a single. His star quality remains, and the crowd yell his name eagerly. But this is a good over from Stokes, containing no boundaries and only three runs, though some signs of pitch unpredictability – the last ball of the over grubbing low after hitting a crack. This will be better news for India than England, overall.

Sometimes, in life, a man just gotta bowl at the stumps. Stokes does, Rahul heaves across the line and misses, and England have a desperately needed breakthrough.

7th over: India 64-1 (Rahul 22, Raina 32) England need to rein this one back in, but they’re not managing it yet. There’s a change of pace with middle-overs master Moeen’s introduction. Raina nudges on the offside to bring up the 50 partnership, as Moeen’s first two balls are tight back of a length fare. The third, however, is not: it’s fuller and is absolutely clobbered by Rahul straight over the bowler’s head and into the top tier for SIX. Two more follow, then an uppish square drive for one, and a nudge on the legside for one more single.

6th over: India 53-1 (Rahul 13, Raina 30) Jordan returns to the attack and concedes a leg-bye when Rahul misreads his slower ball but scurries through for one anyway. Raina masters Jordan next ball though, judging and timing a high hook that soars into the crowd behind square leg for SIX. He does it again from a slightly fuller delivery which he meets on the front foot and flicks into the same part of the stand. SIX more.

“Hang on a minute,” roars Guy Hornsby. “Re: Niggen Nuggehali’s email (over 3), I’m not sure England fans have a lack of enthusiasm for ‘pyjama’ cricket. Our ire is based on its financial supremacy and often veneer-like bombast, as if it’s now the primacy of formats, binning the majesty and history of the long form of the game. We follow England wherever they go, ready for the usual extremes of glorious victory or bleak defeat, whatever the series. The love for the team is undimmed, but our suspicion and issue with T20 centres on the money, corruption and upstart nature, and its skewing of this beautiful game, not our knackered on-field heroes. Viva Morgan, viva Rooty, viva Tymal!” I don’t really see why they should be counterposed all the time myself. T20 has had positive effects on other forms of the game too – the 50-over game seems refreshed – as well as the negative ones listed. Viva sleepy Thursday afternoons at Colchester AND T20 dazzlers in Delhi.

5th over: India 39-1 (Rahul 13, Raina 17 Stokes replaces Mills and his first ball is mistimed high and wide on the offside by Raina, but it lands safely and brings two runs. His second ball is similar, but mistimed on the legside. There’s a sense someone could have dashed in and caught this if it had been picked up quicker by either Jordan or Moeen – Stokes’s teapot-pose and facial expression suggest so. A single and a wide down legside follow before Stokes deceives Raina brilliantly with a short slower ball that completely outfoxed the left-hander’s attempt to pull. But Raina’s comeback is brilliant, a deliciously timed square cut for four. Another wide completes the scoring in another encouraging over for India.

4th over: India 29-1 (Rahul 12, Raina 10) India cut loose. Plunkett comes into the attack and his first ball – pitched up – is flicked beautifully to the square leg boundary for four by Rahul. The next one is similarly pitched and similarly punished, driven gloriously through the air to long-off for four more. A shorter, smarter ball brings a hurried pull for one from Raina. A couple more singles complete a productive over for India.

3rd over: India 17-1 (Rahul 2, Raina 9) Raina tries to chip Mills over mid-off but can’t get hold of a pacy accurate delivery and it bounces once before reaching the fielder. The bowler’s second legside wide of the match follows. Mills is mostly on top of the batsmen though and he beats Raina for pace when the batsman steps back and tries to carve a legside ball through the offside. A scurried single is followed by a short bouncer that Rahul hooks and misses at. Another good over is undone at its end by a magnificently driven and timed offside SIX from Raina, meeting a full delivery and sending it over the ropes.

“It’s ironic that England has such a strong limited overs side, given the relative lack of enthusiasm among England supporters for pyjama cricket,” writes Niggen Nuggehali. “Perhaps this will change once England begin winning more games. Or do you think the tail can’t wag the dog?” Of course, to continue riffing on our 25-30 years ago theme, the last time England had a consistently better limited-overs side than their Test one was the late 80s/early 90s, but it didn’t, and hasn’t, stopped that era being seen as one of decline and doldrums.

2nd over: India 8-1 (Rahul 1, Raina 2) The booming PA system – which makes Wembley’s sound like whispering Bob Harris – cranks up the exhortations of support for the home team as Jordan opens up from the other end. And gets a breakthrough straight away, hitting the stumps to run out Kohli after a half-hearted lbw appeal prompted the India captain to attempt a daft run for a leg-bye. It’s been a slightly underwhelming series for Kohli. Raina comes in next and is off the mark with a cover drive for one. Jordan keeps it tight – what an asset he is in this form of the game – and India can’t puncture the in-field until Raina dabs a shorter wider ball outside off-stump down to deep point but it only brings a single. A fine over.

Reckless stuff from the India captain – he scuttles out of his crease looking for a single after being rapped on the pad but Jordan’s on it swiftly and throws the stumps down. Fine start for England.

1st over: India 4-0 (Kohli 2, Rahul 1) Tymal Mills, who’s been a thoroughly welcome addition to England’s squad in this series, opens up. India open with Kohli and Rahul, both of whom earn IPL big bucks in this stadium. The pitch looks cracked yet kind of smooth, like so many of us, and Mills, round the wicket, finds some bounce out of it to keep Kohli on the back foot. A legside wide gets India off the mark but other than that it’s tight and accurate stuff, just slightly back of a length and difficult to get hold of, and there are only four runs from it.

Out come the umpires, Anil Chaudhary and Nitin Menon. Incidentally, the withdrawn Shamshuddin is now listed as the TV umpire. And they’re going through the national anthems, something I’ll never get used to in cricket. Just get on with the game.

First email: step forward Julien Allen. “Please don’t say ‘ask your grandad’ about Shakoor Rana. I’m 45 and remember it like it was yesterday!” A mere exaggerated sarcastic – not to say melancholy – riff about the passing of time Julien. All reflections on the joys and mediocrities of 80s cricket are welcome here.

For England, we have pace for spin, with Liam Plunkett returning in place of Liam Dawson. And India give a debut to much-heralded teenage wicketkeeper-batsman Risabh Pant, whose strike rate in four-day cricket this season was 107.28. He comes in at the top of the order for Manish Pandey, and is the youngest player to feature in a T20 international for India. Dhoni has the gloves today though, of course.

India: Pant, Rahul, Kohli, Raina, Yuvraj, Dhoni, Pandya, Mishra, Bumrah, Nehra, Chahal

Eoin Morgan calls it right and India bat first for the third time in the series. “Wicket looks reasonable,” says the England captain. “We need a complete performance this time,” he adds.

Nonetheless, as we were riffing – briefly – on the mid-to-late-80s back in the preamble, here’s a fine read from Andy Bull in this week’s The Spin on the Somerset saga of 1986, harking back to a barely imaginable age in which county cricket club politics made the news pages, as well as the sport ones. And if that doesn’t get you in the mood for this hyper-modern T20 decider, nothing will:

Related: Peter Roebuck’s Somerset dilemma a window into how much has changed | The Spin

News! Scratch all that – umpire Shamshuddin has stood down due to illness. Which takes some of the sting out of proceedings, or perhaps not. Get well soon anyway.

Afternoon/evening everyone. Well, after the all-you-can-hit run buffets that were the three ODIs, this Twenty20 series has been agreeably shaped by the bowlers, giving us a chance to admire the death-overs arts of the likes of Jasprit Bumrah and Chris Jordan. The second match in particular demonstrated that low-scoring is no impediment to excitment and tension in T20, particularly if it comes laced with umpiring TALKING POINTS, notably the reprieves of Virat Kohli and the dismissal of Joe Root. Mercifully, Root has been playing it all down, in best diplomatic ‘ah-well-we-all-make-mistakes’ mode. The Shakoor Rana affair this ain’t (ask your grandad).

The umpire at the centre of it all, Chettithody Shamshuddin, stands again today, in a match that is unlikely to follow the patterns of the previous two. The pitch at the M Chinnaswamy stadium is a proper shirtfront, by all accounts, a slogger’s paradise, which threatens a busy old evening in the field for England’s players whose long two-pronged Asian tour finally ends today. How different the world was was back when it all started, at the beginning of October, with that dramatic 50-over win against Bangladesh. England have learned a lot about themselves, in all forms of the game, since then, not all of it heartening. But they’ve competed very well in this T20 series and Bengaluru should see a suitably rousing end to the tour.

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Australia and New Zealand washed out in Napier - as it didn't happen

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  • Australia and New Zealand washed out at McLean Park in Napier
  • Game abandoned without a ball being bowled as rain descends

Related: Australia and New Zealand ODI called off due to unsafe outfield in Napier

It’s all over at Napier. Thanks for coming, fans. But no thanks. See ya later. For close to six hours they’ve been patiently camped out on the hills around McLean Park, but now the umpires finally call it off. Finally the fans are told that the outfield will not dry out. Could that have been done earlier? Probably.

Anyway, that’s if from us. On we move to the final match at Hamilton on Sunday. Be sure to stop by and join us for that, and hopefully we’ll actually get some actual cricket to watch.

It’s starting to rain again

Brilliant. There has been none for hours, in which we’ve had no play, and now with umpires and players meeting behind closed doors in the sheds, it’s falling again. Anytime you fancy making a call, lads.

....yep, still waiting.

Totally token inspection by the umpires. Walked out for a glance. Surely it's off, but there hasn't been any communication. #NZvAus

It's just remarkable that the people running cricket matches can treat the spectators with such pure contempt. #NZvAus

A decision is imminent

Fingers crossed.

Here. We. Go. Again #NZvAUSpic.twitter.com/QIhnXLwLDT

A Sheffield Shield update while we wait

This via AAP:

Western Australia have built a 40-run lead over South Australia for the loss of just one second-innings’ wicket on day two of the Sheffield Shield match in Adelaide. The Warriors, after conceding a 46-run first-innings deficit, have advanced to 87-2 at Thursday’s tea break to continue an impressive turnaround at Gliderol Stadium.

Opener Cameron Bancroft has played watchfully for his 39 not out, while Hilton Cartwright was dismissed for 30, bringing Adam Vogs to the crease. The Redbacks dominated day one to end at 156-4, having cleaned up the Warriors for just 201.

Half-centuries from Ed Cowan and Kurtis Patterson have pushed NSW into a strong position at tea on day two of their Sheffield Shield match against leaders Victoria at the MCG. NSW are 219-3 in reply to Victoria’s 258.

The Blues were on the back foot early on Thursday at17-2 before Cowan and Patterson combined for a third-wicket stand of 141. Patterson was eventually bowled by Dan Christian for 61. Cowan remains at the crease on 95 in a patient 198-ball knock with Blues captain Moises Henriques on 36 not out.

An unbeaten century by captain Chris Hartley has helped Queensland post a formidable first-innings run chase for Tasmania in their Sheffield Shield clash at the Gabba. Hartley struck an unbeaten 102 before declaring their first dig at 405-9 just after lunch on on Thursday’s second day.

Queensland resumed at 251-6, with Hartley not out 31, after winning the toss. Hartley’s 200-ball knock lasted almost five hours and included nine fours and one six. It was his 10th first-class ton and first of the Shield season in his return from a broken finger that sidelined him for the entire Big Bash League.

Update: the next pitch inspection will take place in 25 minutes

This could be make-or-break time for this encounter. Umpires Brown and Dharmasena must deem that the outfit – sodden and unfit for play all day so far – is suddenly dryer and safer for play despite a total lack of sunshine in Napier. I’ll believe it when I see it.

Get ready for 5th inspection in Napier at 6:30pm. Crowd starting to get restless, umpires copped bit of abuse during 4th #NZvAUS#aapsport

They must be close to calling this

Players are still sitting around in their tracksuits and training gear, and little about the scene indicates we’ll actually have any play. It’s a real shame for the faithful fans who’ve stuck around but if a ground doesn’t dry out for play, it doesn’t dry out.

The umpires are out in the middle again

“Conditions have not improved as you would expect” says Simon Doull on the TV now, and that is the understatement of the day. Rain cleared 90 minutes ago in Napier and the players are itching to go, but their safety is the issue here. At present, it is too dangerous under foot for play to begin. No sun + bad drainage = no play

The rain has stopped in Napier

But we’ve still got no play. Frustrating? Yes. Avoidable? Who knows, but based on recent images from the ground, whatever work is being done to clear the moisture at the edge of the inner fielding ring is not working.

The umpires asking the groundsmen to work on a particular area #NZvAUSpic.twitter.com/afgDHfueOs

Moment of truth? #NZvAUSpic.twitter.com/xqBEyIc9zt

Thommo v Trump?

Reader Robert McLiam Wilson certainly thinks so. “Breaking News: Trump just dissed you guys on Twitter,” he says, talking of course about Australia’s Prime Minister suffering the phone call equivalent of being dunked on, then this tweet. “So I’m thinking it’s time for that exemplary carnivore, Thommo, to get off the TV and suit up for some political punditry. If ever there was the perfect meeting between subject and object. I wonder what the verb will be...”

Just met Ian Chappell for 1st time. 'Hi, Mr Chappell, I'm Piers Morgan,' I said. 'Nah mate, you're a dickhead,' he replied. Meeting over!

We don’t have any live cricket but we do still have Thommo

While doing a Twitter search to find that last image I also found this one, which is too good not to share. I’m no car buff, but I believe this is a Ferrari Dino, right? And do I want to know what OTD stands for? I’m not sure if Thommo still owns it but it would surely be worth more than a holiday house on the Gold Coast by now.

Thommo and his Ferrari, 1976. pic.twitter.com/SdbzzT69x0

Hello all. It is indeed Russell Jackson here to take you through the rest of whatever kind of cricket match we get today. I’ll be honest, it doesn’t look good. Literally. Jeff Thomson is currently on my screen, wearing the kind of floral-print shirt even Richard Hammond would deem a bit much. I could live-blog Thommo’s episode of Fox Sports Cricket Legends, but I’m sure you’ve already suffered enough today.

Thommo's shirt still the best thing about the Crash 'cricket legends' interview series on Fox. pic.twitter.com/x3gimp4aQx

It’s Russell Jackson to take over the rain watch. Thanks for your company over the last three and a half very frustrating hours. Sometimes it just isn’t meant to be. In saying that, hopefully Russ has some cricket to bring you in the next 90 minutes or so. Or they put everyone out of their misery. Either way. Until next time. Be nice to one another.

“A lot more shaking of the head than nodding of the head,” says Ian Smith on the TV. Suggesting we’re still on hold. These aren’t good signs. In short: 40 minutes until they take another look.

Update: Another inspection at 5.30pm. Concern over player safety #NZvAUS

But what does it meeeean?

The skippers talk in front of the main grandstand as everyone waits to see what's happening #NZvAUSpic.twitter.com/KmCuoZUWNJ

The time has come. To look at this pitch again. Or more to the point: the outfield. Reports elsewhere say that a pool of water emerged between the previous inspection and the proposed toss. How have the ground staff gone? We stand by to find out.

The ground is still unavailable for play. This is despite them setting up the game to begin a half-hour from now. That’s when the next inspection will occur.

That makes the toss 4:15pm local. That’s 22 minutes from now.

37 overs per side! Beginning at 4:45pm local time. So, that’s about 55 minutes from now. Hurrah!

They’re running out of NZ highlights now. We’re into... what even is this? A Chris Martin retrospective? At least it is the good one. Another pitch inspection shortly. Promise.

Read that Trump/Turnbull thing and feel a bit sick? See that disgusting Herald Sun front page this morning? Want to smile instead? I happened upon this today - some outtakes from Peep Show. This’ll make you smile.

Next inspection: half an hour from now. So, 3:45pm local time.

Have a song while you do the maths on what that may mean for over reductions and the like.

No news is... no news. The talk on the internet is that they wanted to get going about 30 minutes from now. But the surface water - the darned surface water - is going to be a handbrake on that. Still no formal information though, which is a bit slack given the inspection was a quarter hour ago. But there we have it.

Meanwhile, the TV has moved onto the end of the Chap-Had last year at Hamilton. What a brilliant venue, and day. Had the good fortune of calling the game for local radio there, and assure you it meant an awful lot to them. Especially with Baz’s final ODI. Excellent game of cricket too.

Looks like we’re much closer at Napier. Inspection as I type. But the track is ready. And shots coming in from the ground now, the sun is out at least in part. The TV broadcast is talking about 3:45pm - but they’re speculating. That would be 45 minutes from now. Deck looks brilliant. Standing by for official information as the umpires lap the ground, assessing the outfield.

The covers are off with an inspection in around 10 mins... #NZvAUSpic.twitter.com/b4G8haqqwz

If you haven’t had a look at this Neighbours recap...

Use your time wisely investing some time in it before play begins. Dee the bloody scammer.

Another take. In from Craig Mackie. Hi Craig.

“Isn’t the real issue the confusion and frustration caused to all by not having a transparent and consistently applied selection process?”

Interesting. The CA website have lobbed up a story on the White v Hohns stoush. And mentioned the ACA by name in the tweet.

Gary Naylor has popped his head in too. “They sound like blokes in the early stages of bar-room row. Unedifying, but hardly, er... earth shattering.”

ACA rally behind Cameron White after interim National Selector rebuffs selection policy criticism https://t.co/tddbY5APK5

Relevant to our topic.

An observation: Cameron White is younger now than Trevor Hohns was when he first got picked to play for Australia.

On the rain. The latest reports are that the mops are out. The blowers are out. The supersopper is out. Will still be a while, but progress at least while the rain stays away.

Let’s talk politics.

Not Trump’s circus. Not Turnbull’s wallet. Cricket politics.

“The rain looks to have stopped.” Okay then. It still looks pretty rough out in the middle, so we’re going to be waiting a while in any case.

This game, then. The Black Caps have the chance to win the Chap-Had at home, just as they did a year ago. That time it required three games, with a helluva finale at Hamilton, but they could do it in straight sets with a win today.

Welcome to Guardian Australia’s live coverage of the second Chappell-Hadlee Trophy hit out from McLean Park in Napier. Adam Collins here, and I’m relishing the chance to bring you this first innings.

But here’s the thing: it’s raining. The delightful Kiwi TV broadcasters are reporting “a lot of water” around the boundary line, at the very least. The covers are on in the middle. So we’re going to have a delayed start, this much is certain.

Adam will be here shortly. In the meantime, here are more details on the spat between Cricket Australia and the players’ union:

Related: Union hits back after Cameron White's career labelled nothing 'earth shattering'

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New Zealand beat Australia in third one-day international –as it happened

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  • New Zealand win by 24 runs to claim the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy
  • Man-of-the-match Trent Boult records career-best figures of 6-33
  • Ross Taylor scores a New Zealand record-equalling 16th ODI century

Related: Australia fall to series defeat after 24-run loss to New Zealand in third ODI

It’s a shame this is only a three match series because either side of the wash out we’ve enjoyed two crackers.

These are evenly matched sides and that makes for nail-biting cricket. At times today New Zealand threatened to post in excess of 300 and looked incapable of making 200. Australia looked like they might win inside 30 overs but required a stirring tail-end bash just to take the game into its 47th.

It was a match that swung from one side to the other throughout the day but the Chappell-Hadlee trophy belongs to New Zealand.

Both teams have tried their hardest to hand victory to the opposition but this late intervention from Boult has been the most telling.

The dismissal of Zampa was superb and it was followed up by three dot balls to number 11 Hazlewood.

You will never see a more inspired piece of captaincy in a pressure situation. Williamson dared to place Taylor at fly slip for Boult’s first delivery at Zampa and it pays off to perfection. An angled length delivery edged straight to the veteran’s safe hands. Brilliant execution from New Zealand.


46th over: Australia 253-8 (Starc 29, Zampa 1)

Southee given responsibility to back up Boult’s breakthrough.

45th over: Australia 250-8 (Starc 28, Zampa 0)

Terrific over from Trent Boult. His country needed it and he delivered. On the mark early, then the wicket, then some serious sandshoe crushing yorkers to close it out.

Williamson has done what he had to and gone to his best bowler, Trent Boult, but the run rate is now below six r.p.o. so these batsmen don’t need to force the issue any more.

And Boult gets the breakthrough! Three line and length deliveries are followed by a quicker short ball that Cummins tries to pull but gets it high up the splice and lobs an easy catch to midwicket.

44th over: Australia 247-7 (Cummins 26, Starc 26)

For reasons best known to Kane Williamson, Mitchell Santner remains in the firing line and the first delivery of the 44th over is long-ironed over the umpire’s head by Cummins for six more!

43rd over: Australia 236-7 (Cummins 17, Starc 24)

Ferguson back on and his extra pace works for Starc who gets bat on ball and pierces the gap behind point and then works him in front of square on the leg-side for another boundary.

42nd over: Australia 227-7 (Cummins 16, Starc 16)

Oof! Huge over for Australia. Starc and Cummins have decided now’s the time. They long-handled some monster hits off Santner, who for some reason decider to toss up some loopy length deliveries. Three sixes, two straight, one over square leg have set pulses racing around Seddon Park.

41st over: Australia 207-7 (Cummins 9, Starc 3)

Neesham is given another over and he gets away with a poor one. Most deliveries are angled down the leg-side to the right-handed Cummins but a leg-bye four is the worst of the damage.

40th over: Australia 199-7 (Cummins 8, Starc 1)

Santner, now with figures of 2/19 from eight overs, was the wrong bowler to target. Stoinis was slogging to the longest boundary on the ground, against the spin, and he joins Finch, Marsh and Head as batsmen who had opportunities to win this game for their country but couldn’t see the job through.

Yet another set batsman out caught in the deep. The pressure on Stoinis finally tells and he tries to slog Santner out of the country only to pick out Neesham on the long-on boundary. It will take something miraculous for Australia to recover from here.

39th over: Australia 198-6 (Stoinis 42, Cummins 8)

Williamson dares not give Ferguson another over, opting for the experience of Southee instead, and it pays dividends.

38th over: Australia 196-6 (Stoinis 41, Cummins 7)

Big moment in the game as Santner returns to complete his spell. The left-arm spinner has been excellent so far but with the chase nearing its conclusion the pressure will be on.

37th over: Australia 195-6 (Stoinis 41, Cummins 6)

Big over for Australia.

NZ crowd here needs to get behind their team, should be baying for blood here... #nzvaus

36th over: Australia 180-6 (Stoinis 32, Cummins 1)

Stoinis is keeping his powder dry for now, watchful at the crease and taking the single where it’s available. Cummins is struggling to get bat to ball, eventually getting off the mark on his ninth delivery.

35th over: Australia 177-6 (Stoinis 30, Cummins 0)

The final passage of the day begins after drinks with left-armer Boult continuing over the wicket to the two right-handed batsmen. A beauty almost does for Cummins, short of a length rearing up to the batsman’s throat and it flies off the handle but safely in front of the waiting fielders.

34th over: Australia 175-6 (Stoinis 29, Cummins 0)

Williamson going for the jugular, bringing Southee on. Both batsmen are watchful to an over of off-pace mixed seam deliveries.

BANG-BANG! Faulkner out for a duck as he edges Boult to a diving Taylor in the gully. Great plan & execution! Aus 174-6, 33 overs #NZvAUS

33rd over: Australia 174-6 (Stoinis 28, Cummins 0)

If Australia don’t win today they will only have themselves to blame. Three set batsmen have each left a lot of runs out on Seddon Park. It’s all down to Stoinis again.

You can’t believe it! For the third time this innings New Zealand go Bang! Bang! Faulkner this time the latest batsman unable to adjust to this pitch early in his innings. His hands followed a Boult delivery slanting across him and the recently placed Ross Taylor at fly slip made no mistake diving low to his right.

There’s a third-umpire review to make sure Taylor caught that cleanly, which he did, but - you know - cricket.

Right on cue! Head, like Marsh and Finch before him, throws his wicket away when set. Boult sends down a short ball, Head gets under a pull but can’t clear the short boundary and Brownlie takes a smart catch above his head in the shadow of the rope.

32nd over: Australia 172-4 (Head 53, Stoinis 26)

New Zealand taking things much more deliberately in the field now as this partnership for Australia passes 50. Ferguson is bending his back but both batsmen are now set and as we’ve seen all match runs are on offer once a batsman has adjusted to the pace of the pitch.

31st over: Australia 167-4 (Head 51, Stoinis 23)

The rub of the green again goes Australia’s way as Trent Boult is brought back into the attack.

FIFTY! Travis Head finds the boundary to bring up his fifth ODI half-century. Can he guide the Aussies to victory? #NZvAUS

30th over: Australia 159-4 (Head 47, Stoinis 23)

Noticeable increase in energy from Australia at the crease in the past two overs. Head now working runs in front of square before just about surviving a nasty Ferguson bouncer. The speedster’s follow up to Stoinis is tidy also, beating the batsman for pace but just missing the edge.

29th over: Australia 145-4 (Head 44, Stoinis 17)

Williamson continues with his bonus overs but Stoinis has had enough, after 20 balls at the crease his eye is in and the allrounder skips down the pitch and drives smartly through the covers for a boundary - the first in ages. And like Australian wickets one brings two, Stoinis taking to the sky to despatch Williamson over the sight-screen for six.

28th over: Australia 133-4 (Head 42, Stoinis 7)

A return to pace, and serious pace, with Lockie Ferguson. Can he land the sucker punch after the groundwork laid by the spinners?

27th over: Australia 130-4 (Head 41, Stoinis 5)

Another brisk, economical over from Williamson. New Zealand are really dictating terms now, strangling the life out of Australia’s middle order.

26th over: Australia 127-4 (Head 40, Stoinis 3)

Tight from Santner again as the run-rate creeps up towards 6.5 rpo. These middle overs of spin have rocked Australia.

25th over: Australia 125-4 (Head 39, Stoinis 2)

Williamson also getting through his overs rapidly, buying his team some cheap overs against a batsmen yet to get settled and Head who’s lost his timing in recent minutes.

24th over: Australia 123-4 (Head 38, Stoinis 1)

Santner’s into his groove now, rattling through his work bowling dot after dot, refusing to allow the batsmen to rotate the strike. NZ’s premier spinner with 1/15 from his five overs so far.

Finch brain fade and Maxwell whatever-it-was mean Stoinis has to do it again #NZvAUS

23rd over: Australia 121-4 (Head 37, Stoinis 0)

A potentially game changing few overs from Santner and WIlliamson. Like Marsh before him, Finch has to take responsibility for a poor dismissal that’s allowed New Zealand back into the contest.

Bang! Bang! Just like earlier in the afternoon one brings two. Short and wide from Santner to Maxwell who gets a tiny edge that’s taken smartly by Latham standing to the stumps. The batsman uses up his team’s solitary review thinking he hadn’t touched it but snicko reveals the faintest noise and he has to go.

Aaron Finch, what are you doing? Headless chicken stuff from Australia’s captain (what was I saying about a captain’s knock?). There are runs on offer all over the place against Williamson but Finch is determined to knock his opposite number into Antarctica. He offers a half-chance to a diving Santner before holing out to Trent Boult at cow corner. So unnecessary.

20th over: Australia 110-2 (Finch 50, Head 33)

Santner looks innocuous but he’s been hard to get away. Finch eventually picks off the single he requires to reach his half-century, from 60 deliveries. *CLICHE KLAXON* - Captain’s knock in the making for Australia’s eleventeenth choice skipper.

19th over: Australia 107-2 (Finch 49, Head 31)

Finch is showing Williamson no respect at all, slapping another disdainful four through midwicket. Australia have noticeably gone after the first ball of the over in this run chase, enabling them to control the pace from the remaining deliveries. Smart tactics.

18th over: Australia 100-2 (Finch 43, Head 30)

Santner to continue after drinks, mixing up his lengths to keep Head on his toes. He slogs his way off strike but almost offers a chance to long on in the process.

17th over: Australia 97-2 (Finch 41, Head 29)

Williamson brings himself on to lob down his off-spinners and it’s an eventful over!

16th over: Australia 86-2 (Finch 30, Head 29)

Mitchell Santner’s left-arm around the wicket spin is greeted by Travis Head with a crunching straight drive for four. Some good fielding limits further damage in an over that fails to offer any encouragement to the slower bowlers.

15th over: Australia 80-2 (Finch 29, Head 24)

Just three from Ferguson’s over as he aims for a slightly shorter length. It’s a troubling length for the batsmen because when a bowler really digs in the ball seems to hold up fractionally in the surface making back foot shots difficult to time.

14th over: Australia 77-2 (Finch 28, Head 22)

Neesham’s second over begins badly with sweeper Brownlie fumbling on the cover boundary conceding an ugly four. It doesn’t get much better when he drops short to Finch and the Victorian slaps him like a line drive or an Andre Agassi return of serve, through mid-off with a horizontal bat. Brute force.

13th over: Australia 66-2 (Finch 22, Head 17)

Ferguson continuing to steam in but Finch is picking the pace well now and the line to the left-hander Head is awry. Head gobbles up one on his pads for a leg-side four in an over worth nine. It doesn’t matter if it’s 152kph if it’s a half-volley on leg stump.

12th over: Australia 57-2 (Finch 21, Head 9)

Full-time Twitter star occasional Black Cap @JimmyNeesh into the attack with his heavy right-arm seamers. Two singles from it as everyone concerned settles into things.

11th over: Australia 55-2 (Finch 20, Head 8)

Another over from Ferguson that’s fast and on the money. Australia work three singles to keep the scoreboard ticking over.

10th over: Australia 52-2 (Finch 18, Head 7)

Loose over from Boult, eight from it, with Head the main beneficiary. There’s something village about how hard Head goes at some deliveries, often overbalancing. Sometimes he looks like he tries to hit the ball so hard in order to lift his feet from the ground, turn his bat into a broomstick and fly away into the Bay of Islands.

9th over: Australia 44-2 (Finch 17, Head 0)

Lockie Ferguson’s searing pace comes into the attack for the first time and anything short has Finch hopping about uncomfortably. He hits 150kph with his fifth delivery which precedes a sixth that sticks in the pitch and has Finch cutting too early, almost spooning a catch to cover.

Oh dear. S.Marsh run out for 22. He hit four boundaries off his six previous balls https://t.co/XCAwvLoete#NZvAUSpic.twitter.com/qa73e9zLZT

8th over: Australia 44-2 (Finch 17, Head 0)

Huge over for New Zealand. Shaun Marsh has to take a lot of the blame, turning slowly for a second that was only just there and curtailing an innings that was building momentum.

Bang! Bang! New Zealand roaring back into this contest. Boult just short of a length outside off, Handscomb hangs his angled bat out without moving his feet and gets a thick inside edge onto his pegs.

Runs flowing freely for Marsh and Australia now, even off Boult. He’s measured the pace of the pitch and from the crease he waits for Boult to over-pitch and punches him down the ground for four.

But hang on - is that a run out? Yes! Marsh, bit off more than he could chew with a second to the arm of Santner and a good throw and take from the keeper sees Marsh a couple of inches short of his ground.

7th over: Australia 39-0 (Finch 17, Marsh 17)

That’ll do wonders for Marsh’s confidence. Wide half-volley from Southee and the West Australian just leans into a cover drive that skips over the outfield for four.

6th over: Australia 24-0 (Finch 17, Marsh 2)

Marsh - just two from 14 deliveries - is getting bogged down out there against Boult. He’s unable to work anything from the tight top of fourth stump line and length. New Zealand recovering well from Finch’s early assault.

This venue #NZvAUSpic.twitter.com/jDjrxRYmG9

5th over: Australia 22-0 (Finch 16, Marsh 1)

Chance! Well, a half-chance really. Finch goes for the hat-trick of lofted drives but he whacks it straight at the bowler in his follow-through. Southee jabs out a paw but the ball ricochets out before his fingers can secure the dismissal.

4th over: Australia 20-0 (Finch 15, Marsh 1)

Boult sends down the first challenging passage, testing Marsh with a hint of swing - some shaping in, mostly curving away. Marsh plays and misses outside off, gets beaten for pace on his inside edge and then almost gets trapped in front playing across the line.

3rd over: Australia 20-0 (Finch 15, Marsh 1)

The first delivery of Southee’s second over is smited with dreamy technique for six by Finch. Similar to his lofted drive over mid-off in the first over, Finch goes aerially again, but times this one much more sweetly and with barely a flourish sends the ball arcing just wide of the sight-screen. Clearly Finch knows he doesn’t need to overhit boundaries on this tight ground.

Warm day in Hamilton... #NZvAUSpic.twitter.com/kcGMYNh3jk

2nd over: Australia 12-0 (Finch 7, Marsh 1)

Boult will share the new ball with his left-arm over the wicket deliveries. Finch nudges a single early which gives Shaun Marsh his first view from the striker’s end, and he gets off the mark in quick time courtesy of some smart running from his partner.

1st over: Australia 9-0 (Finch 5, Marsh 0)

Southee opens for the Black Caps, bowling to Australian skipper Finch. It’s a loose start with four leg-byes worked down to fine leg from the opening delivery. Three balls later and the first delivery pitched up is driven aerially through a vacant straight mid-off for a four full of intent.

Just to remind you of the match situation. The Chappell-Hadlee trophy is on the line in this, the third of a three-match series. New Zealand racked up 281 in their innings, led by Ross Taylor’s 16th ODI century, to equal Nathan Astle’s national record. James Faulkner’s intervention of 3/59 was decisive, limiting what loomed as a 300-plus score.

Seddon Park in Hamilton is a picture, it’s warm, the skies are blue and there’s a good crowd in. The pitch is true and the consensus seems to be that Australia have their noses just in front at this stage.

And who doesn’t enjoy a swarm of bees disrupting play?

Related: South Africa defy swarm of bees to beat Sri Lanka by seven wickets

Plenty of other cricket news to keep you occupied during the innings break. Not least the ICC’s emerging plans for a Test championship.

Related: ICC agrees plan for nine-team Test championship spread over two years

Thanks Sam, you had me at the Velvets and my loyalty to your updates never wavered.

What a fascinating afternoon we have in store. 281 is in the sweet spot for hard to predict run chases. Australia, without Steve Smith or David Warner to anchor their assault, will be up against it, but there’s plenty of power in that batting order if they can only make starts. New Zealand’s attack with Trent Boult, Tim Southee and Lockie Ferguson promises plenty of entertainment too.

An ebbing, flowing, topsy, turvy, roller-coastery innings there by all measures. Some wonderful early batting by Brownlie, Williamson and most significantly Ross Taylor laid the foundations for what looked like an imposing total, before Australia embarked on a major tightening exercise of their own. New Zealand owned the first 35 overs and Australia the next 14, before Santner finished with a flourish.

At the halfway point a rollicking scoring rate, a small ground and a true wicket left most thinking that 320-350 runs represented par here, and I’m inclined to retain that view. Once Broom departed, New Zealand’s middle-lower order looked bereft of ideas for ways to get off strike, and that profligacy showed. They leave about 50 runs behind, but they do so in the knowledge that they bowl to an Australian batting unit so far unproven without their major talismen. Credit must go to Ross Taylor, who played the conditions masterfully - primarily operating in boundaries and singles. Never was a soft hand seen.

50th over: New Zealand 281-9 (Boult 1, Santner 38)

Last over to be bowled by Starc, and he devastates the stumps of both Southee and Ferguson in succession. He then delivers a waist-high no ball on his hat trick delivery to Boult. They grab a single meaning Santner has a free hit. He misses a length ball completely, no run. Santner doesn’t miss next ball though, striking one crisply over extra cover for four. Important runs. Two balls to go. And another four! Santner takes a full toss - a missed yorker - and lifts him over mid wicket to the vacant boundary out there. Last ball, and Santner finishes with a six! He backs away, Starc follows him, and he splits long on and cow corner. What an excellent final three balls for Santner and New Zealand finish with 281. Some summarising thoughts to follow.

Another! Starc on a hat trick! Almost exactly the same delivery from Starc. Around the wicket, base of the stumps. Ferguson defending, couldn’t stop it. Boult to the crease.

Southee is clean bowled with a round the wicket yorker hitting the base of middle stump. Pace. Execution. Tail.

49th over: New Zealand 265-7 (Southee 10, Santner 24)

Faulkner to bowl the innings’ penultimate over. Ball two and Southee slogs one to cow corner - he gets a good hold of it and it’s going all the way until Stoinis takes the ball brilliantly well over his head running backwards...his weight is taking him over the rope so he throws the ball back in the field of play. Replays confirm outstanding fielding, but it looks like his foot hit the rope, so it’s six. A single later to Southee and Santner then finds two to deep square. He then hits a boundary between point and backward point to finish a good over for New Zealand.

48th over: New Zealand 251-7 (Southee 3, Santner 16)

Southee facing Starc and Australia appeal and review after Southee appears to play and miss. The umpire was correct, and everyone’s bemused. He then drives one wide of extra cover and gets one to long off. A yorker follows to Santner - Starc is surely the best exponent of it in the game. He can only get one. Southee mistimes one to long on for a single, and Starc repeats his earlier yorker dosage to Santner. One squeezed run to square leg. They just can’t buy a boundary.

47th over: New Zealand 247-7 (Southee 1, Santner 15)

Faulkner is in and it’s a barrage of back-of-hand slower balls. Santner gets the first away to deep cover, bringing Taylor on strike. He gets inside the line of one and it strikes his thigh pad, snaking away down fine leg for four! There’s a muted appeal that’s ignored. He tries to hit the next into Larnach Castle but only succeeds in inside edging for one. He’s eventually dismissed playing the same shot, and Southee takes one to finish the over.

Taylor, trying to accelerate proceedings, hoicks one directly to Stoinis on the square leg boundary. It would have gone for six without the sweeper there, but it was a comfortable catch. An excellent innings from the former skipper, who bludgeoned his way to a total that’s held his team’s innings together.

46th over: New Zealand 239-6 (Taylor 106, Santner 13)

Taylor got the all-important early boundary to bring up his ton, and his ensuing single brings Santner on strike. Again, he can’t get off it. Starc is bowling full yorkers just outside off and Santner has no answer. He eventually heaves one to the leg side but long on cuts it off, only one. Taylor shows him how it’s done with a sublime drive over cover for four to complete the set of six. A little better from NZ there.

Taylor’s hundred finally arrives with a welcome boundary. He slices Starc to the third man boundary and it’s too quick for the sweeper to reel in. A mainly brutal innings from Taylor who has creamed a number of balls here. He’s been slowed down as his team mates have crumbled around him, but he’s been imperious himself. A great innings to watch

45th over: New Zealand 229-6 (Taylor 97, Santner 12)

Cummins to Taylor, and it’s a single to the mid on man on the ring. He moves to 96. Santner reciprocates with another to third man - I think he wanted to slap it but was too cramped. Taylor misses a back cut that goes through to Handscomb. He’s only one hit away. He does hit the next one, but it’s a mistimed under edge to Maxwell at point - he’s deep so they take one. Cummins is mixing up slower balls and cutters here, and Santner can’t get him away on ball five. Same goes ball six. Only three from it. That’s Cummins’ spell. 1-47 from 10.

Mitchell Santner hits New Zealand's first boundary in 12.1 overs - a six off Mitchell Starc https://t.co/FgK4dSeQID#NZvAUS

44th over: New Zealand 226-6 (Taylor 95, Santner 11)

As with most other overs, Taylor starts with a single to third man. What can Santner do? One wonders whether the Stoinis approach of farming the strike may be a better option. Santner defends the first, no run. He then hits a textbook on drive for six! Where did that come from? Whatever the case, that’s more like it. Santner gets out of the road of the stumps and hits a Starc full toss to mid wicket for two. The next one is a very quick in-swinging yorker that Santner jams out square for one, to bring Taylor on strike. He gets a single and will start the next over on strike. A better one from New Zealand, eleven from it.

43rd over: New Zealand 215-6 (Taylor 93, Santner 2)

Taylor gets to the other end straight away, leaving Santner to negotiate Hazlewood. He’s cramped with balls just outside his chest and he’s jumping to play them. He can’t find singles from them either. He then misses a pull shot, making it three dots and a Taylor single. Hazlewood makes it four dots as Santner pushes again to backward point. Will some further pressure tell? Not here, just another dot. One run only.

42nd over: New Zealand 214-6 (Taylor 92, Santner 2)

Cummins keeps his lid-man to Santner, and pursues a short length. After three balls he guides one to third man, bringing Taylor on strike. What does he do? Takes a single to third man. They’ve been going at around three an over for a while now - a stunning overhaul from Australia. Santner drives the last ball handsomely but Stoinis is able to stop it at short cover by flinging himself down to the ball. Three from the over.

41st over: New Zealand 211-6 (Taylor 90, Santner 1)

It’s interesting - New Zealand pursued a strategy of consolidation through singles at three down, but they lost wickets through that period anyway. Taylor starts this over on strike to Hazlewood, and takes the single. Australia will be glad for it. Neesham (1 from 6) takes strike and he’s bowled! Santner makes his way to the centre. Two singles finish the over as Taylor enters the nineties (the score, not the era).

Another goes! Neesham is hopping at a Hazlewood ball and trying to run it down to third man. He instead gets a bottom edge into the ground, and as the ball hit the base the off-bail wobbled, and then takes a significant amount of time to dislodge. In the end it’s all that’s needed, Neesham goes for a disappointing 1 - he really struggled to find a way to score. The Black Caps are somewhat sinking here.

40th over: New Zealand 208-5 (Taylor 88, Neesham 1)

New Zealand have lost 3-29, and it’s Cummins to continue. He has a man under the lid to Neesham, who’s wafting at air outside off stump. They have a slip to him as well, so it’s a reasonably aggressive field for the 40th over of an ODI. I wonder how Taylor will play this situation - he would have been eyeing off some party time about now but will probably have to consolidate. Neesham awkwardly fends Cummins and the ball drops just in front of the man under the helmet. I think they’ve found a weakness, Australia. He tries to hook a bouncer but misses, only one from it.

39th over: New Zealand 207-5 (Taylor 87, Neesham 1)

Taylor still dropping and running, this time from the bowling of Hazlewood. Munro’s then caught by Starc, bringing Jimmy Neesham to the crease. Are New Zealand behind now? It was looking very promising for them about thirty minutes ago, but the pressure is swelling now. Taylor becomes critical.

That’s a great catch from Starc, who’s diving forward to a ball driven in the air to mid-off from Hazlewood’s bowling. The Black Caps just can’t get going in the final overs it seems, as Hazlewood picks up his first for the match. A reward for pressure there.

38th over: New Zealand 204-4 (Taylor 85, Munro 3)

Faulkner’s been Australia’s best today, and he’s doing well to continue the stemming of boundaries. New Zealand bring up 200 this over via another Taylor single. The continual fall of wickets has stopped his onslaught, though he’s still striking at better than a run a ball. Still singles only.

37th over: New Zealand 199-4 (Taylor 83, Munro 0)

Taylor gets off strike early and then Hazlewood keeps Munro on strike for the remainder of the over. He does so without conceding a run too, which momentarily halts New Zealand’s march. Hazlewood will be thankful for the respite as he’d been going at six an over up until that point.

36th over: New Zealand 198-4 (Taylor 82, Munro 0)

Broom’s warming to the task here, he flicks one behind square and gets two for it. It’s still a singles convention otherwise, which Faulkner should get credit for. There’s too much dabbing going on though, and Broom is removed on the last ball of the over. Munro now joins Taylor.

Faulkner gets his second now, as the dab undoes Broom. He’s looking to run the ball down the third man but the open face hurts him. He succeeds only in nicking it through to the stand-in keeper Handscomb, and so a new partnership must begin.

35th over: New Zealand 185-3 (Taylor 77, Broom 3)

While I’m pontificating a par score, it occurs to me that this Australian batting line up is anything but steady. Bar a major outlier of an innings from Stoinis, the rest of the top order offered very little at last start. Perhaps New Zealand believe that a solid score of 300+ will exert enough pressure to do the job here? How the Smithless, Warnerless, and Khawajaless batting group manages the chase will be pretty interesting. Cummins keeps it tight early here, at one stage trying to effect a run out via a sweeping left foot caress of the ball to the stumps. Taylor had dropped and run and there was no danger. There was another bouncer-wide from Cummins earlier, and later on he follows it with a more traditional wide down leg side. He’s around the wicket to Taylor though, which doesn’t seem to be a bad option - he’s gone a fair few balls without a boundary. Broom continues the dab-athon, before Cummins bowls another bouncer-wide, this time it was extraordinarily high over the batsman’s head (a three metre high bouncer, says TV). There’s a single to finish.

34th over: New Zealand 185-3 (Taylor 77, Broom 3)

The players return from drinks, and New Zealand will consider themselves pretty well placed heading into the final stanza of the innings. Having said that, it will only take a mistake or two to leave the Black Caps floundering, as this wicket looks an absolute beauty and anything under 310 pretty insubstantial. Faulkner takes the reins and is glided the third man to start things off, bringing the new batsman Broom in strike. He in-turn brings Taylor back on strike. We’ve not seen anything too agricultural from New Zealand yet - I wonder if there’s any reserve of power to come. I think they’ll be looking to get to forty overs, then - if there’s wickets in hand - to truly go wild in the remaining sixty balls. It’s a festival of singles here, five in total.

Not a bad day for it! @BLACKCAPS#nzvauspic.twitter.com/B0bmXvFbrB

33rd over: New Zealand 180-3 (Taylor 74, Broom 1)

Cummins continues and starts with a bouncer-wide, not his first today. Taylor continues his own penchant for playing with hard hands, belting one to deep cover but only for a single. Broom’s off the mark to the same region, albeit with softer hands. Taylor ticks it over and leaves Broom with the strike for the final ball, but he can’t find a run. Not the worst result for New Zealand, who will start the over with Taylor on strike.

32nd over: New Zealand 176-3 (Taylor 72, Broom 0)

The first leg is cleared here, as Brownlie delivers on my earlier, convenient prediction. It goes straight over the bowler’s head for four, as you sense the runs are about to flow. I’m going to call 340-350 as par here, the going looks very good for batsmen, without even having to do much. A good sign of a great batting wicket is the needlessness for foot movement. A single later and Australia are reviewing a caught behind! It looked like a bat-on-ground situation but snicko suggests otherwise, there is a faint edge and he’s gone! You’ll see the description below but that might hold New Zealand up a fraction. It’s Broom to the crease. A good over from Faulkner.

So Brownlie goes for a well-made 63. He was caught behind from a full Faulkner delivery, which found his bottom edge. It looked like a bat-on-ground situation but snicko suggested otherwise. A good catch from Handscomb diving forward.

31st over: New Zealand 169-2 (Taylor 70, Brownlie 58)

120 balls left for NZ and it’s Cummins first up. Taylor outside edges one early that flies to the third man boundary to set up the over well. After a single, Cummins replies with a bouncer to Brownlie that almost has him hitting the deck to evade it. He finds a single to deep square immediately afterward. Taylor gets one himself. I wonder if Brownlie will be looking to accelerate soon.

30th over: New Zealand 162-2 (Taylor 64, Brownlie 57)

They’re hitting the stumps, Australia. This time it’s Stoinis trying to take Taylor down (the best chance they’ve got, it seems) but the NZ man makes his ground after cutting one to point. Brownlie is trying to up the ante but edges another one after being beaten in flight. He gets one. He does better next time though, this time giving himself room outside leg and lofting the ball over extra cover for four to finish the over well.

29th over: New Zealand 155-2 (Taylor 62, Brownlie 55)

Starc commences his sixth over with the requisite in-out field and it’s fairly non eventful early on. Both batsmen grab a single each, Brownlie through mid wicket and Taylor - searching for a boundary - is cramped and gets one to point. Brownlie sends Taylor back to the non strikers after driving one and Finch throws down the stumps, but Taylor is well safe. Starc finishes without conceding.

28th over: New Zealand 153-2 (Taylor 61, Brownlie 51)

Taylor finds the boundary from Zampa’s first ball via a late cut, and later on Brownlie’s dropped by Stoinis - he was beaten in flight by Zampa, lunging forward and driving uppishly. The ball skewed off his bat and just over Stoinis at point, who jumped like Larry Bird to get a hand on it, but no more. He’s lucky to survive.

27th over: New Zealand 147-2 (Taylor 56, Brownlie 50)

It’s Starc now, as Finch continues to ring the changes. He starts well - ‘well’ being defined as no boundaries conceded. There are four singles to the offside, one of which brings up Brownlie’s first ODI fifty. It comes from 65 balls - he’s anchored the innings so far.

26th over: New Zealand 143-2 (Taylor 54, Brownlie 48)

Zampa’s reintroduced, and Taylor is eclipsing Brownlie for runs. Zampa finally errs in length, with a short one pulled to the backward square boundary for four. The following one is inside edged through mid wicket and it brings up Taylor’s fifty. It comes from 44 balls, and it’s been notable for its raw power. It’s not been one of deft singles and fine touch. As if to underscore this, Taylor completes the over by blazing an overpitched ball through cover for four.

25th over: New Zealand 133-2 (Taylor 45, Brownlie 47)

Taylor’s almost caught Brownlie here. Cricinfo reliably informs me that he was on four when Brownlie reached 40. All of his runs, even singles, are hit firmly. He’s crunching a pull shot from Stoinis to deep mid wicket and driving one to the edge of the circle on the off side. His power allows Brownlie to play second fiddle. Stoinis then hits Brownlie on the pad and they go up in unison! The umpire says not out, and the Australians agree. He was back in his crease, feet not moving, and trying to swat the ball wide of midwicket. Replays show it was missing.

24th over: New Zealand 130-2 (Taylor 43, Brownlie 46)

As mentioned earlier, Taylor is hitting the ball hard here. He misses out with a midwicket flick on ball one, but smashes the next behind square off the front foot. Wasn’t that wide either. He goes very hard at the next and a thick outside edgejust evades Handscomb and runs away for four. He may have got a hand to it but he wasn’t a genuine chance. Cover stops another one that’s flayed from Taylor, and he settles for a single to finish.

23rd over: New Zealand 121-2 (Taylor 34, Brownlie 46)

Stoinis, who was hammered early, is back into the attack. With six bowlers already used, I wonder if Head has been relieved of his bowling duties. Much will depend on whether Stoinis can rebound from his early, leaky start. Like Faulkner before him, he’s not conceding anything too dramatic - his length is tight and there are only three singles from the over, heading into the final ball. Brownlie chops it into the off side but can’t get a run. Only three from it, given the state of the wicket I wonder if NZ feel the pressure building.

22nd over: New Zealand 118-2 (Taylor 32, Brownlie 45)

Taylor looks in a hurry here. He can’t find the boundary from Faulkner, but his whip to deep square leg and even his dab to third man have a hardness of hands that suggest he wants to explode. Brownlie meanwhile continues solidly, flicking one and pulling one for singles of his own. Getting the sense that this is a wonderful day for batting, so Taylor’s urgency may be justified. A small ground and a good wicket means 320-350 may be par. Boundaryless overs are very welcome too, and Faulkner’s is one. Five off the over.

21st over: New Zealand 113-2 (Taylor 29, Brownlie 43)

Hazlewood’s going at nearly six an over as his starts, which he won’t be comfortable with. He’s still fairly straight though, and concedes singles to deep square leg early on. He’s then short and wide and Taylor cuts him hard over backward point for four. Miserly he is not. It’s actually kind of refreshing. Another single to deep square makes it seven from the over.

20th over: New Zealand 106-2 (Taylor 23, Brownlie 42)

Faulkner is the third-change bowler now, ready to effect his array of cutters, back-of-hand slower balls and angry faces. There’s a leg bye off the hip to start, then Faulkner finds an edge through the vacant slip region for four. That was Taylor, who did have softish hands through the shot to be fair to him. Faulkner is much straighter than his colleagues so far, and he gets worked to fine leg on ball number five. He’s around the wicket to Brownlie now, and a ball aimed right at the top of off earns him a dot. Six off the over, Ross Taylor looking ominous.

19th over: New Zealand 100-2 (Taylor 18, Brownlie 42)

Some rare freedom is offered by Hazlewood and Taylor’s able to take full toll in the over here. Balls two and three are short and Taylor cuts the first hard through point and pulls the second ferociously in front of square leg - both for boundaries. He’s uncharacteristically off-length here is Hazlewood - he narrowly escapes from a half volley on middle and leg, before another bit of width is smashed through the off side for the third boundary of the over.

18th over: New Zealand 88-2 (Taylor 6, Brownlie 42)

Zampa continues to push the ball through and has further success. Brownlie tries to cut his second ball but extra bounce and pace means it catches the top edge, falling just short of point. A few more to long off and long on completes the over. Zampa has been immense in putting the screws on here, both he and Cummins have crucially arrested NZs momentum. Hazlewood to continue now...

17th over: New Zealand 84-2 (Taylor 4, Brownlie 40)

Hazlewood comes back and gets an edge that falls short of the keeper. Taylor was cutting a full one and luckily escapes. I hear the dulcet tones of colleague Geoff Lemon coming through the commentary airwaves on Radio Sport NZ too - cheerio, mate. More dots before a rising Hazlewood delivery is fended by Taylor for a single. An angled final ball is pushed to square leg by Brownlie for another single. The armwrestle is back on. That’s drinks. Honours even, in my view.

16th over: New Zealand 81-2 (Taylor 3, Brownlie 38)

Zampa’s full and flat and outside off stump, and he’s tough to get away. Brownlie and Taylor are able to find two and one respectively before Zampa drops short to Taylor, who cuts him beyond the ring fielder at point for two. A good throw from the boundary has him diving but he was always safe.

15th over: New Zealand 76-2 (Taylor 0, Brownlie 36)

Good pace from Cummins elicits a thick outside edge from Brownlie down to third man for one. Williamson has just entered a slight lull himself, defending one resolutely, then running one to third man. Cummins attempts a bouncer but it’s poorly directed - well over Brownlie’s head for a wide. He drives at the next and gets another thick outside edge as it flies down to third man for one. Boundaries have dried up here, I wonder if New Zealand will try to manufacture one? [I promise I wrote that before the following ball]. Cummins then beat Williamson with bounce and seam to grab the wicket, and Taylor saw out the last ball to bring it to a close.

There’s the wicket! Just as the boundaries had dried up Cummins gets one to seam in markedly, taking the edge of Williamson who was trying to cut one that ended up way too close to his body to do so. He’s cramped and can only feather it through to Handscomb. Great reward for Cummins.

14th over: New Zealand 72-1 (Williamson 36, Brownlie 34)

NZ content to work further singles here as Zampa gallops back to his mark in between balls. He deceives batsmen less through spin and more through pace, conceding only two heading into the last ball. Brownlie gives himself room on the final delivery but Zampa follows him. He can only slap it for one to long-off. Another good one from Australia.

13th over: New Zealand 69-1 (Williamson 35, Brownlie 32)

12 overs in and Australia have reverted to three boundary riders. The batsmen seem set and we’ve probably entered mid-overs singles territory already. There’s one to deep cover and a dab to third man before Williamson does well to evade a sharp Cummins bouncer. He’s dried things up here, briefly stemming the flow of boundaries earlier in his spell, and he finishes with only two from his over.

12th over: New Zealand 67-1 (Williamson 34, Brownlie 31)

Stoinis is hooked, Zampa is on. We briefly see a crowd-held sign with the words ‘Stoinis Is A One Match Wonder’. Cricket can be desperately unforgiving, can’t it? Zampa’s on the money straight away, finding a fullish length on that off stump line that we’ve become accustomed to. Williamson can’t put away a full toss later in the over, so it’s a smattering of singles down to longs off and on. A single from every ball, in fact. Six off, nothing dramatic.

11th over: New Zealand 61-1 (Williamson 31, Brownlie 28)

There’s a little conference between captain Finch and Cummins before this over commences, and the Australian starts well. It’s a small ground here in Hamilton, with one pronounced ‘short’ boundary square of the wicket. Where the wicket appeared slow-ish at the games start, it seems true and hard now. Cummins angles one in to Williamson’s chest, and the Black Caps’ captain moves quickly to swivel the ball square of fine leg, but it’s only a single. Four balls in and it’s better from Cummins so far, but how will he finish? A slower ball is turned for one to the now-deep midwicket boundary, and there’s a dot to finish. We see Zampa warming up here too.

Marcus Stoinis taking his sweet time winning us this game. Hurry up, man. #NZvAUS

10th over: New Zealand 59-1 (Williamson 30, Brownlie 27)

The carnage continues early in the piece here. Stoinis inexplicably offers further width - his full ball outside off stump is flayed to the square boundary. Stoinis briefly corrects his line before the next is flicked through mid wicket. His line remains on leg, so the following ball goes through there too - this time for two runs. Like Cummins, Stoinis is both sides of the wicket here. Their bowling partnership has been poor so far.

9th over: New Zealand 52-1 (Williamson 25, Brownlie 25)

It’s Cummins from the other end, meaning a double-change for Australia. Listening to some commentary here - some people cannot help but pronounce his name ‘Cummings’, can they? Anyway, Williamson is able to drop-kick his first ball over wide mid-on for four, dab one to third man, and then Brownlie joins the act with a sumptuous drive down the ground, albeit with minimal foot movement. Cummins is struggling here, and Brownlie takes to him again - this time with a cut shot that sails over point to the boundary. New Zealand are racing now - Cummins was all over the place there.

8th over: New Zealand 39-1 (Williamson 20, Brownlie 17)

So it’s Stoinis into the attack now and he starts dryly; his chesty, muscling-approach securing a few dots to kick things off. He then seems to come in wider of the crease and the ball is similarly so - it means Williamson can cut behind gully to the short boundary for four. The next ball is similar though Williamson hits squarer this time - another boundary. A glide down to third man for one and a dot conclude proceedings.

7th over: New Zealand 30-1 (Williamson 11, Brownlie 17)

Starc’s first ball offers the most marginal width but it’s all Brownlie needs. His weight is slightly forward when he cuts hard into the ground, piercing cover and backward point for four. Could Hazlewood have cut that off? Probably not. Brownlie then grabs a single before Williamson finds two more, much in the same vein as Brownlie’s initial boundary. After a slow start and the initial loss of Latham New Zealand are moving along pretty well here - I wouldn’t be surprised if Australia seek a change soon. Starc finishes with another full toss that creates a leading edge. The ball ends up between cover and mid-off, meaning another single for the Black Caps.

6th over: New Zealand 22-1 (Williamson 8, Brownlie 12)

Hazlewood starts with a yorker, and it’s probably the sixth or seventh already for the match. He draws a few more forward defensive strokes before he’s worked through mid wicket by Williamson for three. Brownlie then plays a consummate straight drive that would have likely gone to the boundary but for the mega hands of Hazlewood, who’s able to remove the sting from the ball, so there’s only a single.

5th over: New Zealand 18-1 (Williamson 5, Brownlie 11)

Brownlie gets off strike on ball one to bring Williamson on strike for his first one. He leaves one before he jams down on a quick one from Starc - the open face beats second slip and Hazlewood at third man, giving the captain an early boundary. He tucks the next one fine off his hip - it too looks to be heading to the boundary but Zampa scampers around to cut it off. The Australian then beats a lead-footed Brownlie outside off to finish the over.

4th over: New Zealand 12-1 (Williamson 0, Brownlie 10)

Meanwhile Brownlie looks in great touch here. He narrowly misses out on a boundary after a scintillating square drive early in Hazlewood’s over, but Maxwell makes the diving stop. He won’t be denied the following ball though, as he whips the New South Welshman through midwicket from one on off-stump. He gets a bouncer next for his troubles, but it’s a wide. Brownlie finishes with a single to complete a pretty good over for New Zealand.

3rd over: New Zealand 6-1 (Williamson 0, Brownlie 5)

He’s moving it, is GI Joe Mitch. He swings two past the left-handed Latham to start the over, leaving the New Zealander with no runs from his first five deliveries. He then elicits some bounce through one that hares past Latham’s chest before it balloons slightly through to Handscomb, who’s behind the stumps. As you’ll see below, the pressure somewhat told as Latham flicked one straight to Hazlewood at fine leg, meaning Australia start on top.

Latham’s out! After an over of strangulation from Starc, Latham receives the most perfect of gifts via a half volley on leg stump. He flicks the ball freely but uppishly behind square but right in the vicinity of Josh Hazlewood, who moves forward smartly to take the catch diving forward. Starc laughs because the ball was so poor, but he’d arguably done the work beforehand. Latham will be mightily disappointed with that.

2nd over: New Zealand 6-0 (Latham 0, Brownlie 5)

It’s Hazlewood from the other end. He starts typically before Brownlie leans on one with a bit of width with a beautiful off-drive for the first boundary of the day. Everything else is tight and narrow well-directed, as you’d expect.

1st over: New Zealand 2-0 (Latham 0, Brownlie 1)

Starc looks like GI Joe now with a closely shaved crew cut, and I like it. It screams “I’m going to be spending at least 20 days in the field in India”. He joins a long line of Australian crew cuts for India. Warne comes to mind, can you help me with anyone else? He starts with a full-toss that swings, then a wide, before settling into a better line and length. Australia starts with two slips, as you would, and they’re bowling on a wicket that looks fairly ripe for batting. Brownlie finds his first runs via an attempted drive that catches the toe of his blade, splaying in the direction of third man. Starc then hits Latham on the pad with a very full yorker and they appeal! The umpire says not out, and the Australians don’t review. Replays appear to reveal an Australian mistake - it looked pret-ty, pret-ty close.

Let’s reflect

As we labour, lurch and crawl our way to the end of the traditional cricketing summer, I’d love to read your thoughts on how it’s all panned out. Is Australia moving forward? Is Big Bash now its prince? Is India cricket’s king? Is history being kind to Shane Watson?

No Heazlett

So, interesting that Heazlett misses out today. After a week of sniping between experienced players and selectors about a growing sense that the Australian team is a ‘development squad’, I wonder if the Queenslander will join the worryingly lengthening line of one-match internationals in the annals of Australian cricket. There’s a lot of time left for him, of course, but it’s to ignore the possibility in the current climate.

Teams

New Zealand: Tom Latham, Dean Brownlie, Kane Williamson (c), Ross Taylor, Neil Broom, Colin Munro, Jimmy Neesham, Mitchell Santner, Tim Southee, Lockie Ferguson, Trent Boult

New Zealand has won the toss and elected to bat

It will be Latham and Brownlie to start things off for the Black Caps this morning, with Guptill missing out today. For Australia, Zampa comes in for Heazlett. Full teams next.

Morning, afternoon and evening all,

Welcome to our live commentary of... *checks*... the third and final ODI between New Zealand and Australia as they bring down the curtain on another Chappell-Hadlee series. While it’s technically the third fixture, really it’s the second as Wednesday’s game in Napier was declared abandoned due to an unsafe outfield. As I understand it there were some strange scenes as the umpires checked and re-checked then double-checked on the re-check before eventually calling the match. Those machinations always feel very convoluted.

Sam will be here shortly. While you wait, how about taking a slightly obscure detour through cricket history via the news of Test umpire Lou Rowan’s death at 91? Rowan was the man in charge when John Snow was accosted by a drunk fan during the 1971 Ashes Test at the SCG.

Related: Ex-Test umpire Lou Rowan, known for role in John Snow affair, dies at 91

Continue reading...

Renshaw and Starc lead the way for Australia in Pune - as it happened

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  • Australia 256-9 at stumps on day one of the Pune Test against India
  • Matt Renshaw and Mitchell Starc the stars with half-centuries

What a weird session. There were moments early, with Renshaw on the tools, that the visitors looked likely to atone for their pre-Tea wobble. But then, predictably, the wickets came. Marsh was trapped in front courtesy of a bit of Jadeja genius. Wade likewise when Umesh came back and immediately started hooping it. That reverse swing was too much for O’Keefe too, taken magnificently by Saha with the gloves. Then Lyon, lbw first ball to the same bowler. Between times, Ashwin ragged one into Renshaw’s edge when on 68. A fine hand, but one that looked futile. The collapse totalled 4/15 and Australia had only just crept over 200.

Enter Mitch Starc. His ninth Test half-century was perhaps his best yet. Changing the trajectory of the innings and the day, he swung hard but seldom raised his head. It was proper hitting, not slogging. Supported perfectly by Hazlewood, who took 17 balls to get off the mark but it mattered little. He was dependable in defence, exactly what was needed. All told, the unbeaten stand is now 51, these two have very much earned their right to have another go tomorrow.

94th over: Australia 256-9 (Starc 57, Hazlewood 1). Starc again very happy to take the single first ball. Leaving Hazlewood with five balls to see off for to get the visitors to stumps. To be fair, he’s completely off script, thrice on the trot playing and missing with expansive attempted drives. Not sure what that’s all about? Anyway, he’s fine. Ishant, momentarily, looks like he might be the one in strike after copping a whack on the little finger when the ball is thrown back to him from the field. Requires the physio to come and take a look with one ball remaining in day. What drama. Is he putting it on? Probably not. The result is a wide delivery to end the day that Hazlewood, this time, leaves alone. So stumps it will be! I’ll gather my thoughts and wrap this up in a tic.

Day one neither as good nor as bad as it should've been for Aust #IndvAus

93rd over: Australia 255-9 (Starc 56, Hazlewood 1). Starc gives Hazlewood the strike after one ball with a steer behind point off Ashwin. And why wouldn’t he? His number 11 deserves all the faith in the world for the way he’s gone about his innings this afternoon. A couple spin big, but on each occasion Hazlewood is far enough forward to minimise the risk. It’s one minute before the scheduled close, so we’re going to get one more over in.

92nd over: Australia 254-9 (Starc 55, Hazlewood 1). Ishant, the ageing competitor, goes again against Starc. Defending, leaving, defending. What’s this all about? Stumps. That’s what. Inside ten minutes now. He couldn’t have executed this any better. Kohli will be filthy.

Mitchell Starc has the record for the most sixes in an innings at the MCA Pune Stadium. #IndvAus

91st over: Australia 252-9 (Starc 54, Hazlewood 1). Kohli persists with Ashwin for a second set rather than continuing to throw it around. And what do you know: Hazlewood gets off the mark! Took him 17 balls, but what vital balls they have been in partnership with the rampaging Starc. For the record, it was a tuck behind square leg to open the account. Starc is happy enough to show a bit of respect to the champion spinner at this stage, a single down the ground the other further score. There’s a big shout for LBW when Hazlewood is back at the business end, but plenty of bat in it. Probably more telling how deep the appeal was. They’ve turned a potentially dominant day into something less than that. Or, rather, Starc has done that to them. Plenty of chat on twitter that he should be elevated. To be fair, more a reflection on the modest output from Marsh and Wade earlier today.

90th over: Australia 250-9 (Starc 53, Hazlewood 0). Brilliant from Starc, and the big smile he sports when bringing up his half-century to the second last ball of Ishant’s over. Of course, we’re way ahead of time here so I was wrong about it being the last over. Let the carnage continue! It was a blistering pull shot that got him the milestone, from 47 balls if you don’t mind. Also with that shot: the Australian 250! Who saw that coming an hour ago? Not me.

89th over: Australia 242-9 (Starc 45, Hazlewood 0). Hazlewood again does the hard work here for no personal reward. He remains on zero, but the persistence he shows here to face out the bulk of Ashwin;’s final over of the day ensures that Starc will get a final go. And more importantly, that Australia will get to the final over.

88th over: Australia 241-9 (Starc 44, Hazlewood 0). What a great stand this has evolved into. Hazlewood hasn’t got any of them, reminiscent of his work with Marcus Stoinis in Auckland the other week, but it’s not the point. He’s given Starc the latitude to do his thing. This time around, it is the reintroduced Jadeja who cops it. Granted, the first was a huge inside edge that deserved Starc’s wicket. The cow corner slog followed. The bowler would hate that, four added. Then the huge whack over the rope to long-on for SIX! Two overs to go. He’ll be 50 overnight the way this is playing out. All of a sudden, they’ve put on 36. And it is 15 from the over.

87th over: Australia 226-9 (Starc 29, Hazlewood 0). BOOM! Jayant gives Starc something to hit, so he does. And it’s giant (sorry), over cow corner for a huge six. He has another pop two balls later but misses, before nurdling down to third man for a single. Hazlewood is yet to score but has faced some important dots in the context of this partnership. It’s the same again here, big strides into each of the final two deliveries, negating any spin and ensuring the innings will continue into an 88th over, with Starc on strike.

Mitch Starc finna be our leading run-scorer as well as wickettaker at the end of this series. Give him a huge pay raise and the captaincy

86th over: Australia 219-9 (Starc 22, Hazlewood 0). A rare bumper targets Starc’s head second ball of Umesh’s new over. He tries to hook/swat it, but no contact made. Thankfully, misses his helmet at well. Super impressive response from the Aussie quick too, leaning into a straight drive straight from the MCC manual. Totally risk-free, timed into the rope. Really mature batting. Sure enough, another short ball follows, but he’s again able to get out of the way. Then the final ball of the over, on his pads, is met with a push that beats midwicket and gets him three. Seven from the set and he keeps the strike. He’s into the 20s as well. Four overs to go and these two are salvaging something.

85th over: Australia 212-9 (Starc 15, Hazlewood 0). The new ball has been taken. Jayant gets first use, with his bouncy off-breaks, replacing Ashwin at the Grandstand End. Starc belies the short odds on him trying to take him on, content to turn a single into the on-side. One against Hazlewood does the team thing in defence. It wouldn’t be nothing if they can get through to stumps. They certainly didn’t make a habit of it four years ago on these shores.

Smith's wicket a turning point after a promising start. Reverse swing might help Starc n Hazlewood but oz 100 short of a decent total

84th over: Australia 211-9 (Starc 14, Hazlewood 0). Hazlewood does the right thing here and defends Umesh the best he can, giving Starc another chance to swing next over. He did play and miss once, but he’s still there.

ToffeeDan on twitter getting a positive spin in for the English, who were thrashed four-zip here before Christmas. “I think we’ll now see England’s efforts in India were not as bad as people made out - we competed well but fell short.”

83rd over: Australia 211-9 (Starc 14, Hazlewood 0). Not unreasonably, the Starc takes the first opportunity he has to free the arms and swing, popping Ashwin over the rope at cow corner. Playing to his strengths. He’s good enough to keep Ashwin out for the remainder of the over. I’d imagine both of these guys are thinking about the couple of overs they will likely get with ball in hand before the close.

Umesh Yadav's stats v Australia get better

29 wickets at 38.75 and a wicket every 51 balls
39% of all his Test wickets v Aus#INDvAUS

82nd over: Australia 205-9 (Starc 8, Hazlewood 0). An hour ago Umesh was the least likely of the five bowlers to run through Australia. Or so it seemed. This has been an inspired spell. The hat-trick ball is a bit of a non-event, pushed out into the on-side off the thigh pad. But the movement he has consistently generated since coming back into the attack has left Australia’s innings in ruins here.

We're in funky declaration territory. #IndvAus

Two in two balls! Plenty of reverse back into Lyon, who tries to play across his pad. Fails to get his bat down in time. That’s out! Umesh on a hat-trick to the number 11 Hazlewood!

What a take! Earns the O’Keefe edge, after such a struggle, and he sticks out the one hand at full-stretch and brings it down. The crowd absolutely loving that. The Australian spinner is furious, but not much he could have done about that. The tourists floundering. Reminiscent of Sri Lanka.

80th over: Australia 198-7 (Starc 2, O’Keefe 0). Steering off an edge, Starc is off-strike from the first Umesh delivery. Plenty of reverse coming at O’Keefe when it is his turn, twice hit on the pads and looking generally uncomfortable. But he survives. And now they get a drink. Ten overs to go. No hurry at all for the hosts to get through them. They’ll grind Australia here.

79th over: Australia 198-7 (Starc 1, O’Keefe 0). Ashwin lobs in the one that goes the other way to O’Keefe as a welcome. But he’s up to it in defence. The last of the over rips past the right-hander, clipping a thigh pad on the way through by the looks for a couple of leg-byes. Rugged out there now for the Australians. A long way to stumps.

Well, we can forget about him carrying his bat. Instead, Renshaw has nicked off to Ashwin. It’s a beaut bit of bowling, more or less squaring him up from around the wicket, forcing a stroke. Vijay has to make some ground in front of him to claim the catch, and does so nicely. The end of an excellent hand. But it won’t be enough to save Australia from a poor opening day from here.

78th over: Australia 195-6 (Renshaw 68, Starc 0). It may be a bit of a mess around him, but Renshaw keeps on doing his thing. This time via a clip off Umesh. Well judged, well executed.

77th over: Australia 191-6 (Renshaw 64, Starc 0). Renshaw gives the strike to Starc from Ashwin’s first delivery. Perhaps a fraction bold, but then again, too early to be thinking like that. Right? He’s doing the right thing by getting his giant front foot out to the pitch best he can, but the master offie is still able to beat the bat.

Excellent query from Dom Milesi on the tweet:

@RicFinlay@collinsadam If Renshaw remains not out would he be considered to have carried his bat?

76th over: Australia 190-6 (Renshaw 63, Starc 0). It’s Renshaw and the Bowlers. Not the most punchy name for a band, but it’ll have to work if the tourists are to get out of jail from here. Starc successfully sees off the first couple. Remember, of course, that his last Test hit in this country was a career-high 99. We can dream.

Perfect bowling change from Kohli, going back to his quick after Jayant struggled to find his length. Renshaw got off strike to fine leg, but Wade wouldn’t survive one ball. Nigel Llong didn’t hesitate in raising the finger, around the wicket to the left-hander introducing some doubt, but he was so far across. DRS was called upon - it had to be in the circumstances - but only served to confirm that it would have clipped leg stump. That’s enough. He goes. After such a promising start, Australia may struggle to bat out the day.

WICKET! Umesh has trapped Wade. But we’re upstairs on review. Stand by!

75th over: Australia 189-5 (Renshaw 62, Wade 8). Ashwin’s turn to skip through a maiden to Wade this time. He looks more likely against the newer of the two incumbent batsmen. A man he had a lot of success against four years ago.

74th over: Australia 189-5 (Renshaw 62, Wade 8). Oh yeah this is great batting from Renshaw. Jayant overpitches as he did in the first over of this spell, and the big Queenslander gets down the track and clobbers him to long-on for four. It’s a lovely shot, moving him into the 60s. Such positive footwork, but in attack and defence. Hard to imagine there was even a debate as to whether he should have been on this tour to begin with.

73rd over: Australia 184-5 (Renshaw 58, Wade 7). Consecutive maidens from Ashwin to Renshaw. Early in the set he beats the opener’s edge when getting one to rag, but for the most part he continues to have this under control.

Nigam Nuggehalli on the email. Hi Nigam.

72nd over: Australia 184-5 (Renshaw 58, Wade 7). Jayant into the attack from what I’m going to call the Commentary End, skipping away from us in the press box towards Wade initially. So it is two off-breakers against the Aussie left-handers. Makes sense from Kohli. A sweep from the shorter of the two men puts Renshaw back on strike. And he doesn’t miss his opportunity when it comes, crashing a cover drive to the rope. That’s a good way to keep a new bowler honest. A single to fine leg, nicely worked, keeps him the strike. Such a vital partnership here.

71st over: Australia 178-5 (Renshaw 53, Wade 6). Ashwin versus Renshaw. A stalemate. A maiden. Some flighted, some darts. Renshaw defending throughout. Impressive.

Scott Lowe has dropped me a line (you can too, you know). “As Bender from Futurama would say: ‘Well, we’re boned.’ Watch Australia nurdle and scrap to 250, maybe 300, and then India go at 4 an over while amassing 500-odd.”

70th over: Australia 178-5 (Renshaw 53, Wade 6). Wade off the mark with a boundary himself, Jadeja a bit wide of his mark and the punchy Australian able to flay with enough control down to third man. There’s a bit of excitement when the same batsman looks to almost give a chance to leg-slip. But he’s all good. He’s beaten in flight to end the over, a more conventional inside edge, probably fortunate not to do him in.

With Australia 176-5, #WinViz likes India's chances with a 73% win probability for the hosts and the draw tumbling down to 4%#INDvAUS

69th over: Australia 172-5 (Renshaw 53, Wade 0). Come on, all together now! “Our Matt Renshaw, Every Aussie dips his lid to you!”. Okay, the Bradman comparison is a bit out of line, but I’m pretty excited about his half-century here, brought up with a glance down the legside that went away to the rope. It needed to hit bat, otherwise it would have collected stumps. But it’s fifty all the same to the poorly opener. In the baggy green no less. Just as impressive: the calm he shows to prevent Ashwin building up a head of steam earlier in the set. Plenty of variety, but not the penetration he gets when pinning a batsman down. Especially a left-hander. 125 balls for the milestone, in case you were wondering.

68th over: Australia 168-5 (Renshaw 49, Wade 0). Wade nearly goes first ball! It’s off the glove, or perhaps shoulder of the bat, after Jaedja generates massive turn now from over the wicket. Wade was right to get inside the line, but you don’t expect to get those first up. Lucky for him, it misses leg slip’s outstretched hand. Oh, as I say all that, it is signalled a leg-bye, so thigh pad rather than glove. Still, an eventful start to the ‘keeper/bat’s shift.

lol Mitch Marsh asking if he should review. Just get off mate.

Genius from Jadeja. Coming wide of the crease he threw a couple up to Marsh early in the over, before unleashing his quicker slider. The Australian had no chance, much like Handscomb before him, the ball crashing into his back pad. No need to bother with the DRS there. Superb bowling. India now a real sniff to run through the visitors before stumps.

67th over: Australia 166-4 (Renshaw 49, Marsh 4). Ashwin is giving it a mighty old rip out there, turning past Marsh’s pads a couple of times. Makes Smith’s win at the toss look all the more important. Marsh is up to the challenge through, and clips through midwicket for a single.

66th over: Australia 165-4 (Renshaw 49, Marsh 3). Forgot how hard it is to OBO when these two are operating. They race through their respective sets, never giving the batsmen a moment to settle. Renshaw buys himself some time the old-fashioned way through, making the Indians retrieve the red thing from the gutter after sweeping over backward square. Not the most controlled shot, but adds to his sound start after tea. A couple more to midwicket follows. Who called this bloke slow? He’s one short of a half-ton, by the way.

65th over: Australia 159-4 (Renshaw 43, Marsh 3). A single down the ground to begin Ashwin’s over gets Marsh down the non-strikers end. Where he’ll fancy spending plenty of time in the first half hour here. I’m a bit of a fan of Our Mitch’s batting in Asia, I want to say off the top, while it is unfashionable. I know it was a long time ago, but remember Abu Dhabi? And he had his moments of calm in Sri Lanka too. He’ll surely do something daft now that I’ve said this, but you’ve got to speculate to accumulate and all that. Renshaw defends the remainder of the over. And he’s tidy. Then he grabs a single himself to the last ball of the over, it’s Ashwin’s straight one by the looks. Taken through midwicket. Good batting.

64th over: Australia 157-4 (Renshaw 42, Marsh 2). Shottttttt. Renshaw in the baggy green starts the session with a delightful clip over midwicket. Always a bold stroke against Jadeja with his canny changes of direction. No concerns at any stage through the over. Hopefully by stumps the story will be what he’s done in the middle, not in the dunny.

Good afternoon from Pune.

Adam Collins with you here at the MCA Ground. I slipped in the back door here during the middle session after a rather eventful overnight journey that took me here via Ethiopia. Then seemingly just as long: every backstreet in Pune from the hotel to the ground. Anyway, we’re all set now. Just as Australia were about 20 minutes before lunch. Dear me how they will live to regret those couple of late ones on the cusp of the internal. Not least the skipper. Not one for his youtube highlights reel.

63rd over: Australia 153-4 (Renshaw 38, Marsh 2)

And that is that for the second session as both sides walk off for tea. What gripping cricket we’ve had so far. David Warner and Matt Renshaw were exemplary in the early stages of the day before Warner departed to a loose shot and Renshaw a loose stool. The latter is back at the crease now in partnership with Mitch Marsh, after both Steve Smith and Peter Handscomb got themselves out right when they were set.

62nd over: Australia 152-4 (Renshaw 37, Marsh 2)

Pointless stat time! Phil Withall has a beauty. “Your mention of impressive early averages reminded me of an interesting stat from Ric Finlay, statistical behemoth and fountain of knowledge,” Phil writes. “If Don Bradman had played every Test since he retired in 1948, and scored a duck in every innings, his average would be 5.88. Puts players early form into rather too much perspective.”

61st over: Australia 150-4 (Renshaw 36, Marsh 1)

Boy oh boy there is some spice in this game. Marsh nearly perishes immediately when he’s given out caught behind from the bowling of Ashwin, but he confidently reviews Richard Kettleborough’s decision and you can see why once the replay flashes up; it only flicked his back pad on the way through. Finally a good review. Marsh opens the face of the bat to gather a single and get off the mark, and with that Australia’s 150 is up.

Chaos now as Smith goes as well! He shuffles across to Ashwin, who has been unusually subdued today, and flicks the ball straight into the hands of Kohli at wide mid-on. My oh my that is a terrible way to go so close to tea. He’s absolutely filthy with himself, the Aussie skipper. Australia were set fair two overs ago. Now they’re in a hole.

60th over: Australia 149-3 (Smith 27, Renshaw 36)

Matt Renshaw returns! The weary wanderer is back after his stomach complaint of earlier. He retired ill 15 minutes before lunch and returns about the same period of time until tea.

I’ve mozzed Handscomb! Oh dear, terrible OBOing that. And terrible work by him calling for the baggy green cap, which was also the undoing of David Warner. Jadeja is the bowler, and Handscomb wanders aimlessly in front of his stumps and misses with n attempted prod to leg. It pitches and hits in line with the stumps, rapping his back leg and giving Nigel Llong no other choice. It’s so plumb that Smith advises against a review.

59th over: Australia 149-2 (Smith 27, Handscomb 22)

You know, Smith and Handscomb are such an oasis of calm at the moment that I’d been lulled into a false sense of security, broken a moment ago when I looked at the scorecard and saw “M.S. Wade”. Actual heart palpitation. I wonder how many Wade-related ailments were treated by Australian doctors in the last four months.

58th over: Australia 146-2 (Smith 26, Handscomb 20)

Some Ravi Jadeja brilliance here. The spinner makes a hash of his second delivery to Handscomb and it bounces twice on its way past the batsman. Handscomb takes a decent old swipe at it but misses, then has a laugh. He wouldn’t have been smiling if he’d nicked it. Jadeja then produces one of his more typical no-balls, somehow over-stepping again from that five-pace approach of his. He and Wahab Riaz should form a support group, really. Or a boy band. I’d buy that single.

57th over: Australia 144-2 (Smith 26, Handscomb 19)

“You are mentally one of the toughest players I’ve seen,” says Sanjay Manjrekar to Sunil Gavaskar up in the commentary box. And you thought Channel Nine were a bunch of homers... He’s possibly not referring to his 36 from 174 deliveries to open the 1975 World Cup, although I guess that required application of sorts. Feel free to write in with your favourite pointless innings of all time. That is probably mine.

56th over: Australia 142-2 (Smith 25, Handscomb 18)

He’s been itching to unleash and now Handscomb does, getting forward to a full one from Ashwin and composing a very effective cover drive to pick up four. There is also a an uppish flick wide of mid-wicket for another boundary. Smith is less obtrusive, working singles with the stealth of a Ninja.

55th over: Australia 133-2 (Smith 24, Handscomb 10)

For those impressed by things such as 100-run Test averages early in the careers of quite-good batsmen, Peter Handscomb is now in Adam Voges territory. Voges was in early-Jimmy Adams territory. Now he’s in the Sheffield Shield. A lesson for us all there. A single to Smith is the only damage in this Ishant over, and Handscomb finishes it almost chopping one onto his stumps.

54th over: Australia 132-2 (Smith 23, Handscomb 10)

Ravi Ashwin is back into the attack now, and his stacked leg side field to Handscomb perhaps telegraphs the kind of line he’ll be pursuing. If the Victorian is perturbed he’s not showing it, but he is forced onto the front foot for much of the over, which he generally prefers not to do.

The major key to Batting on turning pitches is. Or to fight the spin. Instead, use it to create angles to score.. just adjust

53rd over: Australia 132-2 (Smith 23, Handscomb 10)

One thing I do wonder about Handscomb is whether his stance to the quicks – so far back in the crease so as to suggest he might hit his stumps – doesn’t play into the hands of bowlers like Ishant. Sure enough, the Indian paceman zeroes in on middle and leg with a fast yorker but Handscomb keeps it out. Ishant is keeping things neat and tidy and tailing it in to the right-handers, but he’s hardly sending shivers down the spines of Australia’s batsmen.

52nd over: Australia 131-2 (Smith 23, Handscomb 9)

Having done a lengthy apprenticeship in the Sheffield Shield and various A teams, Peter Handscomb is ready for this No5 role, and it shows in the way he’s comfortably batting away Ravi Jadeja’s wares early in this innings. He surveys the field like a hawk, and eventually swoops on a single to retain the strike.

51st over: Australia 130-2 (Smith 23, Handscomb 8)

Weirdly, it’s the Indian members of the international commentary feed – Sunny Gavaskar at the moment – who are complaining most about the crumbling surface on day one. In truth, it could get ugly in the second innings based on what we’ve seen, but Australia being 129-2 on it indicates it’s not exactly a minefield. I guess uneven bounce is going to be the issue. Speaking of uneven, Ishant is back into the attack now. Like Samson before him, I think there is something of his magic which is lost when his long locks aren’t flapping in the breeze behind him. Two off the over.

50th over: Australia 128-2 (Smith 22, Handscomb 7)

Another single to Smith is the only damage in Jadeja’s last over before drinks, so we’re halfway through the second session and Australia are only two wickets down. If you’d offered that analysis to the skipper at the toss, I think he would have taken it.

49th over: Australia 127-2 (Smith 21, Handscomb 7)

As Handscomb flicks his first boundary past the man at leg slip, I will be honest with you: live-blogging two bowlers whipping through overs as quickly as Jayant and Jadeja do isn’t great for my creative process. They’re going by quicker than Ramones songs. I feel also for reader Phil Withall, who was apparently crafting a sublime email, which has been made redundant by the Shaun Marsh wicket. I’m sorry Phil. The Marsh family will always let you down in the end.

48th over: Australia 121-2 (Smith 20, Handscomb 2)

Howzat! India start the over with a huge LBW shout against Smith but it’s turned down, and the home side have no reviews left. Smith was forward and defending, and had his bat tucked behind his pad a little, but umpire Nigel Llong fancied that it was either hitting outside the line of off or else spinning past off stump. It’s a super over from Jadeja. He might be chipping away at Wriddhiman Saha for those wasted reviews in the next few minutes.

47th over: Australia 121-2 (Smith 20, Handscomb 2)

Handscomb is straight off the mark from Jayant, tucking one around the corner for two to gather his first Test runs on Indian soil. His arrival, of course, signals that Matt Renshaw is clearly too ill to return to the crease just yet.

Marsh goes! Wow, thank came from nowhere. Kohli positions himself at leg slip just in the nick of time, moving into position a few balls before Marsh plays a slightly misjudged sweep off Jayant. In the follow-through to the shot, Marsh’s bat sweeps around the corner and the ball rolls off its back, straight into the hands of the Indian skipper. Marsh is gone. Peter Handscomb will be the new man for Australia.

46th over: Australia 119-1 (Smith 20, Marsh 16)

Hmm, slightly dicey single here from Marsh, who puts his skipper in a bit of bother when he belts one to mid on and sets off. Smith dives at the keeper’s end and does very well to move into the path of the throw and block the ball coming in, all without being too obvious about it. Virat Kohli is not amused.

45th over: Australia 118-1 (Smith 20, Marsh 15)

I think I said it earlier, but this has been a slightly Australian-style bowling effort from India in the first two sessions. Every other over there has been a full toss, half-volley or short one to dispatch to the fence. Couple that with a lot of singles, and the home side are just not exerting enough pressure for sustained periods. This Jayant over is a bit better, and a maiden.

44th over: Australia 118-1 (Smith 20, Marsh 15)

Jadeja continues to fly through his overs. We’ll be through 90 by tea if he stays on. He’s been expensive though; 0-36 from 12 overs is very loose stuff by his standards. He normally goes at under two an over against Australia.

43rd over: Australia 117-1 (Smith 19, Marsh 15)

Jayant returns now, and both batsmen find plenty of easy runs on offer before Shaun Marsh gets back and across to whip a neat late cut through gully for four. More cricket analysis from Ed Cowan, re bathroom visits on Indian tours:

@ajarrodkimber they tend to be high velocity, but short in time in my experience

42nd over: Australia 110-1 (Smith 16, Marsh 11)

I’m not sure who the commentator is, but somebody has just suggested that Steve Smith doesn’t get out LBW as often as Shane Watson because he’s “mentally tougher”. Hmm. I’ll tell you one thing, you wouldn’t want to bowl him many long hops, as Ravi Jadeja does here. Smith unfurls a lavish pull shot and smokes it to the fence at deep mid-wicket. There is a nice little partnership developing between he and Marsh.

41st over: Australia 105-1 (Smith 11, Marsh 11)

Yadav continues for his sixth over now, and it’s much ado about very little as Marsh has a good look. With nothing much doing there, I’ve had time to study the brilliant photo below, which aptly summarises the sheer terror Matt Renshaw must have been experiencing in the moments before he sprinted off the ground before lunch. Poor bloke.

40th over: Australia 105-1 (Smith 11, Marsh 11)

Hmm, it appears as though Wriddhiman Saha was the culprit again with that review. Yadav would go for it either way, because he’s a bowler, but as per the earlier one the keeper had the casting vote and gave it the nod. Now his side will go 40 overs without access to a review.

39th over: Australia 104-1 (Smith 11, Marsh 10)

That shout aside, I don’t want to be pumping up Smith’s tyres too early, but he is batting beautifully so far. His glance for four off Yadav earlier in the over was effortless.

Worth a shout, but it was angling well down the leg side – a good four or five inches past leg stump. Easy to say from the sofa, but India have really burnt their reviews today. Both are done and dusted inside 40 overs.

I don’t think they’re even sure, but it’s Smith, so they have a bash anyway.

38th over: Australia 100-1 (Smith 7, Marsh 10)

Reader Raf K is equally puzzled about this pant-soiling bravado from former players. “All these claims that X would have batted on with a lost limb, X would have batted on while fountaining blood,” Raf writes. “I don’t remember any of these hard men ever actually having to do any of these things. Really brave to claim after the fact that they totally would have done it, though.”

37th over: Australia 99-1 (Smith 6, Marsh 10)

Yadav is hardly setting the world alight here and strays onto Marsh’s pads, which is never advisable. Australia’s No4 eats that up, turning a crisp drive through mid-wicket for four and building some early momentum. The eternal risk with Marsh is an early dismissal, but I’m tempted to say he’s off and away here.

36th over: Australia 93-1 (Smith 5, Marsh 5)

Not mentioned yet: Jadeja is up to his old tricks with the front-foot no balls. He sends down his third here, and there’s two through cover for Smith. It’s been a fairly docile 10 minutes or so after lunch.

35th over: Australia 90-1 (Smith 3, Marsh 5)

Umesh Yadav gets another go after lunch, which he probably deserves for nipping out David Warner and turning Matt Renshaw’s stomach to jelly. But he won’t be bowling for long if he keeps giving half-volleys to Shaun Marsh. The Western Australian gets one here and plays a typically gorgeous cover drive to the fence. I’ll be honest, I’m not happy about missing out on watching Usman Khawaja, but when Marsh plays shots like that he’s very easy on the eye as well.

34th over: Australia 85-1 (Smith 2, Marsh 1)

“These are live pictures comin’ out of Poo-nay,” says Brendan Julian, and with that we’re back for the second session. Ravi Jadeja bowls, and Steve Smith works him for a quick single first up. Shaun Marsh deals with the rest of the over, and as he does, debate continues to rage about Renshaw’s upset stomach. A worrying amount of former players are seeming to suggest they’d happily soil themselves on live TV.

I'm still getting my head around this... JL would of lost a limb and still batted on #oldschool#cricket#AUSvINDhttps://t.co/1IVu2aUC9N

Ed Cowan weighs in on belly-gate now

Background info: Cowan is on KP’s Twitter block list, one of social media’s great honours.

Still don't know why he didn't leave his bat and gloves there and just go to the toilet a la KP did at the SCG?? Game stops for 3 mins... https://t.co/x5DZhl4TFP

Allan Border now weighs in on Matt Renshaw retiring ill

“I hope he’s lying on the table in there half dead” says the famously hard taskmaster of Australia’s rookie opener in a segment on Fox Sports. “Otherwise, as a captain I would not be happy.” Border also praised the Queenslander’s batting, to be fair. But I think I know which bit will make the news headlines.

Perhaps it wasn’t so clear why Matt Renshaw went off

Michael Clarke, for one, seemed confused. Clearly he’s avoided the local street food.

Hahahahahahahahahahahaha.. I had no idea what I was watching! https://t.co/9huPGzK6Oa

Further confirmation of Matt Renshaw’s, erm, illness. For 90 minutes he was squirting the Indian spinners down leg in the way every batsman wants to. Now he’s in a bit more strife.

Word from the dressing room is that Renshaw "has an upset stomach". #euphemism#INDvAUS

33rd over: Australia 84-1 (Smith 1, Marsh 1)

And that is lunch on day one, a session in which David Warner departed having done all the hard work, and Matt Renshaw had to retire ill with a stomach complaint, launching a thousand bad tweets about being in the runs. Steve Smith was the puzzled onlooker as his opening batsman sprinted off, and even more baffled was Shaun Marsh, who arrived at the crease in bizarre scenes. Both current batsmen got off the mark in this final over from Ravi Ashwin, and survive it without the loss of a wicket. A weird, brilliant, absorbing session of cricket. Advantage Australia.

32nd over: Australia 82-1 (Smith 0, Marsh 0)

Jadeja has two slips and a silly point in place for Steve Smith, who likes to come down the wicket to the spinners. Never mind that, Jadeja has turned one a good 12 inches to beat the bat and Smith almost falls on his face in the aftermath. Hmm, maybe we’ll get yet another over. Jadeja sprinted through that one like Carl Lewis.

Matt Renshaw in the change rooms right now #IndvAus#INDvAUS#AUSvINDpic.twitter.com/Kp2jPwK7CI

31st over: Australia 82-1 (Smith 0, Marsh 0)

To his credit, Shaun Marsh has been rock solid so far, even if he’s probably feeling the pressure of not getting off the mark from his first dozen deliveries faced. He shouldn’t worry. It’s better than being in the change rooms damaging the Doulton. We’ll have one more over before lunch.

30th over: Australia 82-1 (Smith 0, Marsh 0)

Talk has inevitably turned to what AB would have made of Renshaw’s departure, with particular reference to his efforts in keeping Dean Jones at the crease in Madras, back in 1986. The difference there: Deano was merely chundering, and it wasn’t televised around the world. Imagine soiling your dacks on live TV, in front of millions, and becoming an internet meme for the rest of your life. No thanks. Well played, Mr Renshaw.

What would Allan Border say about this? #IndvAus

29th over: Australia 82-1 (Smith 0, Marsh 0)

This is a bit of a nightmare scenario for Shaun Marsh, who faces up to Ravi Ashwin now and hopes he can survive the ten minutes until lunch. The only incident of this over is when Marsh half-considers a suicidal single and gets sent back by his skipper. Lads, calm down. Please.

28th over: Australia 82-1 (Smith 0, Marsh 0)

The rest of the over pass without further incident as Smith finds his way, but what a bizarre turn of events that was following the introduction of Umesh Yadav. He got Warner with his second ball, and Renshaw ran off with an upset stomach not long after. Only Australia could conjure such a crisis out of a period of normality.

Oh my word. Australia were rock solid a moment ago. Now they’re in a state of chaos. Renshaw is retiring ill! There was an exchange with Steve Smith and umpire Nigel Llong in which the youngster appeared to ask for a toilet break, but in cricket there is no such thing of course, so he has to retire and we’ll have two new batsmen at the crease. Weird. I’m tipping Shaun Marsh didn’t have that in his plans five minutes ago, but he trots out to the middle now as Renshaw sprints into the sheds.

Can we get a hotspot on Renshaw pls ump?

Warner goes just before lunch! Oh dear. Having landed the symbolic blow of seeing the spinners off, Warner perishes just as the fun is about to begin. The paceman Umesh Yadav arrives with some pretty uninspiring stuff, but Warner throws his bat at a length ball well outside off stump and sends an inside edge crashing into his timber. He’ll be livid with that. With just 15 minutes to go before lunch and plenty of hard work done, he errs badly.

27th over: Australia 81-0 (Warner 38, Renshaw 36)

Ashwin has a very healthy LBW shout against Warner early in this over but when it’s turned down, perhaps spooked by a howler earlier, India forego the opportunity of a review. That looked very good to me. Might have been umpire’s call, replays reveal. Lucky I’m not an umpire I guess.

26th over: Australia 80-0 (Warner 37, Renshaw 36)

Am I the only one a little stunned by this start? Perhaps I underestimated Renshaw, but his ability to play late and with an open face to blunt the spinners has been a revelation so far. It’s a subtle but important difference to batting Australia, where the spin is less drastic and the ball comes through from even bounce. Renshaw’s 90 minutes into his first Test tour of India and he’s batting like Alastair Cook.

25th over: Australia 78-0 (Warner 36, Renshaw 35)

This is almost Australian-style bowling here from India. Ashwin has plenty of decent moments in the first five balls of the over, but again finishes with a loose one. This time it’s a full toss, and it gets belted through mid-wicket for another boundary.

24th over: Australia 74-0 (Warner 32, Renshaw 35)

Perhaps Jadeja should be focusing less on the patch of rough outside the off stump of the left handers and simply focus on building pressure. He’s got a slip, a leg slip and a fine leg for Warner, but the Australian has no worries transferring his weight back and, without moving his feet much, pulling the ball with exquisite timing to pick up four through deep mid-wicket. What a shot that was. A few balls later Renshaw gets in on the act, skipping down the track and clobbering Jadeja over cow for a big six. Australia are taking the fight to India here. Superb batting, and utterly fascinating cricket.

23rd over: Australia 63-0 (Warner 27, Renshaw 29)

The key to Renshaw’s success so far is that he’s playing the ball very late, allowing himself to alter his stroke late in the piece. It genuinely is wonderful to see an Australian batsman so prepared for his task. It’s a bit weird, actually. Are we sure he’s actually an Aussie?

22nd over: Australia 62-0 (Warner 26, Renshaw 29)

With his undercut and his wraparound shades, Jadeja looks like he could slot into a backing dancer role for the Kriss Kross reunion tour. But he’s not yet hitting his straps with his bowling, and Renshaw simply waits for the bad ball and gets down the track to belt four over mid-wicket when the bowler over-pitches.

21st over: Australia 57-0 (Warner 25, Renshaw 25)

Warnie is really laying it on thick now. “It looks like the surface of Mars,” he says of the pitch. It’s not that bad, honestly. Renshaw even hits Ashwin for a boundary in this over, sweating on a loose one and getting it from the final delivery, which shoots down leg and allows him to glance to the rope at fine leg.

20th over: Australia 53-0 (Warner 25, Renshaw 21)

Wily Jadeja is bowling into a bit of rough here and almost snakes one through Warner’s slightly sketchy back-foot defence. Shane Warne goes a bit further, calling it a “crater” on a good length. Some advice for me: perhaps have alternative entertainment plans lined up for days four and five of this match.

19th over: Australia 50-0 (Warner 25, Renshaw 20)

A note of caution as Warner and Renshaw reach their 50-run partnership: Warner and Ed Cowan did this in the third Test of Australia’s last tour of India. Even better: they put on 180. And Australia still got flogged like the cheapest rental car in the lot. All I’m saying is we shouldn’t get too carried away. As they always say: you can’t judge a pitch until Nathan Lyon’s bowled on it. Ashwin finishes the over with a huge off-break past Warner, as huge chunks of the surface come free. We might be here for a good time, not a long time.

18th over: Australia 49-0 (Warner 25, Renshaw 19)

Please allow me to introduce myself, I’m a man of wealth and taste. I’ve been around for a long, long year, stole many an Australian’s outside edge. Yes, It’s Ravindra Jadeja appearing for his first spell of the game, and his flamboyant arrival has Warner playing a slightly impetuous paddle sweep for one. That doesn’t seem smart.

17th over: Australia 44-0 (Warner 24, Renshaw 15)

Ooft! We’re back after drinks and David Warner has almost been done in by a Jayant Yadav off break, which he fences at ineptly and almost edges behind to Saha. The left-hander has a better moment a few balls later, crouching slightly as he rocks onto the back foot and sends a short one crashing into the boundary at deep mid-wicket. Warner absolutely creamed that one.

16th over: Australia 40-0 (Warner 20, Renshaw 15)

Ashwin fancies a decent run at Renshaw here, and calls Kohli in as a second slip, and there is a leg slip as well. The young Aussie half-plays/half-leaves at one point, hitting the ball with the back of the bat when he meant to let it pass by. With that, both sides take a well-earned drink, after a first hour in witch the tourists have performed admirably to retain all ten wickets. I’ll admit it: I expected at least one to fall by now.

15th over: Australia 40-0 (Warner 20, Renshaw 15)

Reader Ned Hurley is throwing his weight behind the Marsh brothers, because somebody bar their Dad has to. “People forget that the Marsh brothers are like paper fans: bloody useless in Australia with our abundance of air con, but invaluable on the subcontinent.” Right as he says so, Warner seizes upon a half-tracker from Jayant and him Jayant through mid-wicket for a stress-relieving boundary.

14th over: Australia 30-0 (Warner 16, Renshaw 14)

Renshaw turns a single to start the over and gets down to the non-striker’s end, which is the best place to be when Ravi Ashwin is bowling. Warner has a slightly easier time of it, almost turning a single of his own towards mid-wicket and driving back at the bowler. Ashwin was a bit too full there. Six inches back of a length from what he was bowling there and he’s a shoo-in for a wicket.

13th over: Australia 29-0 (Warner 16, Renshaw 13)

Jayant continues to Renshaw, drawing the youngster forward into Matthew Haydenesque lunges. “I’m really proud of this start by Australia,” says Michael Clarke, abandoning journalistic objectivity at the outset. Look out if either of these two posts a hundred, he might do a lap of honour with them.

12th over: Australia 28-0 (Warner 16, Renshaw 12)

Ashwin is really doing his thing now, and jags a trio of monstrous off-breaks past the outside edge of David Warner. The Australian is made to look an absolute rube here. The cordon are doing that muffled cackling thing you hear when a wicket is surely about to fall. Warner survives the over but only just. It took him until his fifth and sixth overs, but Ashwin is letting it rip.

11th over: Australia 28-0 (Warner 16, Renshaw 12)

I’d be tempted to bring Jadeja on here, to be honest, though I’m not Virat Kohli. Jayant is a bit better in this over and it costs just a single to Warner. Reader Dhiraj Kukreja arrives with a good point: “I really wish England had got such a pitch for their series. Beefy’s moaning alone would have made the series worth watching.” Again: if it annoys Ian Botham, it’s probably good.

10th over: Australia 27-0 (Warner 15, Renshaw 12)

As Michael Clarke points out in the commentary box, this is when the ball really starts to turn. Renshaw has far more to worry about in this over, but negotiates the carrom ball and a few other varieties to see it out. Ravi Ashwin is back in the game.

He was dicing with danger by playing with a diagonal bat at Ashwin, but there is daylight between ball and outside edge, so he survives a big shout. India have wasted a review.

10th over: Australia 27-0 (Warner 15, Renshaw 12)

9th over: Australia 27-0 (Warner 15, Renshaw 12)

Jayant Yadav appears with his right-arm off-spin, which has yielded nine wickets in four Tests so far. He might have had a few more if Ashwin left any for the rest. The new bowler sends an absolute gem of an off-break past Warner’s outside edge with his first delivery. Hooley dooley that spun. Still, a few balls later he errs, over-pitching and being belted through mid-wicket for a Warner boundary, then another through cover when he drops short outside off. Warner is batting his his baggy green cap now and warming to his task.

8th over: Australia 19-0 (Warner 7, Renshaw 12)

Warner allows an element of risk now, getting down the track and sweeping Ashwin hard past the man at short leg for a single. Renshaw, on the other hand, is combining that length front-foot stride with an open face of the bat when he defends. Now there is no man in short on the off side, so he’s looking calm and assured in his technique. Ashwin is still racing through his overs, but for now he’s no significant threat.

7th over: Australia 18-0 (Warner 6, Renshaw 12)

Ishant appears for another over, which is thirsty work in this kind of heat – humid and likely to climb past 36 degrees celsius throughout the afternoon session. At the other end David Warner is a study in self-control. So far he’s resisted the urge to heave at anything outside off stump, and he’s working his way into the game with singles and leaves. Such discipline has forced Ishant to change his approach from over to around the wicket at various points, and without success. Australia have been disorientingly solid in the early stages of this innings.

6th over: Australia 17-0 (Warner 5, Renshaw 12)

Ashwin is giving the ball plenty of that beautiful loop he gets outside off stump to the left-handers. He’d probably pay to bowl all day at lefties, he has so much fun doing it. Right now both batsmen are keeping busy, getting in giant strides to defend and tucking every single they can manage before the spinner settles into a rhythm. So far so good for Australia.

5th over: Australia 14-0 (Warner 3, Renshaw 11)

Ishant keeps trucking for what might be the last over of his spell, straying a little straight again to hand Warner a single down to fine leg. As that is happening, Warnie is again taking the opportunity to pay out on Steve O’Keefe, and says rookie Mitchell Swepson should have been picked instead. Renshaw tucks a couple of runs between fine leg and deep square leg, and seems perfectly comfortable for now.

4th over: Australia 11-0 (Warner 2, Renshaw 9)

As much as possible, Renshaw seeks to play at his own pace here, making Ashwin wait a few seconds longer before taking his guard. But already the ball is taking sharp turn and bounce for the spinner. He sends a huge off break arcing past the outside edge, making Renshaw’s huge stride forward moot, and even clumsy. Otherwise the rookie does well, defending calmly.

3rd over: Australia 11-0 (Warner 2, Renshaw 9)

Warner is back where he is most comfortable at the start of the over, facing up to the pace of Ishant. The first one he gets from the paceman is back of a length and straight, so he turns it off his hip for a single to mid-wicket. Ishant, as ever, is sporting a man-bun that would have gone down well if he was a barista in Melbourne’s inner-north in about 2013. He’s also running down the middle of the pitch in his follow-through, scuffing up the surface. The umpires should be keeping an eye on that.

2nd over: Australia 9-0 (Warner 1, Renshaw 8)

OK, AB was almost right. Ashwin takes the second over, and has a slip, a short leg and a man in close on the off-side too. A couple of nervy deliveries and a Warner single later, Renshaw is made to wait as Kohli moves his cover around slightly. The only man put off is Ashwin, who fires one down the leg side and gets turned for a neat boundary by Renshaw.

1st over: Australia 4-0 (Warner 0, Renshaw 4)

Some bombshells to start with: Ishant Sharma gets the first over, not Ashwin, and Shane Warne is commentating on the international feed. Buckle in for some baked beans on toast banter, folks. Renshaw faces up to Ishant’s first and it keeps very low outside off stump. The Queenslander isn’t exactly committed in his footwork but, with an angled bat, he has it skidding away through gully for an early boundary.

The things I’m most looking forward to in this first session

If I’m being pessimistic: complete chaos. Glass half-full: seeing how Matt Renshaw deals with the spin onslaught he will face in his first Test on Indian soil. He said in the lead-up to this Test that he’d watched a bit of the England series prior, so perhaps he will take some confidence from the obdurate efforts of their teenage opener Haseeb Hameed. Just on that: Allan Border reckons Ravi Ashwin will bowl the first over of the game. Does he have inside mail? We will soon see.

This is a battle of spin bowling, make no mistake. Australia must have been tempted to take an extra spinner into this contest, but stick with their two stud quicks on the basis that it’s best to stick with your absolute best bowlers, regardless of their style.

So there is no spot for Mitchell Swepson or Ashton Agar, and plenty of pressure will be heaped upon Steve O’Keefe as the match progresses. He and Nathan Lyon took wickets in the tour match in Mumbai, but really copped some rough treatment too. For more on that conundrum, have a read of Sam Perry’s chat with a number of spin-literate heavy hitters of Australian cricket:

Related: India looms as a severe examination of Australia’s relationship to spin | Sam Perry

Our teams for this first Test - and apologies that it took so long, but neither of the two teams, nor the local broadcasters, was in too much of a hurry to let anyone know. I never thought I’d say this, but the BCCI have come up with the goods. Here is how they look, according to them:

India: M Vijay, L Rahul, C Pujara, V Kohli, A Rahane, W Saha, R Ashwin, R Jadeja, J Yadav, I Sharma, U Yadav.

“It’s very dry. I don’t think it’ll bounce a great deal,” says Steve Smith. “Hopefully we can post a good first-up total. The boys are excited about this challenge.”

“We would have looked to bat first as well,” says Virat Kohli, before pointing to the fact the same thing happened against England, who his team trounced.

Preamble

Hello OBOers and welcome to ground zero: session one, day one, Test one. Australia. India. And the prospect of annihilation, let’s be honest. Will Australia’s makeshift batting line-up – likely to include both Marsh brothers again, after none in their last Test against Pakistan – stand up to the spin mastery of the Ravis Ashwin and Jadeja on a raging turner in Pune? This is among the many puzzlers facing the tourists, who have won just a single one of their last 18 Tests in Asia. What....where are you going?

Russell will be here shortly. In the meantime, take a look at his preview of the series:

Related: Australia must follow Steve Smith's example to stand a chance in India | Russell Jackson

Related: India looms as a severe examination of Australia’s relationship to spin | Sam Perry

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India v Australia: first Test, day two – as it happened

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Australia lead by 298 going into day three after a India were skittled by a stunning performance by Steve O’Keefe

Related: Australia take charge of first Test after Steve O'Keefe skittles India

What a day. Australia started the day at 9/256. Hoping for maybe some cheeky early runs and to keep India under pressure for as long as possible with the bat. Not in their most outlandish dreams could they have expected what happened next. India simply monstered by Steve O’Keefe in the middle session, the hosts rolled for 105. That’s their third lowest score on these shores. Ever.

O’Keefe’s 6/35 came in a hurry, as did Australia’s 7/11 to end the innings. But it will be remembered for a very long time. Some brilliant captaincy from Smith throughout, successfully having bowlers strike when he brought them on. Starc’s removal of Pujara and Kohli inside three balls earlier in the day laid the base for the chaos that came after the long break.

46th over: Australia 143-4 (Smith 59, Marsh 21). Belatedly, it is Jadeja back in the act. Guess what? An unplayable to Marsh begins it. Bounces just over the stumps after defying the edge. The questions keep coming, but Marsh is determined to see stumps. Last ball of the day, he’s able to knock it on the head from deep in the crease. That’s our lot, the Australian batsmen very happy to depart with a lead of 298. As they should be.

45th over: Australia 143-4 (Smith 59, Marsh 21). Ishant continues. Weird. Eight minutes to stumps, so he’ll take at least half of those. Marsh cuts with ease for a single to start the set. He’s done very well here, make no mistake. Smith far tighter in defence than he was against Jadeja, pushing solidly when playing, then just as comfortable when leaving. Not much bounce out there either, one of those bounced twice before reaching the ‘keeper Saha. Giving the ball a good old shine between deliveries too, suggesting that they have conceded this will be the penultimate over of the day and they won’t squeeze in another one. Not very good cricket. Then again, sometimes you just want the day to end. Over bowled, at last.

44th over: Australia 142-4 (Smith 59, Marsh 20). Oh wait, it’s Umesh back on. Not sure about this? Shadow of stumps. Ashwin hasn’t had a go in about, what, an hour? Jadeja beating Smith for laughs. Those two ranked No. 1 and 2 by the ICC at the moment in world cricket. Anyway, Umesh it’ll be. Marsh deals with the first half of the over easily enough, defending then pushing to cover. One taken. Smith equally calm, leaving and defending away. Wasteful not to have the megastar spinners on, surely?

The three highest fourth-innings totals to win Tests in India are 387, 276 and 276 (plus 347 to tie). #IndvAus

43rd over: Australia 141-4 (Smith 59, Marsh 19). Ishant gets another go. Only his second over, the previous spell lasting six balls for him. India in no hurry at all here, chatting away between balls. Not much going on at the batsman’s end though, Marsh defending throughout before taking a single to retain the strike. Probably not a bad thing if Jadeja is planning to continue - keep him away from Smith for 13 further minutes, please. Let’s not tempt fate. Okay? Thanks.

Mitch Marsh only leaves 8% of the balls he faces in Tests, a lower percentage than every other batsman in this match #INDvAUS

42nd over: Australia 140-4 (Smith 59, Marsh 18). Marsh takes a single down the ground to start the over. But that’s the only time the board changes, Jadeja continuing to keep Smith pinned to the crease. The Aussie captain, sure enough, was beaten twice on the way through. What does Jadeja need to do to get this bloke’s wicket today? Plenty, evidently.

41st over: Australia 139-4 (Smith 59, Marsh 17). Another of those 90-second overs that we hate on the OBO. Includes three singles though, all into the on-side. Gives them a bit more latitude than Jadeja. But I reckon we might be seeing Ashwin back next over from the grandstand end. He’ll make a menace of himself.

I'm surprised this bloke is happy to show his face, let alone acknowledge himself to the world...#INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/qu1GPsJoup

40th over: Australia 135-4 (Smith 57, Marsh 15). Marsh won’t be able to put Jaedja into the crowd as easily as he did Jayant. First, he’s beaten. Stumping shout? Not given. They check, and it isn’t out. He learns his lesson though, in defence for the rest of the over. Where he needs to be until the close. This is hard graft, but he needs to be there at the end. No excuse. Maiden, by the way.

39th over: Australia 135-4 (Smith 57, Marsh 15). Boom! Fetch that, Mitch says, popping Jayant miles back over long-on. After the grief he copped online yesterday, that may have been a bit cathartic. Does the clever thing next ball, with a single around the corner. Smith less comfortable with a couple turning big, but they’re only 27 minutes from the finish line now. The lead is 290, by the way.

Jayant is a pie chucker unless he hits a hole in the pitch...well hit m marsh

38th over: Australia 127-4 (Smith 56, Marsh 8). Jadeja’s back. That’s why I included that Smith tweet in the previous post. See? Anyway, he takes a single to cover first ball, so ignore me. Marsh gets the treatment though. Twice he’s beaten, comprehensively, by balls spitting past his blade. Can’t do that much about it, really. Too good. Outrageous that he hasn’t a wicket in his 14 overs so far this afternoon.

37th over: Australia 126-4 (Smith 55, Marsh 8). Glorious straight drive from Marsh when he gets back on strike. It’s a bit bottom-hand-ish, but timed perfectly. Along the ground too. That’s the way, Mitch.

Smith has been careful outside his off stump, only driving 8 times. He's scored off 7 of them though, including 3 boundaries #INDvAUS

Wicket? Is Smith lbw? Doesn’t look like it, but Virat wants a second opinion anyway. I won’t keep you in suspense this time: NOT OUT. Another pretty ordinary review.

36th over: Australia 119-4 (Smith 53, Marsh 4). Ishant opened up the first innings, but is held back until the 36th a day later. Can you believe he’s on 28 years old, by the way? Arguably the best of his career ahead of him. Plenty has happened since that 2007-08 summer where he arrived with such excitement. About six Australian Prime Ministers, for instance. Probably another in a couple of weeks the way it is going. Back to now. Marsh gets off the mark with a powerful cover drive. That’ll do. He looks less certain later in the over, but it is always going to take a while to look fluent in these conditions.

35th over: Australia 115-4 (Smith 53, Marsh 0). Not out! Hitting outside the line. Missing anyway. Was spinning a mile. In concslusion, a poor review. Huge innings in the context of Marsh’s immediate future, so he needed that break. Job isn’t done for Australia yet. They need him to do a shift and get them through to stumps alongside the skipper.

KOHLI: sorry Ashwin we're subbing you out this innings
ASHWIN: who for??
VVS LAXMAN: I am here and ready to bat for three days#IndvAus

Another wicket? Is Mitch Marsh out for nothing? Kohli has sent it upstairs...

Oh no! Matt Renshaw did so much right. And yeah, a bit wrong as well. But I just started believing we were witnessing something a bit special. A bit weird, too. But it isn’t to be. He’s gutted at the shot he has played, a big outside edge that’s gone high to long-off, trying to pop it onto the moon over long-on. Taken. Albeit just! Ishant relied on his chest to balance the catch. Doesn’t make for a pretty replay for anyone. Well, that’s that. 99 runs for the match for Renshaw.

34th over: Australia 113-3 (Smith 52, Renshaw 31). Yadav continues, running away from us at the broadcast end. Renshaw is up the business end and is beaten by the Indian quick second up. Not great batting, more a waft than a stroke. But he’s still there, and doing a mighty job. A single gives Smith the strike, who responds with a full-blooded clip behind square, beating the fielding and bringing up his half century! 93 balls to get there, and that’s his seventh boundary. A fine effort from the captain. Had his chances, but has made them count.

Nice piece here about Jess Cameron. Cricket or footy? Both. What a talent.

Related: Jess Cameron: the Ashes winner who became an Aussie Rules footballer

33rd over: Australia 108-3 (Smith 48, Renshaw 30). Jayant Yadav gets the last over before drinks. His first go of the innings. Oh, and Renshaw is having some kind of afternoon here at Pune. First time up the business end it is a leading edge. Coulda gone anywhere. Not to hand. When back on strike later in the over he brings out his reverse sweep and is dropped behind the wicket by Vijay. Has to do better there. India have really given themselves chances to get back into this, but routinely made a mess of it. Four runs added, just to make matters worse for the hosts. Kohli will be raging. It isn’t, to be fair, as easy on the replay as it looked at first glance. But a chance is a chance. Australia’s lead is 263 as they have a sip of water and maybe some sachels of powder slipped in to protect their tummies. Confession: I was on these earlier in the week in Cape Town after a bung milkshake. It’s been a long week. Still, no regrets about the ‘shake. Was really good.

32nd over: Australia 100-3 (Smith 46, Renshaw 24). Renshaw, you know, only needs to bat for another hour here and he’s just about won Australia a Test Match. That might be overstating it a little, but we’re in that territory given the lead they took into this second dig. Keep going, young man. He is defending and driving Umesh with relative ease after Smith gives him the strike half way through the over. That single brought up the Australian 100, I should add.

Want a bit more for after play? Lovely piece here on the second Madras Tied Test that’s worth a poke around.

Related: How Australia and India produced the second tied Test in cricket history | Steven Pye

31st over: Australia 99-3 (Smith 45, Renshaw 24). Matty Renshaw’s having a party! Bring your Imodium and your arm guard! The boy, crook and broken, has the skill to still flick the best spinner in the world through midwicket off a dangerous length. Then, next ball, he smacks him over his head for four more! Go you good thing go!

30th over: Australia 86-3 (Smith 43, Renshaw 13). Edge, four. Well, not quite an edge really, Smith changing his grip at the last minute to glide past gully. Going a real shift here the captain, notwithstanding the chances. Renshaw looks solid in defence after his arm blow/illness. Until he plays and misses. Rugged couple of days he’s having.

Why do teams put their youngest or sub-fielder under the lid. 1 of the toughest positions, put you best fielder there, right @AlexBlackwell2

29th over: Australia 81-3 (Smith 38, Renshaw 13). Smith dropped again by Mukund. The sub-fielder is having a nightmare. Short leg is where he is stationed, and had an eternity after rebounding off the front pad. The captain was well down the track. Oh, that’s a bad one on the replay as well. Really should have been taken. The strike now Renshaw’s, he plays out the over conservatively. Bloody hell, plenty going on.

Matt Renshaw has gone past the half-death Allan Border called for and is now at least three-quarters dead. The kid’s a pro. #INDvAUS

28th over: Australia 80-3 (Smith 37, Renshaw 13). Umesh Yavad! A fast bowler! Respite! His first jam roll for the day. And has he broken Renshaw’s arm? Oh this isn’t good. He couldn’t avoid the short ball in time, wears it, and it has collected him. The team Doc, Peter Brukner, is out there in a flash. He has arm guard on, but this is his bottom hand. Still leaning over, I’d be surprised if he isn’t taking a leave of absence as he did yesterday, but for altogether more serious reasons. He’s thrown up out there too. Our boy is really in the wars. Well, he is staying out there. It’s a very long delay, and there’s still a ball to go. But he’s sticking it out. Defending the last ball competently, the right decision made. For now.

Some comments, while I have some time to read them. Roland Smith says he “hasn’t been so excited by cricket from India since Hayden smashed 5 sixes in the first session of the first test in 2004.” By contrast, Max Maddison says the Australian batting is bringing him back to Earth. Keep the faith, man.

Matt Renshaw batting on. Gutsy! Wonder whether sore arm takes mind off upset stomach, or vice versa? #INDvAUS

27th over: Australia 79-3 (Smith 36, Renshaw 13). Ashwin causes trouble for Renshaw initially, getting an edge that doesn’t carry. The big boy gets a boundary from the next shot. Basically digging out a yorker. Don’t see that from a spinner too often. The contest remains in favour of Ashwin when he inspires another false stroke off the pads that he doesn’t make contact with. Good, penetrative set.

26th over: Australia 73-3 (Smith 35, Renshaw 8). Are they trying to bowl 60 overs in this session? Won’t somebody please think of the OBO-er? In short: Renshaw did a reverse sweep again. He hit it this time. It went for four. This is a good thing for those who like their cricket to include a constant state of chaos. Not strictly speaking what the left-hander is there for, but we’ve come this far now!

25th over: Australia 68-3 (Smith 35, Renshaw 3). Defend. Defend. Defend. Reverse sweep! Oh Matty Renshaw, you brighten my life. No contact again though. Maybe he’ll put it away. Hope not. He keeps the strike after a more conventional Matty Renshaw stroke: a tickle to fine leg.

Derek D’Cruz has some views and he isn’t afraid to share them. “Wonderful day of cricket. Backfired for India. Why does the ICC allow India to prepare such diabolical wickets? Yet in a few weeks for the IPL, this same ground will no doubt have a wonderful wicket to play on. Are commentators allowed to discuss the ICC or the BCCI and the chaos and lack of leadership they display in governance?” Told you he had views. I’ll take them as comments, as they say on a TV show that I haven’t watched for many years.

24th over: Australia 67-3 (Smith 35, Renshaw 2). After his near-demise, Renshaw picked a single to long-on with an ease that suggests inner peace with what has just occurred with DRS. Smith then makes contact to three Jadeja deliveries in a row! Not a single play and miss! What a time to be alive!

NOT OUT! Too high. There was a mark on snicko but they went upstairs anyway for the ball-tracker. Renshaw survives.

Renshaw given LBW! I think? Sent upstairs! Stand by! DRS!

23rd over: Australia 66-3 (Smith 35, Renshaw 1). Well, then Matt Renshaw played a reverse sweep third ball. Remember that time? That time is today. And what a day. I’m not even going to talk about the rest of the over. This moment deserves this whole post. Cricket.

22nd over: Australia 63-3 (Smith 33, Renshaw 0). Smith has no idea against Jadeja. Three times on the trot beaten by the genius left-armer ortho to begin this over. When finally getting bat on ball, off the edge of course, the Aussie captain came back for an outlandish second run. He’s given not out when the bails are off, but they go upstairs to check. Lucky boy, Sniffer. Chill out.

He does it again! Three Australians down, all Ashwin’s. It’s turned big, Handscomb tried to turn it around the corner, but only succeeded in gifting a catch to leg-slip. Not a great way to go. He looked set, too. Australia, dare I say, still have some work to do here.

21st over: Australia 61-3 (Smith 31, Renshaw 0).

20th over: Australia 57-2 (Smith 29, Handscomb 17). Smith is dropped! It is the sub Abhinav Mukund. Mid-on, to his right, after Smith came down the track. Would have been a very similar demise to yesterday. But he survives. Messy. He’s far more conservative for the rest of the set. Maybe it will take that chance to help settle Smith?

19th over: Australia 57-2 (Smith 29, Handscomb 17). Singles to each through the onside. Handscomb getting another chance makes the most of it with his best shot to date, a cover drive that burts into the advertising boards. Have that, best spinner in the world. Looks up for this, the Victorian.

On only six occasions have Australia lost after leading by 155+ after the first innings, including once in India: Kolkata, 2001. #IndvAus

18th over: Australia 51-2 (Smith 28, Handscomb 12). Never a chance to catch your breath with Ashwin/Jadeja in tandem. It’s the latter operating here from the broadcast end in front of us. He’s got Smith defending and leaving early on. An improvement on the play/miss pattern that emerged before the little break. Oh, but there it is: Smith defeated outside the off-stump. And again! This time the captain pinned on the back foot. Lucky to survive. Honours to the bowler. It may be here that Smith’s best chance to stay is to play shots. Hard to justify if he falls that way though. Dilemma.

17th over: Australia 51-2 (Smith 28, Handscomb 12). Ashwin versus Handscomb, after Smith gets us underway with a single to the first ball. Always busy, our Steve Smith. So is Handscomb, when he comes down the wicket to take the superstar offie through midwicket for a boundary. That’s nice. He responds with a huge turner that takes him on the thigh pad. Can see these two playing out a great little contest here.

I don’t, for even a moment, understand how that happened.

But I’m glad it did. Thanks to Geoff Lemon for a brilliant stint on the OBO, as they tend to be when the joint erupts like it did in that first hour after tea. Incredible scenes. Adam Collins back with you on the tools for the last couple of hours. For my part, I’m hoping that less is more through the close. Because three-day Tests make freelance cricket hacks go broke.

We say this sometimes when it is less warranted, but - what an incredible session. Truly remarkable in Test history. To get some perspective, Australian cricket has been all pessimism leading into this series, myself well and truly included. When the Australians made 260, it looked under par. And when the Indians came out to bat after just one over on Day 2, most onlookers would have expected them to stride on to a big total. But India have been totally disassembled by Steven Norman John O’Keefe. Deconstructed. Destroyated. India lost 7 for 11 at the end of that innings. 7 for 11! That’s their worst collapse of seven wickets, ever. All time.

An innings that was going along alright with Rahul and Rahane suddenly fell in a sinkhole, the batting lower order didn’t bat, and Steve O’Keefe got a bag of six - in the top 10 analyses for Australian bowlers in India ever. And then, while a couple of wickets fell, Steve Smith in particular slammed some quick runs to push that lead out beyond 200. What will Australia need? Can India regroup in the second innings? Will Matt Renshaw be able to bat without more comedy scenes? I’ll leave you with Adam Collins to find out.

16th over: Australia 46-2 (Smith 27, Handscomb 8)

One more testing over from Ravindra Jadeja, a couple more past Pete Handscomb’s edge, again the batsman keeps his cool, and safely navigates his side to the lunch break. The Australian lead is now past 200.

15th over: Australia 46-2 (Smith 27, Handscomb 8)

Dropped! Murali Vijay puts down the Aussie captain! That was the easiest of chances in at leg slip - Smith followed the turn of an Ashwin ball, prodded it away in the air, it went softly away, and Vijay juggled, slopped it hand to hand, and somehow let it slip through. I somehow think he was looking to celebrate before he’d even taken the catch. He was moving as though he was going to throw the ball up. Not entirely sure, but that was my first impression. The Australians had already taken two singles, and then Smith follows up with another dicey reverse sweep, but this time for four. It was turning way too far to leg to safely reverse it, but Smith lucked out and got enough.

14th over: Australia 40-2 (Smith 22, Handscomb 7)

Handscomb right back in his crease to Jadeja, and when the ball attacks his pads he glances it to fine leg for two runs. Blocks out the rest of the over, bar an attempted whack through cover that didn’t come off.

13th over: Australia 38-2 (Smith 22, Handscomb 5)

A Jadeja maiden, and another heart-in-mouth moment as Smith tries a reverse sweep, edges it into the off-side, but no one can get close enough to attempt a catch.

12th over: Australia 38-2 (Smith 22, Handscomb 5)

Smith finally plays at a Jadeja turner. Beats him. He shrugs, in that way that he does when beaten. Jadjeja mimics him childishly from the far end of the pitch. A single from the over. The Indian spinners are flying through these overs.

11th over: Australia 37-2 (Smith 21, Handscomb 5)

They’re working Ashwin a touch more easily than Jadeja. Three singles, but there’s another ball that bounces very sharply at Smith, and he raisers the bat to let it thud into his rib cage to leg slip.

10th over: Australia 34-2 (Smith 19, Handscomb 4)

Loving this innings from Smith. Again, he watches Jadeja’s turning deliveries go past the edge, then hangs back to defend the straight one. A single from the second-last ball whipped through square. The lead climbing towards 200.

9th over: Australia 33-2 (Smith 18, Handscomb 4)

Another smear from Smith, a hard-hit sweep, and he gets every bit of Ashwin’s delivery through backward square. In the air for a while and bouncing over the rope. Then comes down the wicket and drives a single to keep the strike.

8th over: Australia 28-2 (Smith 13, Handscomb 4)

Peter Handscomb to the crease, and the right-hander is faring much the same as Smith. Beaten by Jadeja’s turn a couple of times, the left-arm ortho turning the ball away, but Handscomb gets one ball to drive through the covers for four. Full enough, lovely shot. Australia, I think, will take the approach that they need to score as quickly as they can here to ram home this advantage, build the lead, and put as much pressure as they can on India. But at the rates wickets are falling, one wonders if the top order will be out before Renshaw is able to come back. About 10 minutes to go.

7th over: Australia 23-2 (Smith 13)

It’s a long duck, but it’s a duck all the same. Marsh trying to defend out another over, bar one sweep that misses the ball. In the end with the last ball Ashwin does him in the old familiar way: a straight ball from around the wicket into the left-hander, while Marsh plays for turn that isn’t there. Done.

6th over: Australia 23-1 (S. Marsh 0, Smith 13)

Perhaps Smith is learning from his experiences with Rangana Herath last year in Sri Lanka. He’s playing Jadeja expecting the straight ball, and the turning one keeps beating his edge. But Smith isn’t letting that worry him. When he sees one he likes the length of, he comes down the wicket and carves it out through cover for another four. If he can hang around long enough to notch fifty or so, that could be a matchwinning innings on this pitch.

5th over: Australia 19-1 (S. Marsh 0, Smith 9)

If Smith is about counter-attack, Marsh is about survival against Ashwin. Blocking, blocking, edging, prompting shouts from the fieldsmen, but he gets through the over. It’s a maiden.

4th over: Australia 19-1 (S. Marsh 0, Smith 9)

Beaten. Four. Beaten. Another busy over. Jadeja goes past the off stump, then Smith counters by slamming him through cover to the fence. Then a big-turning delivery beats the outside ege, bounces high out of the pitch as well, this is a real numbers game for batsmen now by the look of it, and we’re only on Day 2.

3rd over: Australia 15-1 (S. Marsh 0, Smith 5)

Smith. Whack. Slog sweep for four. Ashwin gets a bit short, Smith collars it. Drives a single through the on side. Marsh tries to block out the rest, beaten off the last ball as well. This match keeps going at a million miles a minute.

2nd over: Australia 10-1 (S. Marsh 0, Smith 0)

Smith out at 3, Renshaw still in the sheds. Shaun Marsh blocks out the over. Beaten by Jadeja’s last ball.

1st over: Australia 10-1 (Marsh 0)

Stahp it! This match is going too fast to keep up. Warner. Ashwin. Marsh? Oh right, Renshaw can’t bat for another half hour because of the time he spent off the field. Warner punches a couple, then reverse-sweeps the second ball for four! Well, Glenn Maxwell got plenty of stick for doing that in the Emirates a couple of years ago, but Warner is all like:

40.1 overs: India 105-10 (Ishant 2)

Well, well, well, as the constable said when he saw three holes in the ground. Australia started the day batting. And now they’ll be batting for a second time an hour after lunch. In the meantime, they’ve rolled India. Virat Kohli nicked off second ball for a duck. Pujara was bounced out by Starc. KL Rahul dislocated his shoulder failing to hit a ball out of the ground. If he’d stuck around another couple of overs he could have broken the Bannerman record, he made 64 of India’s total. O’Keefe produced a three-wicket over, bowled one maiden after it, then took a wicket in each of his next three overs to finish the innings. He took six wickets for five runs across that period. And Australia has a lead of 155 on the first innings.

India bowled out for 105! Yadav has a big swing, edges to slip, and O’Keefe has six wickets. He has 6 for 35. Maligned, ignored, doubted, and yet he has come out here and struck blow after blow to put Australia in a commanding position in this first Test in India. What a stunning display. What a stunning session.

40th over: India 105-9 (Yadav 4, Ishant 2)

A couple of singles from Lyon’s over. He’s still turning it. Beating the bat. But the wickets are falling at the other end. Spare a moment to feel for Nathan ‘Nathan’.

39th over: India 103-9 (Yadav 3, Ishant 1)

The two pace bowlers at the pitch now, trying to salvage anything. A few late blows? Some sort of occupation?

Steven O’Keefe has his maiden five-wicket haul! Perhaps Jadeja thought there wasn’t much point hanging around, but perhaps the inescapable momentum of the situation has swept him away. He goes for another big shot, it looked like a replay of the Rahul dismissal for a minute the way it hung high in the air, but this time to the leg side, and Starc coming around at midwicket held the tricky chance. India nine down. What is happening.

38th over: India 101-8 (Jadeja 2, Yadav 2)

India’s hundred is up, if you’re looking for good news for the blue-hat team. A couple of singles, but Lyon is all over Umesh Yadav as comprehensively as he was over Jayant Yadav.

37th over: India 99-8 (Jadeja 1, Yadav 1)

Given out, but overturned. O’Keefe denied a five-for, after Nigel Llong gives Jadeja out caught behind essaying the sweep, but DRS shows the ball was all forearm, no glove. Still, five wickets down for five runs.

Matthew Wade has a stumping in India! If life was not bizarre enough, consider that sentence. Read it aloud. Roll it around in your mouth. Tell your neighbour on the bus. Matthew. Wade. Stumping. India. O’Keefe bowls a beauty, slight turn away but a perfect length that draws Jayant forward trying to defend. Lunging at the ball with the back toe trailing. The ball beats the bat, and Jayant’s back foot drags out of the crease by a fraction. Half a centimetre maybe. Wade has the bails off before there’s any attempt to get back, and the fieldsmen erupt.

36th over: India 97-7 (Jadeja 0, Jayant 2)

Lyon is ripping the ball now. Shredding it. There’s no one at cover, and Yadav slaps one through there against the turn. Aside from that he looks all at sea. Lyon swarms him, and there’s nearly a catch to bat pad from the last ball.

35th over: India 95-7 (Jadeja 0, Jayant 0)

Left-arm spinner to left-arm spinner. O’Keefe to Jadeja. Over the wicket to the left-hander with the bat. Knocks out a maiden.

34th over: India 95-7 (Jadeja 0, Jayant 0)

I scarcely know how to draw breath. Is there time? Four wickets for a single run. Lyon finishes off his over. Ravindra Jadeja and Jayant Yadav at the crease. Both excellent batsmen in the lower order, but all the work for them to do now. India yet to reach triple figures. Can they counter attack? Australia’s spinners suddenly looking dangerous.

INDIA LOSES FOUR FOR ONE! This is ridiculous. Lyon bowls to Ashwin, he presses forward at the ball, squeezes it down into his own boot, and then Handscomb the part-time wicketkeeper dives forward at short leg this time to snare another one just above the grass. What is happening?

33rd over: India 95-6 (Ashwin 1)

Amazing over for O’Keefe. Waited so long to get his chance for Australia, and now he’s produced what could be a match-turning over.

Three in an over for Steve O’Keefe! It is truly last drinks at the disco now, he’s reaching for the lasers, he’s screaming the words to Common People at the top of his lungs. They will never understand, what it means to live your life, with no meaning or control. Well, O’Keefe has control, he’s ripped the ball away from Saha’s bat, Matthew Wade drops the catch, but the ricochet comes off his gloves to Smith at slip.

Another one down! Rahane tries to work the ball to leg, it takes a thick edge behind point, and Handscomb snares a beauty. Rahane wants to see if it has carried, the umpires check it but that is taken well above the ground, diving away to the right, snared in one hand and scooped up from the turf. Brilliant.

Redemption for Warner! He removes the more dangerous of the batsmen, too, but this is a weird dismissal. It looks like Rahul has dislocated his shoulder in the shot. He hurt it playing a lofted drive earlier, but didn’t learn his lesson. Goes for the big shot over long-off, howls in anguish as his arm joint gives way, and the ball skews high in the air. Warner comes in from long-off to complete the very high catch, and celebrates with intensity.

32nd over: India 94-3 (Rahul 64, Rahane 13)

Dropped! Rahane is not having a good day, but he’s still there. Nathan Lyon gets one to bounce nicely, Rahane tries to turn it down leg, it beats his stroke and takes the glove. Warner at leg slip shoots his right hand up, and the ball hits the meat of his hand but ricochets away. Again, it was going quickly, but that one really needed to stick. Mark it down and come back to this moment if Rahane makes runs.

31st over: India 93-3 (Rahul 63, Rahane 13)

Starc. Rahul. Four. The doses from last over repeated, except this was the shot Rahul was trying to play last time. A cover drive that he gets every bit of and sends to the fence. Gets off strike with a cover nudge, and then Rahane decides that he likes what he sees from the over end and tries to emulate it. Does emulate it. Except for the hitting the ball part. He’s not comfortable with Starc’s pace, Rahane, he hops and jumps out the over.

30th over: India 88-3 (Rahul 58, Rahane 13)

Nathan ‘Nathan’ Lyon back on with his off-breaks, and sends down a maiden to Rahane, including a yelp-inducing inside edge that nearly carries to bat pad.

Bloke I used to work with got Michael Klinger's face tattooed on his thigh. Everyone get around @bkellerman29 and his unusual life choices. pic.twitter.com/Y2yQcmCSCS

29th over: India 88-3 (Rahul 58, Rahane 13)

Edged! Not in control, but Rahul sees Starc’s pace, decides to make the most of it, and drives with the angle across him from the left-arm over the wicket release point. It takes a thick edge through an empty part of the slips for four. Australia with one slip and a gully in. Then again two balls later, this getting a bit more of the bat and going square through gully. Not in control, but a profitable over.

28th over: India 80-3 (Rahul 50, Rahane 13)

A fast over from the left-armer O’Keefe, just a couple of singles, but one is driven down the ground for Rahul’s fifty.

27th over: India 77-3 (Rahul 48, Rahane 12)

Starc continues from the other end, still bowling quick. Got the breakthroughs before lunch and is still showing ferocity after it. Rahul manages to square drive a single, that’s good pace. Well into the 90 miles an hour range. Rahane continues to trash the Bannerman with a wild flail outside off stump. That would have been an easy dismissal in T20, but there’s no third man or deep backward square, so the cross-bat top edge falls safely behind the slip cordon.

26th over: India 74-3 (Rahul 47, Rahane 10)

Away we go, and finally Rahane gets something to hit. Steve O’keefe opens proceedings after lunch and... well, he barely even drops short. That was stump height at worst. But Rahane had a touch a width, only a fraction, and was able to force the cut shot through backward square. Rahane also ruins Rahul’s Bannerman attempt, dropping his ratio to 63%.

Thank you, Adam. Advantage Australia indeed. Who would have thought. But it may not last for very long, because India’s line-up bats forever. How many centuries do their bowlers have between them? Five? Six?

Advantage... Australia? Do I dare say that? After lasting only five balls this morning, bowled out for 260? Maybe it is. An engaging session comes to an end with the visitors making three crucial breakthroughs. Not least that of captain Kohli, nicking off second ball when the score was 44.

Excellent captaincy from Smith got Starc back into the attack after a ropey start. He immediately sent a snorter across Pujara’s eyes, catching a glove on the way through. That gave him the look at Kohli, who wouldn’t resist an early drive, popping the catch into Smith’s waiting hands at first slip.

25th over: India 70-3 (Rahul 47, Rahane 6). Probably the last over? If they don’t rush. It’s Hazlewood versus Rahul. The batsman knows the drill here, he isn’t going to throw away his fine start. He is forced to play every delivery, and doesn’t leave the defensive pose. It’s an elegant pose, too. He’d be far better at yoga than me. Given how pretty he looks when batting, he’s probably better at most things than me, let’s be honest. Righto, that’s lunch.

24th over: India 70-3 (Rahul 47, Rahane 6). Much better from O’Keefe, his best over of the day. Bowling to struggling Rahane, it is a good match-up for the spinner. Bit of drift early in the over as he gives the ball a chance to spin. And spin it does with the penultimate ball, a huge puff of dust as the ball turns past Rahane’s edge. Wade takes the bails as well, but his foot is anchored. That excites any spinner. A maiden. More of those please, Sok.

Apparently it was an electricity junction box which blew up. "It happens" an official says. It's the heat. As you were.

23rd over: India 70-3 (Rahul 47, Rahane 6). Hazlewood right on Rahane early in the over, culminating in an inside edge into the on-side. Gets a single for it, but not convincing. He’s still scratchy out there, the Indian vice-captain. Rahul in far better shape, defending with the full face of the bat for the second half of the over. Well bowled, well played, good cricket.

22nd over: India 69-3 (Rahul 47, Rahane 5). How appropriate: Steve O’Keefe back on and there is a... Fire in the disco!For real: an actual fire. A speaker (I think?) burning at midwicket just outside the boundary rope. They are on it right away though, no interruption to play. On the field: four singles. Smith won’t like that. Singles annoy captains, especially when three of those were from misdirected deliveries.

O’ Keefe slipping down leg far too often for someone trying to keep one end tight. #IndvAus

21st over: India 65-3 (Rahul 45, Rahane 3). Hazlewood is straight back after Starc’s ropey over. Enjoying this from Smith. To be fair, didn’t quite work as well as his last change, Big Josh driven to the cover boundary first up. To be fair, it is a glorious shot. Rahul one of the best in the world to watch at the moment, especially through that part of the ground. Hazlewood back into his groove almost immediately. He’ll have probably two more overs at the hosts before the lunch break, due in 15 minutes.

20th over: India 60-3 (Rahul 40, Rahane 3). Singles through the posh side bookend this Lyon over. Between times, Lyon is confident enough to throw it up to Rahul; the batsman competent enough not to get sucked in. Proper Test cricket.

Simon Bogli on the email in some good areas. “Can Nathan “Nathan” Lyon be hyphenated in the style of Courtney Taylor-Taylor from the Dandy Warhols for the rest of the series? Nathan-Nathan Lyon will never be the outer’s favourite but the pop cultural types will dig it.”

19th over: India 58-3 (Rahul 39, Rahane 2). Rahane more comfortable against Starc on the small sample we have seen so far, pushing him into the off-side with some confidence. Kept to one thanks to an enthusiastic dive. Warner I think it was. Rahul, playing carefully in the previous over, needn’t do anything risky here either when Starc gifts him a half-volley. He doesn’t miss out. He grabs a couple more to end the over when the left-armer drifts onto the pads.

18th over: India 50-3 (Rahul 33, Rahane 1). Lyon, hard on his luck. Same as it ever was in this part of the world. For the second time in two overs he has Rahane thoroughly beaten, this time winning an inside edge into the pad-flap that so often goes to hand for other tweakers. Not Nath. It evades Warner’s hand at leg-slip; Rahane off the mark. Deserved better. Next ball: Rahul reverse sweeps him for four. Cop that. The 50 up for the hosts in the process.

17th over: India 45-3 (Rahul 29, Rahane 0). Starc to Rahul, who has a different role to play now. Defending, leaving and getting under the short one. Starc has picked up a yard here as well. As you do after picking up the best player on the planet the over before.

16th over: India 45-3 (Rahul 29, Rahane 0). Lyon holds up his end of the deal here, rushing through his set of six while ripping it as hard as he can. Gets one to bite back at the new man Rahane, just keeping it out with a combination of bat and pad.

Starc's double wicket maiden has brought Australia right back into the game #WinViz#INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/xpOYynyR98

15th over: India 44-3 (Rahul 28, Rahane 0). What scenes they were. I’ve never seen Starc so elated as when that catch was pouched by his captain. Let’s give him some more credit for that tactical move. Hazlewood on before after Starc struggled to begin. He dried it up, gave them not a thing. Got the breakthrough. Starc back on, fired up, and produces that pearler to Pujura. Opportunity created to get an early look at Kohli, and no mistake made. Starc’s first delivery to Rahane is fast as well, kept out. All happening, as WM Lawry would say.

Virat's first duck since August 2014 against England at Old Trafford

KOHLI IS OUT FOR NOTHING! SECOND BALL! Oh, what a bowling change by Steve Smith! It’s not a special delivery by Starc, just angling across the skipper, he’s had a crack at it to try to get his account going, but only succeeded in getting a thick edge to Smith at slip. India floundering! Game on!

Australia in the game! A beauty from Starc! Ripped across Pujara at pace, screaming off the track. He was committed to playing, and grabbed his glove. Oh, and they’re up and about the tourists! They know how clutch that was. Kohli. Here we go...

14th over: India 44-1 (Rahul 28, Pujara 6). Rahul and Pujara both showing Lyon respect here. I still reckon it won’t be long before they take him on aggressively, ala the tour game. Or the opening Test of the 2013 series in this country. Anyway, it’s regard for now. An inside edge from Pujara in there as well. Good bowling.

13th over: India 42-1 (Rahul 27, Pujara 5). Hazlewood delivering to Pujara in a fashion that will make his captain very happy. It’s a maiden. No risk-free way of scoring off him at the moment. It’s why he is an automatic selection in this Australian XI right now.

12th over: India 42-1 (Rahul 27, Pujara 5). Nathan “Nathan” Lyon to replace Sokka from the grandstand end. His first trundle. The Lyon story could be fascinating over the next few days. They need him to deliver in ways that he simply hasn’t in Asia before, averaging 43 in this part of the world. Decent turn to begin, Rahul forced late on the opening delivery. But the response is wonderful, leaping onto the front foot to thrashing the Aussie offie through the covers. That’s a risky shot for some against the spin, but not Rahul. Class. Dropping his length back a fraction, Lyon is successful in pinning the Indian opener to the crease for the rest of his opening over.

Hazlewood digging a trench early on in his spell - 14 of his 18 deliveries have been length balls outside off stump #INDvAUS

11th over: India 38-1 (Rahul 23, Pujara 5). The first time Hazlewood misdirects in this spell, Pujara jumps on it, clipping through midwicket for his first boundary of the day. Sure enough, the quick is back on the mark thereafter, defending and leaving the Indian no.3’s only credible option.

Anup Dhere has also jumped in on the crowd chatter. “The Pune stadium has to bear some brunt for the low attendance. This the start of summer and most of the stands in the stadium are uncovered. It will be brutal to sit in those stands after around 11 am.” Fair point. There’s the grandstand... but that’s it. Those uncovered seats square of the wicket look brutal. Waca-esque, if you like.

10th over: India 34-1 (Rahul 23, Pujara 1). Sok to Che. Pushing. Pushing. Turning. Rahul takes a different approach: smashing O’Keefe into the crowd down the ground. Used his feet in classical fashion to meet the delivery as it’s pitched. Wonderful stroke. But do we have an injury? Has Rahul thrown his shoulder out after swinging so hard? It looks that way, the physio coming out for a look. It prompts the umpires to call on the drinks after 9.4 overs. But he’s alright, a bit of the old magic spray and back to the crease for the two remaining deliveries. And sure enough, after having his fun, Rahul is happy enough to defend both of them.

Vijay-Rahul have batted together 13 times now. Highest partnership is 52. Nowhere near good enough for an ambitious team. #IndvAus

9th over: India 27-1 (Rahul 17, Pujara 0). Hazlewood to Rahul. Important contest as well. The right-arm quick went for 1.99 runs an over against Pakistan over the summer. He looks the perfect weapon for Smith here. Worth remembering that he was man of the series in the West Indies a couple of years ago in conditions that weren’t enormously different to what we’ll see over the next five weeks. The length he bowls just seems to work. As it does in this over, beating Rahul outside the line with a carbon-copy of the ball that won Vijay’s edge just moments before. And he does it again two balls later! Squared up a treat. This is brilliant. Then to finish: Rahul deep in the crease nearly chops on. All over it, the big boy from Bendemeer. What they would give for a second breakthrough here.

8th over: India 27-1 (Rahul 17, Pujara 0). Nice contest emerging between O’Keefe and Rahul, after the former forced an error from the latter in the previous over. The bowler mixes up his speeds early in the over, but a single is taken behind point. Strong footwork. Leg before shout to Pujara’s second ball... but it is declined. Plenty of bat in that, to be fair. Umpire Kettleborough knows the deal.

Mandar Golatgaonkarreason in on the email discussing crowd numbers. “Can also be attributed to ‘result day’ of local elections, which generated massive interest in all over Maharashtra.” Good point. Thanks for noting it. Let’s see if they stream in to watch Virat bat later on.

It’s not pretty or fashionable but Steven Smith would do well to ask himself: What would Dhoni do? Dry runs, control the pace. #IndvAus

And it’s worked! The quintessential Hazlewood over and wicket, immediately into his happy place just short of a length. That pressure prompts a prod from Vijay to the last ball of the over, just holding its line enough to clip the edge. What a lovely piece of bowling.

7th over: India 26-1 (Rahul 16, Pujara 0).

6th over: India 25-0 (Vijay 10, Rahul 15). That long-off sweeper brought into the game to begin the over, Vijay making room to take a single down there. Easy. O’Keefe prompts the first false stroke we’ve seen from Rahul, trying to also go through cover by only getting an inside edge. Good bowling. He has that dangerous slider in his kit bag much the same way as Jadeja. Four consecutive singles all told. Not strictly what Smith wants of his left-arm spinner after giving him the new ball. Has to start racking up some maidens.

Oh, and it is Hazlewood to replace Starc.

5th over: India 21-0 (Vijay 8, Rahul 13). Starc is wasting the new ball a bit here. No real issues for Vijay, leaving thrice outside the off-stump without needing to consider any other alternative. He lets a bouncer pass by to the next. Frustrated, Starc goes back to Plan A: hit the stumps. It probably would have done so, but the delivery is met by a beautiful clip by Vijay, timed into the midwicket rope. Lovely batting. A single to point means he’ll retain the strike as well. I wonder if that’ll be enough for Smith to make a quick change and throw the ball over to Hazlewood at the broadcast end next time around?

4th over: India 16-0 (Vijay 3, Rahul 13). Vijay finds that man at long-off again for one. Wonder if Smith will consider shutting that down, make them go after the spin early? Rahul gets a chance to score later in the set to a poor delivery, tickling fine and making no mistake, profiting by four. Good start for the locals.

Renshaw feeling nauseous which is why he remains in dressing room. No word yet on his likely return to the fray #INDvAUS

3rd over: India 11-0 (Vijay 2, Rahul 9). Glorious Rahul cover drive to start the over. Gee he’s a wonderful player to watch. Overpitched by Starc, but the batsman makes that look easy. Sure enough: a terrible shot next ball, wafting at one well outside the off-stump. Lucky not to edge at this early stage. He’s defending and watching for the remainder, Starc slowly working into a bit of rhythm. Hopefully.

ICYMI: Matt Renshaw not in the field, Glenn Maxwell the sub #INDvAUS

2nd over: India 7-0 (Vijay 2, Rahul 5). A bit of flight and turn from the left-arm ortho’s first delivery. Rahul is forced to defend early before making some room for himself to drive down to long-off. There’s a man back there, Warner, so they only take one. The over ends with a push past silly point, for no score into the ring. Bit of protection there, which makes sense.

1st over: India 5-0 (Vijay 1, Rahul 4). Gentle push to midwicket gets Vijay away to the first Starc ball of the innings. Rahul has a look initially, but then Starc misfires, allowing the tall right-hander to turn him around the corner for a straightforward boundary. That’s what you want to get early as an opening batsman. Starc is back on the money next ball, nearly slipping through with an inswinging yorker, but Rahul is up to the task. Eventful.

And Sokka has the new ball up the other end! I like this.

O'Keefe gets the new ball. Good to see this, he was bowling brilliantly with it in the nets.

Australia ready on the boundary line. Good sign. Always like it when a side are held back from running on.

Australia's 1st 20 overs with 1st new ball: 0/53
Australia's 11 overs with 2nd new ball: 1/49
Everything else: 9/109 (74.5 overs)#INDvAUS

Well, that didn’t last long. Five balls to be precise before Starc holed out to deep mid wicket, Jadeja doing the rest. He smashed Ashwin down the ground to the long-on rope to the second ball of the day, prompting some healthy comments (from me) that he was going to make a ton. But Ashwin knew better, beating the gallant Australian with a huge off-break before enticing the mistimed heave. Let’s be happy that it happened, not sad that it is over.

The players are on the field. And play they will.

Crowd chat before we get going.

Lots and lots of questions yesterday on the OBO email about the modest attendance at Pune yesterday. I said I’d chase it up, and dutifully, I have. Around 7,000 rocked up one day one. The capacity is 37,000. It is the first time a Test has been played here, so that looked a bit off.

“Foster’s: Indian for Milk.”

Vessel the breakfast milk was served in at my Pune hotel this morning. Bonza. #INDvAUS#Indiapic.twitter.com/nIOfGDzFP1

The sky is that burnt, grey colour, about to be carved through by the hot sun here at Maharashtra Stadium. I doubt that comes as a surprise. It will be a day where Australia will have the heat turned up perhaps even more than they were in the opening exchanges of this series yesterday. Sure, batting through a day was important, even coming as it did after a bad wobble, but how the visitors’ spinners tend to Kohli and co will be what really defines the next five weeks, I reckon.

It is Adam Collins with you here for the opening session at Pune. Most of the chat overnight continues to centre on Matt Renshaw’s bowels, but we’ll look forward rather than back, so to speak, in the esteemed OBO. He was pretty amusing in the press conference yesterday. Nice sense of timing off the field as well as on. A lot to like about the young opener.

MCA Ground, Pune. Day two. #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/PyQaHOtr45

Adam will be here shortly. In the meantime, check out the report from day one, in which half-centuries to Matt Renshaw and Mitchell Starc saved the day for Australia.

Related: Renshaw leads Australian resistance against India in Pune Test

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Australia beat India by 333 runs inside three days at first Test – as it happened

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Left-arm spinner Steve O’Keefe took 12 wickets in the match to help Australia beat India by 333 runs on Saturday as the tourists took a 1-0 lead in the four-Test series between the world’s top-ranked sides

Related: Steve O’Keefe takes 12 wickets as Australia thrash India inside three days

Man of the Match (for real this time, not a ridiculous sponsor award): Steve O’Keefe!

“It was great to have the belief of the captain who backed me and threw the ball to me. And Nathan Lyon, who bowled brilliantly as well.”

Steve Smith up on the mic now.

“I am really proud of the way the boys performed in this Test Match.”

Or maybe not? A “special award” according to someone on twitter. Stand by. Definitely said “man of the match” on the telly. Weird.

MAN OF THE MATCH... Mitchell Starc?! Fair dinkum. This is not a drill. I have no idea either. I mean, great Test, fantastic contributions... but seriously?!

More presentation interviews.

I think? I hope? Hard to tell. Standing by. What I will report, thanks to “Rocket” on the email, is that Chandrasekhar also did what O’Keefe did way back when; 6/52 and 6/52 at Melbourne in 1977/78. How about that?

Down at the presentation... (part one)

Lehmann first, just catching the end of his interview. “The second innings was totally different. We had to take the game on.” On Smith: “If not the best hundred I’ve seen.” He thinks the pitch will “change a little bit” before the second Test.

Steve O’Keefe replicates his first innings figures. 6/35 and 6/35. What a tremendous performance. Lyon completes a four-wicket bag himself, running through the tail. Rewards he thoroughly earned. What redemption for that man after the corresponding opening fixture in 2013 that cost him his place in the XI.

There’s a lot to say, but the story is very simple. Australia’s bowlers were just too good. India never looked comfortable, never built partnerships, never showed composure. Australia’s pressure with the ball replicated the persistence shown by the captain Smith with the bat. Not the most classical hand, but so special. Such leadership.

That's India's second-heaviest defeat by runs at home. Only Nagpur 2004 (342 runs) was worse. Outstanding match from Australia. #IndvAus

AUSTRALIA GO ONE-UP! What a miraculous win. The final wicket came when Lyon won the inside edge of Jayant, caught by Wade behind the wicket. Bloody hell! Let me TAKE THIS ALL IN for a minute.

33rd over: India 103-9 (Jayant 1, Umesh 0). NOT OUT! Madness. Some strike-management from Jayant earlier in the over, which seems a bit daft, but whatever makes you happy at this stage.

Run out?! Have they lost their last wicket with a mad quick single? Upstairs we go.

Make that one to go! Are India going to fall short of their first innings score? That’s more like it for a proper offie’s wicket, huge spin into the glove, into the hands of Dave Warner at leg slip. Three wickets in about 12 minutes since the resumption. Another extraordinary afternoon for Australian cricket.

32nd over: India 102-9 (Jayant 0, Umesh 0).

Jadeja tries to cut Lyon a couple of times, and ends up dragging it back onto his stumps! Not the most classical off-spinning wicket he’s ever taken in his illustrious Test career, but he will care little. A second wicket, very well earned. Two to go.

31st over: India 102-7 (Jadeja 3, Yadav 0). Steve O’Keefe bowls an over where he doesn’t take a wicket. Man bites dog. Jayant defending suitably enough. Except for the bit where he was beaten outside the off stump.

30th over: India 102-7 (Jadeja 3, Yadav 0). No Luck Nathan Lyon. Turning it square, beating the bat, but no love. No edges. He’s such a team mate he probably won’t be seething. But at some level, of course he will be. What’s the old story about Laker and Lock? Yeah, that.

That Sokka Slider! Put him on the front of the paper! Put him on a Weet-Bix box! Send him to the Moon, if he doesn’t go there himself tonight already. It’s too good for Pujara, straight on with the arm second ball after tea. Who is this, Herath? Unbelievable. Australia three wickets to victory. O’Keefe has six...12 for the match.

SCENES AT PUNE.

I was talking a bit of trash at lunch about big chases and India’s depth and lightning striking twice and whatever. It was just that: trash. You cannot fault Steve O’Keefe. His spell between lunch and tea thoroughly deserved the rewards. A ten wicket match (got lucky again to call him to that on the radio). 11 actually! With four more on the shelf. And Nathan Lyon too. He won’t have the stories written about him, but both spin twins made that happen.

Surely, Australia has this in the bag. Cheteshwar Pujara is still there, and has battled through. Jadeja and Jayant can make some runs coming in next. But India are a million miles away from their target. It has been all about Steve O’Keefe again, five-fors in both innings, 11 in the match, and he’s one wicket away from equally Jason Crazy Krejza’s 12-wicket haul which sets the high-water mark for an Australian spinner in this country.

Australia will look to wrap this Test up inside three days, which would have been an absurd statement three days ago. But that was then, and now is now. Now is also the time for Adam Collins to take the OBO baton and walk you through the final phases. Or, the miraculous comeback. Wait and see.

Sa-ha sings, “Take me on. Take on me. I’ll be yours, in a ball or two.”

He is Steve O’Keefe’s, completing a five-wicket haul in both innings of this match. Another ropey decision from Kettleborough I reckon, probably the umpire wasn’t game to give a third wrong not-out to the same bowler. But I think that arm ball was sliding down leg. It might have been clipping leg stump, but we won’t find out because that is the tea break with the wicket falling halfway through the over.

28th over: India 99-5 (Pujara 31, Saha 5)

Dropped! Warner puts Pujara down at short leg. Third catch dropped from Lyon’s bowling today. The universe is on SOK’s side. Pujara flicks the ball to bat pad, Warner’s hands are between his knees as it comes at home low, he gets hands to it but the ball is travelling too quickly and skews free. Very little time to react, but Lyon will be frustrated. Though happy to be in a team on top. The Indian batsmen tick a few singles about thereafter.

27th over: India 95-5 (Pujara 29, Saha 4)

O’Keefe slips, bowls a full toss, Saha slams it through cover for four. Off the mark. O’Keefe responds by shredding a turner past the batsman’s outside edge. They settle for a defensive close to the over. Stalemate.

26th over: India 91-5 (Pujara 29, Saha 0)

Interesting that Ashwin came out ahead of Saha at No 6, it was the other way around in the first innings. Pujara soaks up the strike, and flicks Lyon for two from the last ball.

25th over: India 89-5 (Pujara 27, Saha 0)

A wicket maiden for O’Keefe to put the final gloss on that ten-wicket haul.

Ten wicket haul for Steven O’Keefe! And it will be the decisive factor in a huge Australian victory. You can be sure of that now. Similar to the Kohli appeal earlier, this one hits bat and pad close together as Ashwin lunges forward in defence, and is given not out by Kettleborough. This time the Australians have learned their lesson, and review the call. The replay shows it did indeed hit pad first, and was clearly going straight on to hit middle stump. Kettleborough gives a disgusted finger raise, having made another mistake in a rare bad match.

24th over: India 89-4 (Pujara 27, Ashwin 8)

Nathan Lyon the bowler.Ashwin nails the reverse sweep for four, then chips an attempted cover drive wide of mid off for three, after Pujara had given him the strike with a single to start the over. Unconvincing, the second Ashwin shot.

23rd over: India 81-4 (Pujara 26, Ashwin 1)

Ashwin gets off the mark, Pujara whips three through midwicket from a low full toss, and another destructive O’Keefe over comes to an end.

Another one! Big puff of dust as O’Keefe pitches the ball outside off, Rahane sees the line and tries to drive through cover, but can only chip it up enough for Lyon to scope his fingers underneath the ball.

22nd over: India 76-3 (Pujara 22, Rahane 18)

Another couple of boundaries to Pujara and Rahane, the latter trying to stay positive. It was easy to play that way the first time, with Lyon dragging a shocker short and very wide down leg. Pujara just had to catch up with it and send a low pull shot away to fine leg. The second effort once Rahane gets the strike is a much harder sweep, well timed, and it shoots away to the fence.

21st over: India 67-3 (Pujara 17, Rahane 14)

Finally, an Indian batsman is able to smash O’Keefe. The first time is streaky, Rahane slashing outside off and edging over second slip, Glenn Maxwell in there as a substitute fieldsman for Renshaw, it appears. The second boundary is more convincing – Rahane picked the arm ball, went back, waited for it to come on having made the length a bit short, then carved it out through covers for another four.

20th over: India 58-3 (Pujara 16, Rahane 6)

Smith notes the same thing about Hazlewood and decides to go straight back to spin. Lyon with the ball again. Concedes five from the over, thanks in large part to a couple of overthrows when Starc pings in a fast return from a sweep at deep backward square. Rahane gets the three and both batsmen harvest a single.

19th over: India 53-3 (Pujara 15, Rahane 3)

O’Keefe brimming with confidence. He’s turning the ball sharply on occasion, not turning it at other times. It’s possible we could be seeing the emergence of a significant career.

18th over: India 52-3 (Pujara 14, Rahane 3)

Hazlewood continues, Pujara looks more comfortable against him. Rahane flicks a couple through square.

17th over: India 49-3 (Pujara 13, Rahane 1)

Steve O’Keefe is living a dream. He has 2/14, after his 6/35 in the first innings. Kohli was looking good too – had off-driven a couple of runs nicely just before he was dismissed, but then just guessed wrong against a ball that may have turned and eventually didn’t.

The Indian captain is gone! Four double hundreds in the last few months, but not today. And that DRS mishap won’t haunt the Australians. They’ve been the victims of the left-arm trick many times against Rangana Herath and Ravindra Jadeja, but finally they get to dish one off. O’Keefe, around the wicket, bowls one angling in that Kohli expects to turn. The batsman shoulders arms, a la Usman Khawaja in Galle. Unbelievable. And the ball goes on straight with the arm and knocks off stump out of the ground. Steve O’Keefe is levitating mid-pitch, like Scooby smelling a sandwich. Kohli stays in his crouch for a good 10 seconds, staring back at his shattered stumps in disbelief at what he has done. Scenes.

16th over: India 45-2 (Pujara 12, Kohli 11)

Josh Hazlewood at last gets his first use of the ball. Not quite his perfect line, a little wide with a couple of balls, but a couple closer to the stumps as well. The fifth of the over is a nasty one, leaping and crushing the fingers against the bat handle. Pujara leaps and winces, yanking the hand away. But Pujara recovers from the last ball of the over, as Hazlewood goes way too wide, and is easily cut away through backward point for four.

15th over: India 41-2 (Pujara 8, Kohli 11)

Edged! Kohli versus O’Keefe is hotting up. Into the ground to slip, Smith grabs the rebound. Next ball, driven for four! Glorious cover drive, this is is a battle now between two cricketers right in the contest. Beautiful timing, playing with the spin, crouching low, that bottom-handed slapping drive that marks Kohli so clearly. Then another couple of balls to slip, one running along the ground, one on the bounce.

14th over: India 36-2 (Pujara 7, Kohli 7)

Pujara now finding some timing against Lyon. Down the wicket to drive two, then switches to the leg side for a single. Kohli adds a couple of singles of his own. Five from the over.

13th over: India 31-2 (Pujara 3, Kohli 6)

Huge appeal! O’Keefe gave that every single ounce of energy he had. Down on one knee, both hands vibrating as though he was trying to screw in two lightbulbs at once, head wobbling, eyes like searchlights. O’Keefe is excitable, Kohli is the prize wicket. Straight ball, hits pad and bat almost at the same time as Kohli pressed forward. Given not out. Smith at slip asked if it had hit outside the line, using gestures. O’Keefe replied “It’s close. It’s very close.” But the replay shows that it was pad first, and Kohli would have been out. But after watching India burn two reviews, Smith went conservative and kept his. Fair call, not many lbws get overturned, but O’Keefe will be grinding his teeth in a different fashion to usual when he realises he had the Indian captain done, but let him go. All that happens from the first ball, and it’s a miaden thereafter.

12th over: India 31-2 (Pujara 3, Kohli 6)

Pujara finally uses his feet, comes down to drive Lyon to long-on. Looked out of sorts in the first innings, and this is very tough batting out here now. Kohli going back into his crease on a couple of occasions looking to score, gets one ball away for a single.

11th over: India 29-2 (Pujara 2, Kohli 5)

And a maiden for O’Keefe, these two belting through the overs, just a couple of leg byes as the ball hits the pad and goes behind square.

10th over: India 27-2 (Pujara 2, Kohli 5)

A maiden for Lyon, though four runs from it. Wade lets through his second set of four byes in the 10th over. This pitch is a hard one to keep on. The ball leaps in at Pujara from outside the stump, beats his forcing shot aimed at cover, and climbs over the middle stump before continuing leg side and past Wade.

9th over: India 23-2 (Pujara 2, Kohli 5)

Kohli using his T20 tactics here, coming across his stumps and sweeping SOK behind square, then belting back for the second run. Take every one that you can, is his approach, where most players would have ambled one.

8th over: India 20-2 (Pujara 1, Kohli 3)

Lyon bowls a tidy over, a couple of singles from it, but no great alarms. Even one quiet over feels notable at this point. Pujara off the mark with a leg-side tap.

7th over: India 18-2 (Pujara 0, Kohli 2)

O’Keefe carries on looking dangerous. Gets one to spin and kick past Kohli’s bat as the Indian captain gropes forward, then when Pujara comes on strike there’s a raucous appeal for a ball that jumps off the pad up to slip. No bat involved.

6th over: India 17-2 (Pujara 0, Kohli 1)

Virat Kohli does indeed look pretty grumpy. Mind you, he always looks pretty grumpy when he’s batting. Fixated might be a nicer way of saying it. He dodges a pair of ducks by flicking his first ball from Lyon through square for a single.

Another review? I’m not even waiting for this to be resolved to write that is one of the worst I’ve seen. Lyon bowls, well outside off, turns sharply but stays so low. Rahul was hopping, trying to jam the bat down but couldn’t get there. It hits his pad about a quarter of the way up off stump. And they burn a second review? Why? OK, it’s umpire’s call on whether it was hitting outside the line, but that was given out by the umpire and looked absolutely dead. Kohli comes in with 75 overs until India get their burnt reviews back. The way this pitch is playing you don’t imagine we’ll get anywhere near that.

5th over: India 10-1 (Rahul 4, Pujara 0)

Would you believe it? The Golden Arm strikes again. O’Keefe on for his first over, Rahul drives a single, but Vijay gets a straighter ball into his pads. O’Keefe bowls left-arm around the wicket 99% of the time, and he’s sliding one in toward the right-hander’s wicket. Hit in front of middle. Vijay reviews, of course, the opener’s prerogative. Or what the opener assumes is his. It’s another absurd decision really. India have been awful with their DRS usage in this match. This is another one, it’s umpire’s call for height perhaps, but taking leg stump. SNJOK can do no wrong.

4th over: India 9-0 (Vijay 2, Rahul 3)

Dropped again! Lyon’s second chance goes down, Handscomb with another toughie. There are a couple of singles from the over, then the fifth ball really takes off, leaps up at the glove, takes it front on as though the batsman was trying to punch the ball. It loops up directly in front of him, straight down the pitch. Handscomb leaps forward, tumbles, gets fingertips to it low to the ground, but can’t scoop it in.

3rd over: India 6-0 (Vijay 1, Rahul 1)

Starc not quite getting the line right yet, it’s wide enough to leave a bit too often for so early in the innings. Though of course the wide one got Kohli yesterday. Throws in a couple of shorter ones and it’s another maiden.

2nd over: India 6-0 (Vijay 1, Rahul 1)

Nathan ‘Nathan’ Lyon will take the new ball to partner Starc. No Hazlewood, who took a wicket as soon as he started yesterday. No O’Keefe, who got the new ball in the first innings. Australia’s shiny-pated GOAT gets the chance to find a length. Good turn, and Rahul is going back and working with it for a single. Turn again, it beats Vijay’s pad just down leg and Wade lets it through for four byes. Grrrrrrrreat. Then there’s a dropped catch! Already, the second over of the game. Vijay tries to parry a ball away, it turns into him and takes the glove, and flies over short leg. Handscomb in there I think? Got fingers to it but it was travelling too quickly. Tough chance but not impossible, especially given the two rippers he took in the first innings. Then there’s an appeal for a ball that would have gone well down leg, and Vijay sweeps a single to finish the over.

1st over: India 0-0 (Vijay 0, Rahul 0)

Here we go. Mitchell Starc with the missile. Fast. Starts wide, then dials back in toward the stumps. Nails the yorker third ball, stops a drive himself from the fourth. The fifth zings! Very fast, lifting sharply and flying by just outside the off stump. He’s getting close to 150 kilometres per hour already. Attacks the pads with the last, and it’s a maiden.

Do send me a missive during the session as we see how it unfolds. On the email it’s geoff.lemon@theguardian.com, on the idiot machine it’s @GeoffLemonSport.

Yes indeed, thanks Adam. Who’s in the mood for a world record? India will need one if they want to pull off a miracle win. Otherwise, an Australian win will inject a huge amount of life and excitement into this series. It’ll be well worth watching either way.

285 doesn’t sound like much, but it has given Australia a lead that will require the highest successful fourth innings in over 2200 Test matches if India are to win this. In other words, it is plenty.

Beginning 298 ahead, Australia had some work to do. They’ve collapsed before, and if they give it away early today, who knows. But the captain, Smith, was having none of that. He was scratchy yesterday and little more fluent today. But he was utterly relentless. His 18th Test match century is one that may go down to define his era as skipper. Tough as they come.

At last O’Keefe goes! Jadeja has, at last, won himself an edge. A consolation edge after beating it so often this innings. The final wicket goes and Australia’s innings ends on 285. And that’s lunch as well. I’ll gather my thoughts.

86th over: Australia 279-9 (O’Keefe 6, Hazlewood 1). Umesh into another over. Decent shift he’s put in here. He’d want a bite to eat, but he’ll have to get through Sokka first. He won’t here, the Australian man of the moment clipping through midwicket for his first boundary! In response: a bouncer. Naturally. But O’Keefe is up to that too, getting underneath it – 439 the lead.

85th over: Australia 279-9 (O’Keefe 2, Hazlewood 0). RJ, I love ya. You’re a star. But if you are going to bowl 60-second overs, all I am going to say is this: maiden to O’Keefe. Take your time, man.

Umesh and Jadeja bowling in tandem looked like India's best bet this innings. Didn't happen enough. #IndvAus

84th over: Australia 279-9 (O’Keefe 2, Hazlewood 0). Actually, a pretty good effort from Jadeja on reflection, to get that previous over in at 11.28am local time so that Umesh got one more shot at the Australians. Hazlewood played and missed the final ball of the over, if you were wondering. But he has a habit of hanging around. Pretty determined pair. I fancy them to last a decent chunk of this extra half hour.

OK, that won’t be lunch. Nine down, the umpires will extend the session. Nice, belated, reverse swing enough to dart through the gate and trap him in front. No review required there. Another handy cameo, pushing Australia’s lead to the point where India will need an all-time record to win this Test from here.

83rd over: Australia 279-8 (O’Keefe 2, Lyon 13). Jadeja has somehow earned his side one more over before lunch via a 60 second over. Couldn’t have been more than that. Incredible how he does that. It’s a maiden to O’Keefe, who does very little wrong. Beaten once, but that’ll happen. Umesh will have the last one before the break.

82nd over: Australia 279-8 (O’Keefe 2, Lyon 13). O’Keefe is off the mark through cover early in the over and that’s great. But Lyon has plonked Ashwin over the rope at cow corner to end the over! What times! Granted, it just made it - Umesh catching him over the rope, but six all the same. One for Lyon’s highlights reel.

81st over: Australia 269-8 (O’Keefe 0, Lyon 2). Lyon sweeping joyously! To the rope to begin the over. Jadeja will hate that. A leg bye gets him off strike, accompanied as it was by an lbw appeal, but no major concerns there. O’Keefe, predictably, back into his defensive posture, where he remains. Still on nothing, but he’s doing a shift.

80th over: Australia 264-8 (O’Keefe 0, Lyon 2). Last over before they get their reviews back and a new ball if they fancy it. Ashwin has it. Lyon again sweeps early in the over to give O’Keefe the strike. There is an lbw appeal against Sokka, but he survives it. He’s luckier last ball, the off-break beating O’Keefe’s bat, pad and Saha’s gloves. Four byes. More pain for the hosts.

So India will now need the highest successful Test chase of all time #INDvAUS

79th over: Australia 259-8 (O’Keefe 0, Lyon 1). Jaedja versus Lyon. The former will fancy himself to grab the last couple here. But he deploys his best stroke, the sweep, to get off the mark with a single. O’Keefe defends the remainder of the set off the front foot. He’s doing a good job of premeditating where his fellow left-armer is going to pitch it. He’s actually on a pair here too. For a man who has made his fair share of first class runs, he’ll fancy getting off that at some stage.

Starc puts Ashwin over the midwicket fence halfway through the over, his fifth six of the match! But when trying it on again to the last ball, there’s a fraction less pace on the delivery and the miscue ends up in the hands of Rahul on the rope. Another important contribution with the bat from the Aussie quick.

78th over: Australia 258-8 (O’Keefe 0, Lyon 0).

77th over: Australia 252-7 (Starc 24, O’Keefe 0). Jadeja races through this over to O’Keefe who is very happy to ride shotgun with Starc. Simple strategy: jump forward, get the pad out there. It’ll do.

Job is done. But they have to punish them now. Find a way to bat two more hours, rather than slapping. Bury them. Make it hurt. #INDvAUS

76th over: Australia 252-7 (Starc 24, O’Keefe 0). Booooooom! Starc’s second big one, Ashwin on the receiving end this time. To his sweet spot, long-on. Every time he gets a chance to free the arms he obliges. No other runs in the over, but it matters not; 22 minutes to the lunch break. India being punished the way they have hurt Australian sides so often in these circumstances over the years – 250 up as well with the blow.

75th over: Australia 246-7 (Starc 18, O’Keefe 0). The man they call Sokka, yesterday’s hero, is beaten immediately by Jadeja. But it is over-bowled. The Australian lead is 401 now, Smith edging it over that mark before departing with the penultimate ball of the over.

@collinsadam Only Smith’s second ever ton in the second dig. The other was v NZ in the tied Perth Test in 2015. Massive knock.

DRS confirms that Smith is, indeed, out leg before wicket. What a magnificent hand, taking the lead for his side beyond 400. Job done, skip. He gives the bat a good old wave, and fair enough too. It was his 18th Test ton, an innings that lasted 202 crucial deliveries. Appropriately, it is Jadeja who got his man after all that. Cold comfort, after dominating the Australian captain for large portions of their contest, beating him routinely outside the off-stump. But that only adds to the Smith knock. A lesser player would have thrown it away in those circumstances, but he toughed it out instead and is rewarded accordingly. Played.

Wicket! Smith lbw! He’s reviewed though... stand by.

74th over: Australia 244-6 (Smith 108, Starc 17). Ashwin not posing any problems for Smith. He misses a sweep to begin, but that’s not an issue with the ball well outside the line. A couple to third man. Another to square leg. This hurts. The lead is 399.

73rd over: Australia 241-6 (Smith 105, Starc 17). This is punishing cricket! On a variety of levels. Jadeja, after having Smith leg-before half an hour ago it is worth remembering, is now being clobbered by Starc. First past point to a rare poor delivery. Then high and deep over long-on, reminiscent of his first innings stroke play. Eleven from the over, and India are nearing a 400 deficit. What a session from the tourists. Half an hour to go.

72nd over: Australia 230-6 (Smith 104, Starc 7). Ashwin is back. As directed. Thanks for listening, Virat. Big shout for lbw against the century-maker, but turned down. Turning too much? We will never know, as Kohli - as I keep reminding you out there - threw away both reviews on terrible challenges when tired and frustrated late yesterday. Starc also survives a leg before shout, but this is more ambitious again. India need something. Immediately. Or these two could go nuts before lunch. We’ve seen them do it before.

Most consecutive Test 100s vs a team:

6 Don Bradman v Eng
5 Shoaib Mohammad v NZ
5 Jack Kallis v WI
5 STEVE SMITH v Ind *#IndvAus

What a hand! Steve Smith, take a bow. It’s been scratchy and required plenty of luck. But it’s been outstanding. It comes up in a hurry, cutting his nemesis Jadeja to the rope to move to 98 then taking a rapid two to extra cover. Oh, and he loves it too! Bat to all four points of the ground after roaring into his glove. You can see how much it means to the Australian captain to deliver for his side in such a profound way in this series opener.

71st over: Australia 227-6 (Smith 101, Starc 7).

70th over: Australia 220-5 (Smith 94, Starc 7). Umesh gets another. Neither Smith nor Starc troubled. Ashwin again, surely?

69th over: Australia 219-5 (Smith 93, Starc 7). Jadeja is back. That’s better. Sure enough, causing Smith problems from the get go, yorking himself almost. He slows it down as the over progresses, beating the Australian for the umpteenth time outside the off-stump with a peach. Smith persists, though, profiting by one to end the over with a push to point. How’s my unintended alliteration?

68th over: Australia 218-5 (Smith 92, Starc 7). This is getting away from India, rapidly. Singles to each of the Australians to stat the over. A sign that the pressure just isn’t there. Not when Ashwin/Jadeja are resting. Umesh then beats Starc with some reverse; he isn’t doing a lot wrong, to be fair. But when he’s too full at the end of the over the big man unleashes a cover drive, adding four more to the Australian lead. Now 373.

Robert Wilson has dropped in. Always an honour to have an email with his name on it. “Cracking match.” That it is, Bob. “One hates to risk hexing it but this is turning into a special innings from Smith. I described him today as having the air of a cheeky pickpocket ludicrously assuming an air of innocence. I was pleased with that but it did start me worrying that Kohli, enraged by that first innings duck, might just go full Fagin second time around.” You may say that, I’ll just say he’s been a lucky lad. But worked his arse off out there. Dare I risk the cliche jar rattling, but a captain’s knock.

67th over: Australia 212-5 (Smith 91, Starc 2). Jayant continues after the break. Not sure about that, as they really need to finish Australia off here to have any chance and Jayant has been the man least likely so far this match for India. Evidenced by the full toss he gives Smith to begin the over, who drives through cover with no risk at all, down to the rope for four. Perfect restart. Oh, now a pie, a half-tracker, pulled by Smith for one to the sweeper. Could have hit that anywhere, but sensible to take the conservative approach this close to three figures. Singles everywhere with the field one, Starc takes one to get off the mark, to cover. More singles, Smith one to square leg before Starc retains the strike with one to cover to end the ropey over. Gotta get Jadeja back on ASAP. Eight off it, the lead now 367. And Smith into the 90s as well.

Well earned by Umesh, a conventional caught behind with Wade driving lavishly and edging a quicker delivery from around the wicket, Saha doing the rest. Some luck for the Indians that they desperately needed. Earlier in the over Wade nicked off the bottom of the bat but was given not out by ump Kettleborough. No review left after Kohli burned them both on magic beans yesterday, so they’re relying on the officials to get it right. Anyway, justice by the end of the set. The lead is 359 as the players take a drink half way through this opening session.

66th over: Australia 204-6 (Smith 85, Starc 0)

65th over: Australia 202-5 (Smith 84, Wade 19). The 200 is up with Smith pushing with ease down to long-on to start the over. Jayant oversteps next ball. That’s a crime for a spinner, one he paid for in the first dig too. Wade took a quick single too. Wheels falling off for the locals a bit when their main spinners not operating? No real issues for Smith for the rest of the over.

64th over: Australia 199-5 (Smith 83, Wade 18). They’re up for caught behind, but Wade didn’t hit it and Dicky Kettleborough isn’t going to buy into the ruse. Not out, fellas. Not out. Umesh not finding a groove here yet, evidenced by Wade responding to the shout by driving the next ball to the rope. Overpitched, in the slot, had to go.

India made one huge mistake when they dropped Smith three times. #INDvAUS

63rd over: Australia 194-5 (Smith 82, Wade 14). Smith far more comfortable using his dancing shoes against Jayant. A single comes through midwicket using that tactic. Wade looks equally as content when he gets his go.

Support grows for Aust as lead tops 347 - India's highest 4th inns total v Aust at home. Made in famous '86 Tied Test at Chennai #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/EOQWdzDqNH

62nd over: Australia 193-5 (Smith 81, Wade 14). Confident push from Smith out to point. So it’s Wade up against Umesh, who was so effective with the older ball in the first dig. Not so much this time, Wade picking up two into the onside when his radar is slightly off. He bangs the next in short, but the result is the same, two more. Rahul throws in from the deep but seems to be in some discomfort with his shoulder again. One to watch. The lead is now 348. Australia in a wonderful position.

61st over: Australia 188-5 (Smith 80, Wade 10). Jayant beats Wade outside the off-stump early in the over. Perfect flight. More of that required from him. But that isn’t the case later in the over, dropping short the Australian ‘keeper rocks back and makes no mistake, cutting hard behind point to the rope. That’s the main difference between Jayant and his more experienced teammates, struggling to put a full set together.

60th over: Australia 184-5 (Smith 80, Wade 6). Double change! It’s Umesh on for a trundle. He’s running away from us at the broadcast end. Smith defends at first, before pushing to cover. Easy peasy for the Aussie captain here after the relentlessly testing times he’s had against Jadeja from this end. Wade also grabs one, to square leg. Oh, that last one to Smith has shot through a bit. Smith missed it outside the off-stump. Lucky it wasn’t online. The tourists won’t mind that though.

Once has score of 280+ been made in 4th inns to win Test in India: 4-387 by IND v ENG in Chennai in 2008. AUS 5 down, 339 in front #IndvAus

59th over: Australia 182-5 (Smith 79, Wade 5). A change! Jayant to replace Ashwin from the grandstand end. He’s battled a bit so far this Test, copping plenty of grief from the local media. And no dramas for Wade here in response to his opening set of the day, defending each delivery with confidence.

58th over: Australia 182-5 (Smith 79, Wade 5). Wish I had a chance to put in a couple of snappy tweets here, but these two are determined to sprint through the overs. Chuck on Big Bad Ishant Sharma so I can get a bit of a break will you, Virat? Anyway, Ravi Jadeja it is. Smith carves him behind point second ball. That’s important; the more he is down the non-strikers’ end when he is bowling the better. Wade sweeps him. That’s bold. A couple taken, albeit requiring another dive. A pattern of this innings, dirtying up the cream shirts. Wade attempts to sweep again, less successfully, later in the over. His approach is clear, then. And again, a single this time, so he keeps the strike. Four from it. It’ll do.

57th over: Australia 178-5 (Smith 78, Wade 2). Ashwin lets Wade get off strike first up. Not what he would have wanted. Smith looks alright in defence, eventually tucking another single behind square. It’ll be the captain versus Jadeja again next over. What a contest that has been.

56th over: Australia 176-5 (Smith 77, Wade 1). Jadeja to his old mate Smith. There’s a big shout for lbw that Kettleborough turns down. But it looked pad first, rather than bat. Smith may have been lucky there. Again. He capitalises on it by ending the over by dancing down the track and smacking the left-armer over midwicket. What a bizarre century this would be if Smith can get there.

55th over: Australia 172-5 (Smith 73, Wade 1). Ashwin throws it up to Smith, who is up to the task on the front foot. Turns one around the corner to give Wade a go. He’s tentative, but it will take a while to play himself in here. This isn’t easy batting.

54th over: Australia 171-5 (Smith 72, Wade 1). Worth noting that before Marsh went he was beaten outside the edge with another big turner. It also beat Saha after clipping Marsh’s back pad. It was inevitable Jadeja would get himself in the book eventually. He’s been masterful. Meanwhile, Wade is off the mark with a swept single, Smith also clipping in that direction to retain the strike.

Tobe fiar to Mitch Marsh, that was a very good knock in context.

Oh no! Looked so good, worked so well. But Jadeja is a cagey operator, dropping his length back just a fraction, Marsh unable to reach the length with his front-foot stride this time. A feather off the outside edge is neatly taken by Saha behind the stumps. The stand of 56 comes to an end. Not the total Marsh wanted, but a serviceable contribution in the context of the game. But with a lead of 324, more runs are going to be needed by the lower order for the visitors to feel safe before taking the ball again later today.

53rd over: Australia 165-4 (Smith 71, Marsh 31). Singles down the ground for each to begin this Ashwin over. But then Smith is dropped! Again! A fourth time! Inside edge after a big turner, got the shoulder, but Rahane wasn’t able to complete the chance at leg-slip. Didn’t get a hand on it. To be fair, a tough chance, but they always are in that position. To the boundary it goes as well, making matters worse for the locals, the Australian lead building at a decent clip here all of a sudden.

52nd over: Australia 159-4 (Smith 66, Marsh 30). Smith defies his nemesis, a single down the ground to begin the over. Marsh’s approach is far more convincing, time and again getting his huge foot forward a long way. Every time. As a strategy, I’ve seen worse. Predictable, but effective. And so far, impenetrable.

51st over: Australia 158-4 (Smith 65, Marsh 30). Marsh does it again! Just as he did in the previous over, the moment Ashwin is a fraction short he doesn’t hesitate in freeing the arms and thrashing through cover. That wasn’t that short either. Dominant stroke. Carn, Mitch. Per the previous match-up between these two, after the boundary he’s capably forward time and again to negate the Ashwin spin.

This could be a very big day in the career of Mitch Marsh - doing well here despite the naysayers #INDvAUS

50th over: Australia 153-4 (Smith 64, Marsh 26). Jadeja races through this over in 75 seconds. Not even 90. Smith had to dig out a ball that was darted in, getting it out behind point for one. He won Marsh’s edge later, a genuine edge too, but it doesn’t carry to slip! Soft hands by the looks of the replay. Good batting. Then sound defence.

49th over: Australia 152-4 (Smith 63, Marsh 26). Onya, Mitch! Rocking back into the crease he wallops Ashwin to the cover boundary. Not a great ball, but encouraging that he has the confidence to put the bad ones away when they come. It brings up Australia’s 150 which is not for nothing considering what they have been up against. Marsh is content in defence thereafter. Good batting. Without wanting to stitch him up with the OBO commentator curse (as I have so often to the poor bloke), I have a feeling about him today.

48th over: Australia 147-4 (Smith 62, Marsh 22). Blimey, Ravindra Jadeja is on here for the unluckiest none-fa you’ll ever see. Huge spin from the get go, beating Marsh’s bat. Miles past the bat; ends up at first slip. Finger spinners aren’t meant to do that, are they? He beats him again! It prompts a chat between the captain and his all-rounder. A slider hits the pad. Such good bowling. Marsh realises the best form of defence is the huge lunge, which he deploys for the remainder of the over.

47th over: Australia 147-4 (Smith 62, Marsh 22). It was eventful for Smith yesterday, and is again today. He opts for two after taking Ashwin down to third man. Nicely worked off the face of the bat to the one that goes the other way. To make his ground, it required a dive. A direct hit would have had him the replay shows. Well, that’s the 300 lead in any case. A sweep gets Marsh on strike for the last ball of the set, who steers for a single himself to retain the strike for the second over of the day.

We’re underway at Pune! It’ll be Ashwin to Smith to kick it off. Play.

In a call back to yesterday. Another enjoyable use of the Fosters jug by my hotel at breakfast this morning. Important to document these things. Players due out in a few minutes, by the way.

This morning's addition to the series: (damn cold) carrot juice. #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/3nwvCPpj5x

What a wonderful morning it is after Australia go and do something like that? I’ve read all the stories and seen all the headlines, but can’t quite believe it. My favourite, the Indian Express going with ‘STEVE’S WONDER CONCERT IN PUNE.’ Good areas. Really good areas.

So here’s the deal. Australia are 298 ahead. Captain Smith has given plenty of chances, but kept ticking the board over. Jadeja was all over him, but didn’t nab him. He resumes on 59. It wouldn’t be his most fluent ton, but if he can pull it off it’ll be one of his gutsiest. But I’ll try not to write that story quite yet.

Day three. Half hour from the resumption. Australians warming up with a (quite skilful) game of tennis ball volleyball. #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/WOFJz2bPSk

Adam will be here shortly. In the meantime, relive Steve O’Keefe’s remarkable performance on day two, when the spinner took six for 35.

Related: Australia take charge of first Test after Steve O'Keefe skittles India

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West Indies v England: first ODI – as it happened

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  • England 296-6 beat West Indies 251 by 45 runs
  • England take 1-0 lead in three-match series

They take a 1-0 lead in the three match series. The second ODI is on Sunday and will be played back on this very same wicket in Antigua. No doubt the anticipation is killing you. Bye.

Gabriel looks to flick into the on-side, gets all in a tangle and it loops up off the glove to the keeper.

47th over: West Indies 250-9 (Gabriel 0, Bishoo 11) Target 297 It looks like this match is still twitching and gasping, like the roadkill you thought was dead and can’t quite bring yourself to put out of its misery. Nurse thunders a full one from Woakes back over long-off for six ... ah no, then he’s out. Shannon Gabriel remains between England and a mighty triumph. Ahem.

Simon McMahon writes: “I met my wife on the OBO.” WAIT FOR IT ...

Full and quick from Woakes, Nurse plays around it and the review shows the ball just clipping leg stump.

Nurse given lbw, so he might as well review.

46th over: West Indies 244-8 (Nurse 15, Bishoo 11) Target 297 In theory, this is a nice shot from Nurse, backing away and trying to go inside out over extra cover. The only thing that’s out is the timing and as such he sends a looping edge down to third man on the bounce. After a handful of singles, Bishoo slogs a couple of ugly fours through the on-side. 53 from 24 needed.

Phil Sawyer is right, this place is a ladies magnet. I'm so rock n roll I'm off to bed @DanLucas86 This one's in the bag, after all.

45th over: West Indies 232-8 (Nurse 13, Bishoo 1) Target 297 Woakes is back for Plunkett. I guess Morgan wants to give Plunkett one of the final two overs, hence taking him out of the attack with one left in the bank. We might not get there though as Brathwaite doesn’t read Woakes’s slower ball and holes out. Nurse, on the other hand, reads the very next ball perfectly and slog-sweeps over mid-on for six. Next ball is launched high into the air but lands safely behind the bowler before Moeen can get to it.

A question from John Starbuck: “Given that it’s only three single days of meaningful play, does this qualify as an overseas tour? That’s if you measure it by the depth of tan for English teams.” When are the three days of meaningful play, John?

Slower and in the slot. Brathwaite slams it up in the air Root, stationed in the circle at mid-off, orders all other fielders out of the way and steadies himself under it.

44th over: West Indies 223-7 (Nurse 5, C Brathwaite 12) Target 297 Dismissive from Brathwaite, standing tall and clubbing it with the toe-end of the bat over mid-off for his first boundary. That’s all very well and good, but they need a few more like that and none are forthcoming in the rest of this over. “When you get to this stage, every ball’s an event” says Rob Key. None of this match has been an event, Rob.

Here’s ... look, Phil Sawyer, you’re the only one reading now. “‘I think we’ve even had a married couple meet on here before.’ Jeremy Theobald and Lynn Bashforth. Unwisely they even let me stay with them for a couple of OBO meets in that London. And Naylor was the guest of honour at their Sri Lanka wedding, Turns out the OBO IS the place to meet. Form an orderly one, ladies.”

43rd over: West Indies 215-7 (Nurse 3, C Brathwaite 6) Target 297 Finn has a big grin on his face and well he might: it was an excellent piece of footwork to get rid of Mohammed. Ashley Nurse is the new batsman with 87 from 48 needed, or 11ish an over, maths fans. These two don’t seem that fussed about the escalating required rate, mind, as they nudge and nurdle another five singles.

42nd over: West Indies 210-7 (C Brathwaite 4) Target 297 One. One. One. One. One. Out. More singles than there are swiping right on Phil Sawyer, then the big wicket as Mohammed’s excellent knock comes to a tame end. Stick a fork in this one, it’s about done.

Brathwaite drops it down and sets off for a quick single. It’s a race between Finn and Mohammed from the non-striker’s end and the bowler gets there first and kicks the ball into the stumps with the batsman short. Agüeroesque tap in.

41st over: West Indies 205-6 (Mohammed 69, C Brathwaite 2) Target 297 Now Carlos Brathwaite, average 13 but let’s all judge him on four balls, comes to the party. Just four singles from this over and it’s just nudging back England’s way.

“Tinder is full of women interested in middle aged men who have nothing better to do on a Friday night than email the OBO? Well colour me interested. Sorry to abandon you, Dan, but I’m off to engage with my admiring throng.” Believe it or not there was a time the OBO effectively was Tinder – I think we’ve even had a married couple meet on here before.

Plunkett gets his third for 30. Holder looks to be cute and run a slightly back-of-a-length ball down to third man. He can only feather it through though.

40th over: West Indies 201-5 (Mohammed 67, Holder 4) Target 297 Finn is on for Woakes as Morgan looks for another wicket to go in for the kill. Well, at least I assume that’s his thinking; not sure Finn is the right man for that job though. A slow, harmless leg-side ball is worked away for two to bring up the 200. Finn taking LCD Soundsystem’s advice here.

39th over: West Indies 196-5 (Mohammed 66, Holder 0) Target 297 Another half-hearted appeal for lbw against Mohammed when Plunkett raps him on the thigh pad. The batsman had both feet off the ground at the time though, so it was going comfortably over the top. No matter though, as he gets rid of the dangerous Carter a couple of balls later, ending the partnership at 82 from 83 balls. The new man is Jason Holder, who can hit a mean long ball himself. Mohammed gets four more with a well-placed back-foot cut through point. Rashid pulls off a good stop on the rope from the last ball and there’s very nearly a run-out as Holder was so, so late coming back for the second.

What a catch this is! It’s a heaved hook into the wind form Carter and Roy comes haring in from the boundary, judges it perfectly and dives forward to take a catch just six inches off the ground!

38th over: West Indies 188-4 (Mohammed 60, Carter 52) Target 297 Mohammed looks to get in on the clubbing action, having a big old heave at a short ball from Woakes that followed him down the leg side. He doesn’t really get hold of it, but the ball lands out at deep mid-on between two converging fielders. Couple of runs there and five from the over, which makes it something of a minor relief for England.

37th over: West Indies 183-4 (Mohammed 57, Carter 51) Target 297 Double change, in fact, and Plunkett is back. He strays down the leg side and Carter flips it down to long-leg for the four runs needed to bring up his 44-ball 50. In retrospect, he is able to lay bat on ball. Nine from the over is just what the doctor ordered. Time for drinks.

36th over: West Indies 174-4 (Mohammed 55, Carter 45) Target 297 Change of bowling, thank god. It’s Woakes for Root – Bumble suggests that Stokes might be carrying a knock, which is a good bet. He drops short and Carter absolutely monsters one out of the ground! He got underneath it and gave it a good full swing of the arms, hitting with the breeze and into the palm trees outside the ground. We’re going to have a delay while we get a new ball. Eventually they find one and Carter cuts it for a well-run two through point. 10 from the over and this is starting to get slightly interesting.

@DanLucas86 Is Phil Swayer a real person, or a Lankbot? And Hull is the city of culture 2017

35th over: West Indies 164-4 (Mohammed 54, Carter 36) Target 297 Half a shout for lbw when Mohammed misses a sweep, but I reckon that was turning away from off-stump. Incidentally the 50-partnership came up in that last over, from 57 balls. A single brings Carter on strike and he too misses a sweep and is hit on the pad, but this was a googly that pitched outside leg stump.

34th over: West Indies 161-4 (Mohammed 53, Carter35) Target 297 This is a fifth over for Root. Ben Stokes hasn’t bowled yet. There’s flattering the new captain and then there’s this, Eoin. Carter, after surviving a rather bizarre appeal – it was incredibly muted – drives through cover for two then slogs a length ball on the up, straight back down the ground for the first six of the innings. Another two, then Carter reverse slogs through point for four more! That might be the end of Root.

Simon McMahon is still with us. “Dan, there’s nothing I like more on a Friday night than sharing emails about the colour mutations of 16th century carrots with people I’ve never met, whilst a shit cricket match plays out in the background. There’s not much live cricket in Dundee, so I call that livin’ the dream.”

It is a bump ball.

I think Carter is out here: he’s just absolutely smashed one back into Root’s midriff and the umpires are checking to see if it’s a bump ball, I think.

33rd over: West Indies 147-4 (Mohammed 53, Carter 21) Target 297 Given the number of dangerous hitters down the order for the West Indies, this is probably going to be a close, exciting finish. It’s a pretty damn dull middle though. Carter provides the highlight of this over by stepping a long way outside off and shovelling it to fine-leg for a couple. He has 21 from 29 despite my earlier assertion that he can’t hit a ball. Huh.

32nd over: West Indies 139-4 (Mohammed 51, Carter 15) Target 297 That’s a first ODI half-century for Jason Mohammed. It took 63 balls and featured six boundaries. In context – he came in after his side had lost three for three in 14 balls – it’s been a strong innings but he needs to step up a gear in a few overs’ time if his side is going to win this.

31st over: West Indies 134-4 (Mohammed 47, Carter 14) Target 297 There’s a huge appeal for a catch behind when Carter tries to cut a leg-break that’s turning back into him from near the top of off stump. That was a really poor shot to play to that ball but we won’t criticise too much, as he does pick up a couple of boundaries in the over. There was a sweep nailed aerially but safely through midwicket and then a late deflection that trickles agonisingly to third man.

30th over: West Indies 123-4 (Mohammed 46, Carter 5) Target 297 A return to the attack for Joe Root. I guess Morgan just wants to keep pace off the ball for as long as possible and let the required rate spiral. Carter cuts for two off the final ball but that’s it for the over.

Some crap cricket town emails. First Phil Sawyer: “‘Even Copestake and Naylor have better things to do tonight it seems, Phil.’. Thanks Dan. That makes me feel so much better about my life choices. Not sure about your suggested riff about worst town to watch cricket in, as any town with a cricket ground automatically improves it for me. However, as a naturalised (Lanky) Lincolnite nowadays, I’m obliged to point out that anyone who’s ever watched a cricket match in Hull probably wins that one hands down.”

29th over: West Indies 121-4 (Mohammed 46, Carter 3) Target 297 I haven’t seen much of Carter but he looks to be a very inventive batsman. He has such a range of strokes, and looks very extravagant when reeling out the reverse sweep. He hasn’t hit a bloody thing with any of them.

28th over: West Indies 119-4 (Mohammed 45, Carter 2) Target 297 Like Mansun, extra cover is (in) a wide open space and Mohammed takes full advantage, creaming a half-volley up and over it for four runs. The required rate has gone up above eight now so he’s probably going to have to hit a fair few more of those.

27th over: West Indies 112-4 (Mohammed 39, Carter 1) Target 297 Jonathan Carter – wasn’t that also the name of Noah Wyle’s character in ER? – finally gets off the mark from his eighth ball with a push back down the ground for one.

26th over: West Indies 109-4 (Mohammed 37, Carter 0) Target 297 That wicket is a massive blow for the West Indies you would think. The partnership was going well and Hope looks like a very promising, talented batsman. Now Hope has gone (etc etc) you suspect there might not be enough depth in the batting lineup to take them home from here.

Here’s Marie Meyer: “I’m with Bumble. Until the 16th century carrots were pale yellow, looking like skinny parsnips. Dutch growers discovered a mutation that they nurtured into today’s much richer color. However, the word ‘orange’ as a color word was not yet part of our language. And so the color name ‘carrot red’ was born.”

25th over: West Indies 108-4 (Mohammed 36, Carter 0) Target 297 That that delivery from Rashid proved successful is a very poor advert for cricket. The new man is Jonathan Carter and he misses out with a couple of attempted sweeps. Wicket maiden.

This is atrocious cricket. The delivery is short, wide of off and uglier than your OBOer when his flatmate wakes him up at 4am. Hope doesn’t move his feet, swishes the bat in and edges to gully. Finn dives forward to take a good catch.

24th over: West Indies 108-3 (Mohammed 36, Hope 31) Target 297 Ooh, after what I said in Moeen’s previous over he goes close to getting rid of Mohammed. The batsman celebrates his survival with a couple of fours; a deft cut past backward point and an agricultural slog into the wind but over midwicket.

It pitched on middle and leg, turned past the inside edge and was missing leg stump by a fair way. It looked close in real time but, it transpires, wasn’t, really.

Moeen thinks he’s got Mohammed lbw. Given not-out but it looked close. Think it’s going to be missing leg.

23rd over: West Indies 98-3 (Mohammed 26, Hope 31) Target 297 This is going to be a rubbish series, isn’t it? The TV commentators are playing Identify The Flag In The Crowd.

22nd over: West Indies 94-3 (Mohammed 23, Hope 30) Target 297 Moeen comes round the wicket and gets one past Mohammed’s outside edge. Given that the ball isn’t doing much and the wind is going in the wrong direction to bring it into the batsman from this end, I’m not sure round the wicket is the best approach.

21st over: West Indies 90-3 (Mohammed 21, Hope 28) Target 297 More like it between the wickets from this pair, as they run hard for two into the on-side. A few singles later and the 50-partnership is up, from 59 balls. It’s been a good one after the top order did its wet paper towel impression.

Robert Wilson is back: “Whilst I commiserate with Phil Sawyer’s tourist-jingle ordeal, I’m obliged to say Skegness-Schmegness. The poor lost tourism soul I met worked for an entity that had recently been renamed ‘Destination Chesterfield’. You try finding the haircut or the handshake that makes that a better thing to say to someone you’ve just met.”

20th over: West Indies 84-3 (Mohammed 20, Hope 23) Target 297 Now it’s time for Moeen to lose his line and Mohammed heaves him away for back-to-back fours: the first behind square leg, the second out to cover where Billings misfields and reels it in while touching the rope. 10 from that over and the West Indies will need a few more like it.

“Oh, Dan, I’m afraid there is a certain kind of cricket tragic for whom the prospect of an OBO considerably enlivens their usual Friday night,” writes Phil Sawyer. Even Copestake and Naylor have better things to do tonight it seems, Phil.

19th over: West Indies 74-3 (Mohammed 11, Hope 22) Target 297 Another bowling change: it’s Adil ‘He’s No Joe Root Is He?’ Rashid and he starts with a couple of rank leg-side balls: the first is a wide and the second helped around the corner by Hope with a late sweep. There’s a bit of a breeze taking the ball that way but it’s still pretty poor bowling. Oh and there’s another leg-side wide.

I've got much love for the Windies, how can anyone not be? But we really have the makings of an outstanding ODI side @DanLucas86#BELIEVE

18th over: West Indies 66-3 (Mohammed 10, Hope 17) Target 297 Moeen has Mohammed in a wee bit of discomfort with one that turns a bit more sharply than the batsman expected. Three singles and that’s drinks.

17th over: West Indies 63-3 (Mohammed 9, Hope 15) Target 297 That over happened. Meanwhile the good folk over at Guerilla Cricket have been in touch to point out they don’t have ministers doing PR exercises on their commentary. They do, however, sometimes have my voice, so every silver lining has a cloud.

16th over: West Indies 60-3 (Mohammed 8, Hope 14) Target 297 Here’s one of England’s actual spinners, Moeen Ali. Mohammed has a big swing at a smackable straight ball outside off but doesn’t get near it. A little bit of turn out there for Mo but it’s very slow. The required rate is up to near-as-dammit seven.

“Evening Dan,” begins Phil Sawyer, taking us to three emails in this innings and officially past what I expected on a Friday evening. “Anyone who thinks that the Tsar of the Chesterfield Tourist Board (9th over) has it bad has never been to Skegness. There was a jaunty little jingle on local radio here in Lincoln a few years ago advertising Skegness in which the main selling point of the pier was the fact that you could get burger and chips for 99p. I’d have thought the prospect of a burger and chips meal that only costs 99p is a good reason to run quite fast in the opposite direction.”

15th over: West Indies 58-3 (Mohammed 7, Hope 13) Target 297 Lovely from Hope, who leans into a very, very slightly overpitched ball and times it sweetly back past the bowler for four. As far as I can recall, that’s the first thing close to a poor ball – and it wasn’t really a poor ball – the Yorkshireman has bowled today. I still think he should be under consideration for the Test side this summer, but don’t think he will be.

Speaking of the Test side, this is a grand conspiracy theory.

@bbctms@DanLucas86 couple of overs for @root66? Reckon @Eoin16 is after a test spot!

14th over: West Indies 51-3 (Mohammed 7, Hope 6) Target 297“They’ll be as red as carrots” says Bumble of some underdressed sunbathers in the crowd. Does... does Bumble not know what carrots are? Mohammed gets the first boundary in a while, rocking back and cutting nicely through point with both feet off the ground. Hope then nearly gets out in identical fashion to Braithwaite but drags it down short of Rashid at mid-on.

13th over: West Indies 43-3 (Mohammed 1, Hope 4) Target 297 In fairness to Jason Mohammed, his List A figures are decent: a 40+ average and a couple of hundreds from 48 matches. He is yet another player in single-figures for caps though, aged 30, which is probably a bad indicator for where this team is headed in the medium term. Hope cracks a drive through cover for two and the West Indies have got through an over without losing a wicket. They lost three for three in 14 balls before that.

12th over: West Indies 39-3 (Mohammed 0, Hope 1) Target 297 I don’t think Bumble is too impressed with the Antiguan minster for tourism’s commentary stint: he makes the point that at this time of year, the 5,000 Brits in Antigua probably didn’t need too much persuading. The new batsman is Jason Mohammed, not to be confused with BBC Final Score presenter Jason Mohammad.

This is poor. It’s a short ball that’s begging to be hit, Brathwaite offers the most watery of pulls and toe ends it lamely to mid-on. I might be out of here before the rugby kicks off at this rate.

11th over: West Indies 37-2 (K Brathwaite 13, Hope 0) Target 297 Here’s Liam Plunkett and there goes Kieran Powell. His first ODI for nearly two years ends after just five balls and one run. Hope for the Windies arrives in the form of Shai Hope. This is just the fifth ODI for the Barbadian wicketkeeper, who got a century in his second in November, albeit only against Zimbabwe. A wicket-maiden to begin with for Plunkett.

Plunkett strikes with his second ball! Powell’s return is cut short when he tries to turn a straight ball into the on-side, gets a leading edge and it loops to point.

10th over: West Indies 37-1 (K Brathwaite 13, Powell 1) Target 297 Woakes is back and strikes with the second ball, tempting Lewis and getting the batsman to fall into his trap all too easily. Kieron Powell enters the fray. He gets a single and then, with the last ball, Woakes thinks about asking for lbw but there was a good-sized inside edge.

Meanwhile, a tribute to the fallen batsman.

Short, hooked and top-edged straight down the throat of Billings on the deep square leg boundary.

9th over: West Indies 36-0 (K Brathwaite 13, Lewis 21) Target 297 No more slips for Finn. Instead, Morgan has packed the off-side field, with Roy pretty much acting as a backstop at cover, behind his captain. It’s an effective tactic, as Lewis twice is denied off crunching drives in that very region. Billie Jean comes over the PA at the end of the over, which is nice.

“Daniel, Daniel.” Robert Wilson, Robert Wilson. “So the Antiguan Minister for Tourism is a touch dull, is he? You have to ask yourself quite how exciting or eloquent any Caribbean Tourism Minister needs to be? How hard is it persuade people that it might be nice to go on holiday there? I, on the other hand, once met the Tsar of the Chesterfield Tourist Board. Now that was a heartbreaking hard ask. Poor bloke, it was like something out of Gogol. But rainier.” Oh no I’m not saying he should entertain us, more that he shouldn’t be in a bloody cricket commentary box.

8th over: West Indies 34-0 (K Brathwaite 12, Lewis 20) Target 297 Root gets another over, for some reason. Lewis gives him half a charge and clubs it over extra cover, but it’s all muscle and no timing (as the Manic Street Preachers once sang) and doesn’t get to the rope. Two runs there and five from the over.

7th over: West Indies 29-0 (K Brathwaite 11, Lewis 17) Target 297 Finn continues. These two don’t seem to fussed when running between the wickets; there have been a couple of occasions when they’ve taken a comfortable single out into the deep when two could have been had from running hard. Root thinks he’s caught Lewis at slip but the batsman missed his pull completely and the ball looped up off the thigh pad.

This is a good read, if you can find the time after this thriller.

"Where are the voices from the working class Londoners?" On inequality and I, Daniel Blake with director Ken Loach: https://t.co/XKx5fMN7gBpic.twitter.com/jwjxN4MPbT

6th over: West Indies 27-0 (K Brathwaite 10, Lewis 16) Target 297 This is a funky one: England’s new Test captain is on for a very early bowl. If explosive impact from the surprise change is what Morgan was going for then it hasn’t come off: he’s milked for five singles from the first five balls and follows those with a dot.

5th over: West Indies 22-0 (K Brathwaite 7, Lewis 14) Target 297 A clip behind square on the leg-side ends a run of 10 successive dot balls. The minister is still doing his PR job on the telly. It’s impressively shameless – aside from mentioning the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium he didn’t say a single thing about the cricket.

Woakes & Finn have found a similar amount of swing early on (0.55° & 0.47°) but Finn has found more seam movement (0.47° v 0.33°) #WIvENG

4th over: West Indies 19-0 (K Brathwaite 5, Lewis 13) Target 297 The Antiguan minister for tourism, investment and a bunch of other things has taken over commentary on the telly and is using the over to advertise the tourism industry. I am not good enough a liveblogger to convey quite how tedious this is. Woakes’ line is a bit wobbly but somehow he gets away with a maiden.

3rd over: West Indies 19-0 (K Brathwaite 5, Lewis 13) Target 297 Shot from Lewis! It’s a gimme from Finn, in the slot just outside off, but the bottom hand comes right through and smites the ball to the mid-off fence. Three more from the over come in singles.

2nd over: West Indies 12-0 (K Brathwaite 4, Lewis 7) Target 297 Chris Woakes from the other end, bowling to the left-handed Evin Lewis. He’s someone you’d describe as a cracking prospect if he wasn’t already 25. He gets a couple with a punchy drive through cover; expect to see him play that shot a fair bit if he stays in. Four more when Woakes drops short and, given how slow it was, sends down a ball that’s as hittable as David Haye.

Remarkably, if the West Indies win it will be their second-highest successful chase ever.

1st over: West Indies 5-0 (K Brathwaite 4, Lewis 0) Target 297 Steven Finn also has two slips for the right-handed Kraigg Brathwaite. There’s a wee bit of movement away from the batsman, which isn’t great when you start wide and send it wider. A wide. This isn’t much of a start from Finn, whose third ball is full, on the pads and tucked through square leg for the first four runs off the bat. Brathwaite’s figures aren’t great, averaging as he does 31 at a strike-rate of 57, albeit from just eight matches.

The players are back out. West Indies need 297. Steven Finn has the ball.

An email! “Evening Dan,” begins cocktail-enthusiast Simon McMahon. “Am with you all the way about Mr Hannon. Saw him in Glasgow last year and he’s coming back in the summer too. Sweet. Also, I see the other half of The Duckworth Lewis Method, Thomas Walsh, is releasing a new album with his band Pugwash later this year. They’re very underrated. The Moeen Ali to Divine Comedy’s Ben Stokes, if you will.”

He’s also a lovely man – I had wine with him last summer. He’s a very funny man, as you’d expect from someone who brilliantly wrote the line “I’m the Catcher in the Rye / I’m the twinkle in her eye / I’m Jeff Goldblum in The Fly”.

Guardian Sport web editor/my boss James Dart is running a half-marathon in Reading to raise money for the National Coastwatch Institution. As Darty puts it:

The National Coastwatch Institution (NCI) is an entirely voluntary organisation, helping keep a supportive visual watch around UK shores. And there’s a lot of coast to keep watch over: the Ordnance Survey records the main British Isles as having 11,073 miles of coast alone. As the NCI says:

‘Each station assists in the protection and preservation of life at sea and around the UK coastline. Currently 50 NCI stations are operational and manned by over 2,000 volunteers keeping watch around the British Isles. NCI watchkeepers provide the eyes and ears along the coast, monitoring radio channels and providing a listening watch in poor visibility. They are trained to deal with emergencies. Over 240,000 hours of organised coastal surveillance were completed in 2015 alone, all at no cost to the public.’

Thanks Vish. England will, of course, be grateful to their captain although perhaps not as grateful as I am: for 40 overs that was horrible to watch. A real trudge on a pretty dire wicket and to get up to nearly 300 is a heck of an effort from England’s middle order batsmen. The wheels might easily have come off when Billings and Buttler went in quick succession but Morgan and Stokes bided their time before going all Logan on the bowlers (go and see Logan; I went last night and it’s excellent).

In 2017 Morgan has scored 280 ODI runs at an average of 70.00 and a strike rate of 104.86. #WIvEng

Most ODI hundreds for England: 12 Trescothick 9 Morgan, Pietersen 8 Gooch, Root 7 Gower

50th over: England 296-6 (Ali 31, Woakes 0) Handy score, that. Considering the nature of the bounce – particularly the wickets of Jason Roy and Joe Root – and the big outfield, that is a thoroughly impressive total that England have posted. They put on exactly 100 in the last 10 overs. Eoin Morgan imperious. That’s all from me – I leave England’s hopes in the hands of Dan Lucas who will be with you shortly. Bye!

A fine innings comes to an equally fine end. Brathwaite bats down a drive into the ground from Moeen Ali. The bowler then gathers his own rebound and throws down the stumps at the nonstriker’s end, with Morgan a few feet out of his crease.

49th over: England 288-5 (Morgan 107, Ali 23) Ton in the bag, Morgan decides to swing from the hip and flays a boundary over the off side for a change. The rest of the over is better from Holder, who realises width to a man with 100 to his name isn’t a good idea.

48th over: England 277-5 (Morgan 101, Ali 19) Gabriel’s overs done – he finishes with two for 58 from his 10 – so Brathwaite returns to finish things off. Pace off the ball means Morgan and Ali have to make do with singles on either side. You can sense the frustration, but, crucially, there aren’t dots. AND BOOM, SIX OVER MIDWICKET FOR MORGAN’S HUNDRED! Cleared the front leg, went big and brought up 100 from 112 deliveries. A brilliant innings, especially considering he had just nine off 32 balls...

47 overs: England 265-5 (Morgan 92, Ali 17)

Morgan's been involved in 8 of the 23 100-partnerships that Eng have made since the '15 WC. Only Root (11) has been involved in more #WIvENG

46 overs: England 249-5 (Morgan 87, Ali 8) Moeen has brought his drives out to the West Indies, which is great news for everyone. A couple of flowing ones allow him and Morgan to take nine runs, as Gabriel nails a few yorkers.

45 overs: England 240-5 (Morgan 86, Ali 1) Good stuff from Bishoo, who is brought on to change the pace and is rewarded with a wicket. Credit to Holder for the bowling change, too.

Stokes aims for a fourth six but can’t quite get everything behind a flighted delivery from Bishoo... Holder takes a few steps in from long on and catches easily.

44th over: England 235-4 (Morgan 85, Stokes 52) A third six from Stokes and this one doesn’t need a helping hand from the field. Gabriel doesn’t looked to have dropped that short but Stokes manages to get right under the ball, giving it the full flow of the bat and sending it way, way, way over the midwicket fence. Two more give him his ninth ODI fifty. The hundred partnership comes up thanks to a run and a no ball – it’s taken 110 balls – before Morgan signs off the over with a clean six down the ground. 20 from the over!

43rd over: England 215-4 (Morgan 78, Stokes 40) A good over from Holder sees just three taken from it. England have had a few big overs but they’ve not really stitched them together.

42nd over: England 212-4 (Morgan 77, Stokes 38) Four leg byes start the over and, third ball, the fielder at deep midwicket loses his bearings and, essentially, takes the ball over the rope for another six to Ben Stokes. Kraigg Brathwaite’s the guilty party. That was some good old-fashioned boundary incompetence, far from the nimble quick-thinking we’re used to seeing. All for it!

41st over: England 199-4 (Morgan 76, Stokes 31) Bishoo returns for his fourth over and concedes just three. West Indies haven’t been especially reliable at the death, so 300 isn’t totally out of the question. Would still take something special...

40th over: England 196-4 (Morgan 74, Stokes 30) Ooooooof – first six of the innings and it’s worth the wait! Ben Stokes drops to one knee and obliterates Jason Mohammed down the ground, into the second tier and straight into the hands of a Nottinghamshire fan. Well struck, well held.

39th over: England 187-4 (Morgan 72, Stokes 23) Runs off all but one ball. But it’s still only six taken from the over. While England have some decent hitters in the shed, these two would need to do the brunt of the back-end work given how difficult this pitch is for new batsmen.

38th over: England 181-4 (Morgan 70, Stokes 19) A chance! At first glances, it looks like Shai Hope has missed a stumping, as Morgan dances down the track. But the replays show that the England captain nicked the ball, hence why Hope was unable to gather cleanly. I did wonder why he was bowling ahead of Bishoo, but Jason Mohammed is doing work, here.

37 overs: England 179-4 (Morgan 69, Stokes 18) Fifty partnership between Morgan and Stokes, from 63 deliveries. This is good stuff from Brathwaite, who is starting to run his fingers along the ball, ensuring there’s little pace to work with.

36th over: England 176-4 (Morgan 67, Stokes 17) Wayward from Mohammed and Morgan can drop back and cart him over midwicket for his ninth boundary. More swinging needed, you’d think, especially with the extra pace of Gabriel and Holder to come at the death. Speaking of Gabriel swingers, here’s an offering from Janet Stevens

35th over: England 169-4 (Morgan 61, Stokes 16) Another five runs to England from that over, as Brathwaite does well to ensure that nothing is in the batsman’s arc. So, 15 overs to go and you’d think England need about 120 more to feel comfortable...

34th over: England 164-4 (Morgan 58, Stokes 14) A second over for Jason Mohammed and, disappointingly, it’s actually not that bad. No comic relief from this part-timer. Five runs from it as Morgan and Stokes get a wiggle on.

33rd over: England 159-4 (Morgan 56, Stokes 11) Ridiculous shot from Morgan! Basically a forehand smash brings four down the ground. He walked into it, too, like Federer pouncing from the baseline. Just a thought given the variable bounce: we’ve not seen too many cutters from the West Indies. Something for England’s battery of quicks to think about? Excellent work from Carlos Brathwaite saves two runs as Stokes drives down the ground. And that’s drinks.

32nd over: England 151-4 (Morgan 51, Stokes 9) Part-time spin now, with the offies of Jason Mohammed. Chance for these two to cash in? Not right now – two from the over, as Morgan and Stokes take a single each.

Eoin Morgan for England since he should never have been picked again for being an Irish coward: 28, 102, 43, 51, 17, 40, 50*

31st over: England 149-4 (Morgan 50, Stokes 8) A 32nd ODI half-century for Morgan, who gets there with his 67th ball, getting a single in the leg side off Jason Holder. Both Morgan and Stokes want to come down the wicket, so Holder bowls a few further back to catch them off guard. Stokes, in particular, adjusts well and manages to scamper two.

30th over: England 145-4 (Morgan 49, Stokes 5) Nurse finishes his allocation strongly, with just two conceded from his 10th over.

Glorious stuff on TMS @Vitu_E. Curtly didn't start bowling until 20 (!) & his mum used to ring a bell every time he took a wicket. Superb.

29th over: England 143-4 (Morgan 49, Stokes 3) Slight delay as Gabriel rushes Morgan and lands a telling blow on the England captain’s bonce. Once the interlude is over (Morgan is fine) Gabriel bowls another snorter that explodes off a good length and nearly takes Morgan’s fingers through to the keeper! Wouldn’t fancy chasing a score in excess of 275 on this deck...

28th over: England 141-4 (Morgan 49, Stokes 2) Vintage Morgan, right there. Having thumped another four to midwicket, leading Jason Holder to bring up the man at mid off in order to give him cover on the leg side, he goes down the ground for four through the recently vacated region. Holder reacts by dropping mid off back again and bringing in point from the fence.

27th over: England 131-4 (Morgan 39, Stokes 1) Pace back on the ball with Gabriel. Presumably, this will be the first of two overs, allowing him to bowl his remaining three overs at the death. Stokes aligns well against him, working a single to midwicket to get off the mark and keep the strike.

26th over: England 129-4 (Morgan 38) Big wicket for West Indies as Buttler, sent in early, falls cheaply. He’d looked to be just getting into things: running hard between the wickets and finding the middle of the bat with a series of ones and twos. Sadly, it was not to be.

There it is – that natural variation from Nurse. Buttler is drawn forward to a ball that goes on with the arm and finds the edge. There’s work to do at first slip, but Jonathan Carter does it exceptionally – diving to his right and taking an excellent one-handed catch.

25th over: England 123-3 (Morgan 36, Buttler 10) Another short ball from Bishoo, another four to Morgan. This time, he picks his spot in front of square on the leg side. There’s a very strong breeze coming in from Morgan’s leg side at this end, meaning anything he hits too high will get held up. As such, he’s persisted with hitting flat. Apart from to the final ball, which he sweeps fine, lofting it over the head of short fine leg.

24th over: England 110-3 (Morgan 28, Buttler 7) Smart over from Nurse, giving the ball a good rip while also aware that a bit of natural variation will give both batsmen something to think about. Buttler is beaten on the outside edge after reverse sweeping for a couple.

23rd over: England 107-3 (Morgan 28, Buttler 4) Pishoo from Bishoo, as he starts the over with a half-tracker that Morgan clubs away to square leg. Given Morgan’s issues outside off stump, you’d think maybe going around the wicket and threatening both edges of the bat would tie him down.

22nd over: England 98-3 (Morgan 22, Buttler 2) Billings goes and Buttler comes in, ahead of Ben Stokes. Smart move from England. This pitch needs a bit of getting used to, so why not send in your most destructive batsman in early to allow him ample time to build.

Oh Sam. Having done the hard work, Billings tries and fails to beat the man at midwicket. It was well struck, but just too close to Brathwaite’s bucket-hands.

21st over: England 94-2 (Billings 51, Morgan 21) Well batted, Sam. Scratchy to start off, starved of the strike inside the first 10 overs, but he has caught up superbly well to bring up that half-century – his 2nd in ODIs – off just 53 balls. Devendra Bishoo is the new bowler and he’s causing both a bit of discomfort. Morgan tries to hit a delivery out of the island but is beaten between bat and pad with a sharp bit of spin.

20th over: England 90-2 (Billings 49, Morgan 21) Sound the alarm – Morgan’s finally got hold of one. Nurse drops short and, with mid off up in the circle, the left-hander moves back and clubs over the top for four.

This is boring. Should give the batsmen bigger bats imo.

19th over: England 83-2 (Billings 48, Morgan 16) Slower ball from Brathwaite and Billings muscles it down the ground for four. Morgan tries to get in on the act but falls victim to the slow outfield and has to run three when he thinks he has four. That brings up the fifty partnership between these two, from 68 balls. Billings very much the dominant partner.

Billings played and missed 4 of his first 9 balls. Since then, he has put on bat on ball to every delivery he's faced #WIvENG

18th over: England 73-2 (Billings 42, Morgan 12) The torment goes on for Morgan as, first ball, he watches on as Nurse bowls a pie that Billings slaps to square leg for four. What he wouldn’t give for that kind of freebie.

17th over: England 66-2 (Billings 36, Morgan 11) Brathwaite continues after drinks, as Morgan tries to untangle himself from this web of his own making. A couple of the penultimate ball takes him into double figures.

16th over: England 63-2 (Billings 35, Morgan 9) Both these batsmen aren’t keen on hitting Nurse down the ground, which makes sense given how up-and-down the pitch is. Instead, they’re getting cute and hitting behind the wicket. Billings gets away with a reverse sweep which nearly clips onto his stumps... drinks.

15th over: England 59-2 (Billings 32, Morgan 8) Like Billings a few overs ago, Morgan is battling. He’s currently eight from 27 balls. Lancashire fan Phil Swayer emails in, regarding my thoughts earlier on that a fair few county players will be getting their first caps this summer, as England look to manage a heavy workload: “I fear the county raiding that may take place this year. As well as young Haseeb Hameed, who I fear will only be making the odd guest appearance for Lancashire for the next 15 years, Liam Livingstone appears to be in decent early season form for the Lions, with centuries in each innings in the last test against Sri Lanka A. And Lanky really, really, really don’t need their batting weakening any further.” Thank god you’ve signed 42-year-old Shiv Chanderpaul!

14th over: England 57-2 (Billings 31, Morgan 7) Nurse isn’t getting much from the pitch – or himself, truth be told – and Billings reverse sweeps him twice in succession for two boundaries through fine leg. England take 11 from the over, as Billings looks to catch up to “balls faced”.

Nurse getting the treatment

(plenty more where that came from)

13th over: England 46-2 (Billings 21, Morgan 6) It’s taken him some time, but it looks like Billings has got the measure of this pitch. The tell is a classy flick through midwicket that is more timing than force, which races away to the boundary.

12th over: England 41-2 (Billings 16, Morgan 6) Ashley Nurse, leading wicket-taker in West Indies’ domestic 50-over competition, comes into the attack. Like Gabriel, he looks like he can handle himself, but he deals in twirlers rather than grenades. Morgan is able to get under one, dabbing it around the corner for a couple.

11th over: England 38-2 (Billings 15, Morgan 4) SHELLED! Carlos Brathwaite’s first ball of the match is angled across Morgan, drawing him into a drive, that is edged to first slip. Kieran Powell watches it all the way and, even with the added distraction of keeper Shai Hope diving across him, should take the catch. Morgan tries to put him off his line by charging down the wicket and flailing about like a bolshy kid who has just realised he’s on TV, but misses, twice. Maiden.

10th over: England 38-2 (Billings 15, Morgan 4) A second boundary for Billings, as Gabriel drops short and is whipped over square leg for four. The outfield is pretty big, meaning most of the shots that have made it to the boundary keep the fielders interested. Not that one. Finally, a good strike from Billings.

9th over: England 34-2 (Billings 11, Morgan 4) Billings jumps across to the off side to manufacture a single to leg. Shot of the over goes to Morgan, though, who drives Holder on the up through cover for four.

8th over: England 29-2 (Billings 10, Morgan 0) The replays show that, while the ball did keep a touch low, it nipped in off the seam, too. Special bit of bowling from Gabriel, who has been very impressive. Eoin Morgan joins Billings. England on the ropes.

Oh wow... what a delivery that was! Might have kept low, but Gabriel rushes one right through Root. Stumps splattered. Goneski

7th over: England 28-1 (Billings 9 , Root 4) Four from the over, as Root finds three with a flick through midwicket before Billings pinches back the strike, almost running Root out in the process! It’s not been pretty or particularly dynamic from Billings, but he can show he’s got a different side to his game if he comes out of this with a score of note.

6th over: England 24-1 (Billings 8, Root 1) Finally, Billings feels substantial bat on ball, getting four down the ground with a thwack that’s more farm boy than Loughborough graduate. England’s new Test skipper Joe Root is out at number three.

No second chance for Roy! A straight ball, just on a length, doesn’t get above shin height and pins Roy right in front of all three. LBWs don’t get LBW-er.

5th over: England 16-0 (Roy 13, Billings 1) A maiden, but it could have been much better for the West Indies... Roy bunts the final ball back to Jason Holder, who reacts well in his follow-through but can’t cling on. Looks like Holder has hurt himself and will leave the field for treatment...

4th over: England 16-0 (Roy 13, Billings 1) George Rogers has some thoughts on Jonny Bairstow: “Is it fair to say that, given he’s not been a first choice member of the ODI squad and his ever presence in the Test team, he’s not had much of a chance to show what he can do in ODI over the last two years? My memory is more anecdote than fact, but when Jos Butler broke his finger and Bairstow was drafted in against New Zealand, he was the only English batsman to come away from that game with any credit. Scoring 83 not out from 60 balls. And if I’m not mistaken he was dropped the next time they played. Feels harsh to say he hasn’t scored a century since 2014 when the only thing which stopped him there was everyone else getting out. Personally I think he’s probably a better long term pick for the No.4 spot in the ODI squad than Morgan is. Even if Morgan has the more compelling ODI record.”

Oh I was merely presenting Bairstow’s stats rather than having a go at his record. And I think you’re right about his future potentially being at number four, especially as the man touted for that spot, Sam Billings, is currently labouring on one off nine deliveries...

3rd over: England 15-0 (Roy 12, Billings 1) “So, what did happen to the Windies over the past couple of decades?” asks Andrew Benton. “They were once unbeatable, but now all too beatable (hopefully).” The T20 side beg to differ. It is something they are keen to address. As Ali Martin has written this week, the WICB are looking to address the “player drain” from ODI and Test cricket. Back-to-back fours for Roy, both through midwicket, heavy on the wrists.

2nd over: England 5-0 (Roy 3, Billings 0) Two LBW shouts for Shannon Gabriel, against both openers. Both turned down, both yielding leg byes. Good pace from Gabriel, who looks like he spends his spare time ruling the underground boxing scene. One slight stray and Roy lands a jab through square leg for a couple. Billings is looking a bit tetchy....

1st over: England 1-0 (Roy 1, Billings 0) Jason Holder opens up from the Curtly Ambrose Stand end. As it happens, Curtly is perched inside as part of the BBC TMS team for this tour.

We may be broadcasting from the end bearing his name, but Sir Curtly still needed to have his pass checked! pic.twitter.com/n12Ez5j4Xa

Play due to start at 2pm, with no overs lost. Feel free to get in touch over email (vithushan.ehantharajah.casual@guardian.co.uk) and on Twitter (@Vitu_E).

A quick thank you to Steve Pye for sending me this piece on the time Mike Gatting got his nose rearranged by Malcolm Marshall...

Moisture in the air and in the pitch – Jason Holder, playing in his 50th ODI, wins the toss and decides to chase. “It feels like a fresh start,” says Holder. Eoin Morgan reckons it’ll be tricky early on and a bit tacky to start. He confirms that Jason Roy and Sam Billings will open the batting.

West Indies: E Lewis, KC Brathwaite, KOA Powell, SD Hope†, JN Mohammed, JL Carter, JO Holder*, CR Brathwaite, AR Nurse, D Bishoo, ST Gabriel

Will Macpherson brings news of another to depart South Africa for county cricket – 26 year-old quick, Marchant de Lange.

Seven recent internationals have already joined counties as Kolpaks this close season, but De Lange is not eligible to play as one, because he has played an insufficient amount of international cricket in the last two years. Kolpak registrations require the player to have played one Test match or 15 limited overs internationals in the 24 months before signing. In that period, De Lange has played just one ODI and one T20i.

Instead, pending the awarding of a visa and ECB approval, he will be registered as a local player as his wife has a British passport.

Related: Marchant de Lange to join Glamorgan in latest example of South African exodus

Shades of 2009, when an England Test was moved from this ground to the old Antigua Recreation Ground because of an unfit outfield.

Mike Selvey’s seethe at the time is worth revisiting

Related: Antigua pitch a disgrace to West Indies cricket

The latest rain has set us back a bit so the toss is going to be delayed. Perhaps of more concern is the bowler’s run-up. The groundstaff are using the roller to press dry soil into an area that looks badly affected by the weather. It seems that they were left open overnight which, given it has been raining on-and-off since 3am, is a tad concerning...

For those that don’t remember, the last time England were in the Caribbean for a one-off ODI series was back in 2014. Then, they used the tour as a warm-up for their T20 squad ahead of the World T20, which was held in Bangladesh. England didn’t make it out of the group, winning just one game and losing to the Netherlands in their final match. But the series did bring some joy to Michael Lumb. Making his debut in the first ODI, he rattled off 106 in a failed chase, opening the batting alongside Moeen Ali, also on debut. That World T20 would be the last time Lumb represented England.

Oh and it’s started raining again. While we wait for it to pass, let’s have some Rahkeem Cornwall...

Hello all – welcome to coverage of England’s opening ODI of the definitely-not-a-waste-of-time-series against West Indies. So begins a packed schedule that leads into two ODIs against Ireland, three versus South Africa and then theChampions Trophy. Four Tests against South Africa follow, as do another three against West Indies, a solitary T20 and five more ODIs, taking us to September 29th. All this, by the way, in the lead-up to an Ashes series. Don’t be surprised if the county cupboard is raided for some stand-ins for the last part of the summer. Might be worth keeping your phone on, too.

England have opted against changing things up for this tour: barring an injury to Alex Hales (who joined the touring party a few days ago), expect them to name a first-string batting line-up at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium. In lieu of mixing things up, it seems that Sam Billings will get the nod at the top of the order, despite Jonny Bairstow’s form. Bairstow’s an intriguing one. It has not really happened for him in white-ball cricket, yet. He has two List A hundreds, the last of which was scored in a series against New Zealand A, back in 2014. In fact, Bairstow has scored more List A runs for England representative sides – Lions or XIs – than he has for Yorkshire, from 12 fewer innings. Considering how he has turned around his Test career, you’d imagine he’s capable of addressing whatever it is that is holding him back in the other formats.

Wow, @benstokes38. Just Wow. pic.twitter.com/03pySEt1lh

Continue reading...

India bundled out for 189 as Nathan Lyon runs rampant – as it happened

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  • Nathan Lyon claims record-breaking 8-50 as India all out for 189
  • Australia 40-0 at stumps on first day of Bangalore Test

Australia have negotiated the final hour of the day, and will resume tomorrow 149 behind. Yes, you are reading that correctly if having gone out without your phone for a few hours. Australia rolled India for 189.

After tea, Nathan Lyon took five wickets after tea to rout the hosts for the third time in eight days. He finished with 8-for-50. They are the best figures for any foreign bowler in India. This is one of those days where the facts speak for themselves.

16th over (and Stumps): Australia 40-0 (Warner 23, Renshaw 15). Australia have won the last quarter hour here. Warner gets off strike at the first time of asking to point. He’s cutting well here. Renshaw has the skills for this task, the bat as straight as ever, the tourists to stumps without losing a wicket. Phew. Let me catch my breath and make something of that? Back in a moment.

Related: Nathan Lyon's record 8-50 decimates India on day one of Bangalore Test

15th over: Australia 39-0 (Warner 22, Renshaw 15). The wondrous left-arm ortho will get six balls at them here. Warner elects to use his feet to meet the flight, and push hard when Jadeja is quicker through the air. He then uses the crease to get off strike via a push to the sweeper at point. Renshaw has a couple to look at. Does well to the first, pushing behind point. So it’s Warner with one more to negotiate, and he again uses the crease with ease. This time for three. Five from it. Good over in the end. One to come. Ashwin will bowl it.

14th over: Australia 34-0 (Warner 18, Renshaw 14). Three to go. Warner gets a couple out to the on-side with no real risk. Less convincing off the inside edge. A single. Renshaw also gets one on the pads. Good batting, big boy. Then Warners the over down the ground for one. Much easier for the Australian pair in the shadow of stumps. And Jadeja is coming on!

13th over: Australia 29-0 (Warner 14, Renshaw 13). Umesh again. So, Virat seems determined to not give his best bowler a little trundle before stumps. Okay then. Warner grabs one off the hip early in the over before Renshaw does what he does best: leaves. Oh, and he’s beaten with the last ball of the over, ruining my narrative for the set. But we’ve come this far.

What has happened to Indian Cricket !!!!!! This is really affecting the start to my weekend .... #IndvAus

12th over: Australia 28-0 (Warner 13, Renshaw 13). Ashwin is the man most likely here. A Warner single puts the pressure on Renshaw. To each delivery he has a question to answer, each on the stumps. Except the one that beats him. Tough game.

Nathan Lyon's record 8-50 decimates India on day one of Bangalore Test https://t.co/Q85gIkE0uf

11th over: Australia 27-0 (Warner 12, Renshaw 13). Why is Umesh back? He struggled early, and follows Ishant - who bowled very nicely - from the far end. Anyway, he gets the gong, not Jadeja, with six overs to go. And to be fair, beats Renshaw from around the wicket to begin. So I’ll leave him alone. Then his a good length again, making a tough leave for the youngster. Four more leaves follow, but far more convincing. Make of that what you will this close to the end of play. Maiden.

10th over: Australia 27-0 (Warner 12, Renshaw 13). Ashwin doing his bit here. Plenty of flight to Warner, then pinging a couple in to Renshaw hoping to sneak another through to his pads. He’s good enough to get bat on it around the corner though. Warner back in defence for the last couple. Good contest from both ends at the moment.

Warner has come down the pitch 207 times in Test cricket, bringing him 289 runs at a strike rate of 131.61 and an average of 48.17. #IndvAus

9th over: Australia 25-0 (Warner 11, Renshaw 12). Ishant doing a lot right, and rewarded with another over. Warner again in defence, the Indian quick changing his line a bit to attack the Australian’s stumps as we near the end of day one. A push into the off-side gives Renshaw a couple to look at. The second of those, to end the over, beats him outside the off-stump! That’s very hard to execute, moving the ball away from a left-hander from around the wicket. Quality fast bowling from the veteran. Yeah, I know he’s only 28, but he’s a veteran.

Lyon tears India apart with eight-wicket haul: https://t.co/uRmsJi2j6l#INDvAUS

8th over: Australia 23-0 (Warner 10, Renshaw 11). Ashwin pins Renshaw back to begin, but he’s back on the front foot down the ground shortly thereafter. Good cricket. Warner would be mindful of stumps, and consequentially plays conservatively rather than chancing his hand. Experienced campaigner over here, he’ll want big Test runs here tomorrow.

7th over: Australia 22-0 (Warner 10, Renshaw 10). That is DROPPED! Warner gets lucky. Ishant misses out. Flays a drive to the gully region, Rahane dives but can’t take it. Not sure the dive was required? Doesn’t look great. Ishant to Renshaw now, and he’s nearly taken his off-stump leaving! Just over the top.

Plenty more where these are coming from:

Australia's spinners currently average 9.00 in this series. #IndvAus

6th over: Australia 19-0 (Warner 9, Renshaw 9). Virat is listening to me. Ashwin on from the Cathedral End in front of us here. And immediately gets the crowd up and about with two big LBW shouts against Renshaw. The first was just sliding. Some pressure on the captain to go upstairs, but finally he’s learned to keep it in the holster. Only taken five innings. The second is closer by the looks. But again the captain declines the chance for a second look. Renshaw survives.

Two Ashwin shouts already. Lock your kids in an attic, murder your boss, ignore all people in danger so you can WATCH THIS SESSION

5th over: Australia 18-0 (Warner 8, Renshaw 9). Ishant stays on. Wonder how long before Virat just goes for broke and chucks on his two twirlers? Best shot he’s got. Warner is defending, ducking, leaving, prodding. No real issues for him here. A single to the last ball ensures he’ll retain the strike.

4th over: Australia 17-0 (Warner 7, Renshaw 9). Renshaw into it, steering through the cordon for four. I saw steer, it was probably more an edge. But he did it so easily, I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt. Bouncer follows, of course. But Umesh isn’t on his game here, overstepping later in the over. It’s a bit frantic out there.

@collinsadam England spinner v India, 8 innings, 40/1859 ave 46.48. Aus 3 innings, 26/334, ave 12.85. Let's not forget to bag England...

3rd over: Australia 10-0 (Warner 6, Renshaw 4). Predictably eventful once Renshaw gives Warner the strike. He’s cut in half by Ishant. Under his bat, actually, watching it again.

Lyon took 7 for 40 from the 117 balls he landed on a good length. He over-pitched three times and dropped short twice. #IndvAus

2nd over: Australia 9-0 (Warner 6, Renshaw 3). Warner away. Short trash first up from Umesh, Warner doesn’t miss out. A steered single puts Renshaw on strike. Not mucking around, our D Warner. Renshaw takes three from the pads, the way he does so well. Essentially Al Cook mk II the big Queenslander.

I’m just going to keep posting these kinds of tweets for a while. FYI.

First time in 40 years that India have been bowled out for less than 200 in three consecutive innings at home - 105, 107 and 189. #IndvAus

1st over: Australia 1-0 (Warner 1, Renshaw 0). Righto. Australia bat now. Concentrate. Still cricket to be played. And play they will. Ishant Sharma has the ball, and Warner is away with a push. Renshaw is leaving close to his stumps, but he knows where they are. Lyon’s 8/50 also the sixth best figures of all-time for an Australian, in case you were wondering.

Best figures in India:

Murali 7-100 <<< Lyon 8-50
Warne 6-125 <<< O'Keefe 6-35#IndvAus

Australia have an hour to bat. Or 18 overs. I’m not entirely sure, but I’m in disbelief still. I never shy away from the fact that Nath was the club captain as a 21-year-old when I played at Wests UCCC in the ACT comp. So I never tire of his success. Such a wonderful story. And every time he overcomes an existential threat to his career - and there have been a few - it gets better.

Nathan Lyon, 8-for-50. Best ever figures in India by a non-Indian bowler. Extraordinary. #IndvAuspic.twitter.com/W1zEA7JkE2

FIRST BALL! LYON HAS 8-FOR-50! INDIA ARE ALL OUT FOR 189! The best figures by an Australian against India. Ever! It was the most straightforward catch, short-leg Handscomb having very little work to do. Bloody hell! What a world! And he’ll be on a hat-trick in the second dig.

What is Rahul thinking! Trying to hit Lyon off a length over his head, but nowhere near it. It has rolled off the back of the bat to mid-off to mid-off where Renshaw makes no mistake. An otherwise controlled innings comes to an end. And Lyon has 7-for-50! Party on, Nath!

71st over: India 189-8 (Rahul 90, Umesh 0). Rahul wheels away in frustration and/or injury after driving O’Keefe into the off-side after the tourist’s failed review. He has a go at a reverse sweep next, but misses. Back to the manual, he cuts one to point. A single is taken, meaning Umesh has a couple of balls to look at. Rahul is on 90. He does his job, forward in defence in a vaguely convincing fashion. India really need a Starc-like effort from Pune here to see them through to stumps. Unlikely as that is. Very long way to the finish line.

NOT OUT! Long way away from it. The parochial crowd like that, making plenty of noise for the first time in a while. Oh, the ball-tracking says it nearly hit middle stump. Survives that too.

We’re upstairs again! Smith isn’t worried about having a pop at this, O’Keefe wondering if Rahul top-edged a sweep. We’ll see...

70th over: India 188-8 (Rahul 89, Umesh 0). Worth noting in all that, Rahul again took a single first ball of the over. Don’t expect he will do that again if he fancies a ton, with only the fast bowlers left. Umesh is a legit no 11 coming in at no 10, so this might not take long with Lyon going as he is. For all that, he’s able to prod his way to safety through four deliveries to end the over. Lyon’s figures are 6-50 from 22 overs.

An inside edge saves Jadeja according to snicko. But it was taken easily by Smith at slip. So he’s gone! Lyon has six! What a performance. Around the wicket that just went on with the arm with plenty over overspin. He has done everything right today. What a performance.

Lyon shout for LBW! Umpire Llong says no. Smith says “nah, it is out, we’ll go upstairs.” Lyon likes it. Stand by!

69th over: India 187-7 (Rahul 88, Jadeja 3). Mitchell Starc back from the far end. He was getting some nice little reverse swing tail away from the right handers between lunch and tea. You could tell because he was hiding the ball in his right hand when running in until the delivery stride. He’s up to that again here to begin the over, bowling to lefty Jadeja. He’s really carving it back into the left-hander when he gets it right. But on the whole, not the most threatening set. He’ll be back to rectify that shortly.

Feelgood Australian-Indian story of the year pic.twitter.com/Yknk3yZhJ9

68th over: India 187-7 (Rahul 88, Jadeja 3). Lyon must have another coming soon. Absolutely all over Rahul, past his hip with a huge turning off-break. Beats everyone, including the ‘keeper and leg-slip. Singles for each to the sweepers releases the pressure somewhere.

Freddie means India here, but you can see his point.

67th over: India 181-7 (Rahul 87, Jadeja 2). Jadeja holding up his end of the bargain, racing through five dots to Jadeja after Rahul gives him the strike first ball. Lyon the man of the moment, after all.

66th over: India 180-7 (Rahul 86, Jadeja 2). It’s nearly two in two balls! Jadeja lets it go and it isn’t far from his stumps. By contrast, second ball he’s cutting from his stumps; the way he got out in the second dig last week. Gotta get them however you can. Lyon has an eight-fa on the shelf here. His eighth 5fa in Tests.

Gorgeous! Lyon has five! Another conventional offie’s wicket, holding its line a fraction after plenty of flight. Due to the turn he has routinely got today, the Indian ‘keeper had to play, but an edge was all he got. Smith did the rest. Easy as you like. 5-for-45. Five of the best.

65th over: India 177-6 (Rahul 85, Saha 1). O’Keefe has no concerns throwing it up here, giving it a chance to turn as it did for him from the other end before tea. Rahul’s most effective shot has been the tuck behind square, it gets him off strike early in the over. Saha is getting well forward to blunt any potential turn.

64th over: India 176-6 (Rahul 84, Saha 1). What is a good score here? A day ago, 500+ seemed the orthodoxy, given the track looked so flat. Not so much now. Lyon v Saha is a relatively tame affair, with the exception of the penultimate delivery that turns hard back into the right-hander when dropping the length back a bit. Maiden it is. Here are some highlights from earlier.

Aussie spin twins leave India stumped before tea: https://t.co/5lqxy2DfLr#INDvAUS

63rd over: India 176-6 (Rahul 84, Saha 1). Rahul then Saha take singles to long-off to begin the over. The former might need to get busy to reach three figures if his bowlers continue their form of last week. O’Keefe mixes it up to Rahul for the remainder of the over, but nothing coming from it for either.

62nd over: India 174-6 (Rahul 83, Saha 0). Saha comes forward to negotiate the only ball he has before Lyon’s over is done. Lyon came to this Test with a bowling average still in excess of 40 on this continent. Wonder what it’ll be by the end of today? Such a clutch performance.

Most wkts for Aus against India in Tests:

54 NATHAN LYON *
53 Brett Lee
52 R Benaud
51 G McGrath
50 M Johnson
47 G McKenzie#IndvAus

Great catch by Warner at leg-slip! Ashwin didn’t Lyon to get quite that much spin, pitching outside the off-stump it ripped across his body and collected the glove on the way through. Low take by Warner, after putting one down above his head of the same bowler earlier. But forget that, Australia in with a real show of bowling out India inside a day. What a brilliant performance from Nathan Lyon. He now has four.

61st over: India 172-5 (Rahul 82, Ashwin 6). Two around the corner for Rahul to O’Keefe’s first one after tea. He’s back to the end where he bowled his first couple of frugal spells. It is called the BELM End. They make big, industrial machinery and are owned by the government. There you go, I’ve taught you something. I personally like it better when there is a Football Stand End like at Northants. Anyway, I digress. SOK runs through this over in, I promise you, no more than 60 seconds. Rahul defending throughout.

Indian team a management seem to have read the pitch better than most pundits. Extra batter looking like a good ploy right now.

60th over: India 170-5 (Rahul 80, Ashwin 6). Pleased to see that Nathan “Nathan” Lyon is back into the attack, skipping away from us here at the Cathedral End. Singles to both Ashwin then KL Rahul gets the latter safely into the 80s. The tweaker gets one to spin back sharply to end the over.

Afternoon, everyone. I invested a fair bit of time in that middle session trying to convince colleagues here at Bangalore that the track was pretty good. On reflection, I was probably trying to convince myself. It isn’t Pune, but it shouldn’t be shooting through the way it did from O’Keefe’s end before tea.

In saying that, his dismissal of Nair on the cusp of the break was all to do with class. A lot was said about the left-armer’s overspin during the week. That it was his main weapon at Shield level, and would be his main device on a flatter track here. In other words, not to expect him to turn it much on a flat one.

59th over: India 168-5 (Rahul 79, Ashwin 5)

In the context of what is happening around him, this innings could be the making of Lokesh Rahul, who continues to soldier on despite the chaos around him and goes to tea undefeated on 79. If he and the bowlers can push this total up around 280, who knows what the pitch will do in the Australia’s first innings and beyond? With him now is Ravi Ashwin, who is a genuine all-rounder, and what a fascinating two sessions of cricket we’ve just seen.

58th over: India 160-5 (Rahul 76, Ashwin o)

Ravi Ashwin is the new man at the crease and there is plenty of spite in the contest right now; I think Rahul reckons O’Keefe was a little overzealous in his wickets celebration, and he might have a bit of a point. Distracted, O’Keefe fires four byes down the leg side and continues to jaw off at the Indian opener, who is not exactly a shrinking violet. Ashwin, meanwhile, looks like he’s batting with a piece of rope as the ball turns sharply. Might I forward the theory that this pitch is going to be a real handful for the Australians to bat on? There are shades of the first Test already as balls spit out of the foot marks.

What is going on? Now Karun Nair loses his head, charging down the pitch to O’Keefe and missing a well-flighted delivery. Matthew Wade performers a much cleaner job of the rest than he did before and Nair, who’d looked perfectly comfortable, is inexplicably gone. India are self-destructing here.

57th over: India 156-4 (Rahul 76, Karun Nair 26)

Such is his difficulty getting any assistance from the pitch, Starc now comes around the wicket to Karun Nair but offers up another full toss to be whipped through leg for a boundary. He won’t mind that as such. We all know he was going for the yorker. The bigger concern for Steve Smith is how well these batsmen are now turning the strike and refusing to allow the bowlers any rhythm.

56th over: India 148-4 (Rahul 73, Karun Nair 21)

Steve O’Keefe continues with his miserly straight ones, or not-so-straight in the case of his fourth, which is a little too short and offers Nair enough width to cut late and hard for a boundary. Nair is also beaten all ends up by one that does actually spin away from him, but it jagged so far off the surface it only really threatened Steve Smith at slip.

55th over: India 142-4 (Rahul 73, Karun Nair 15)

Starc is slanting it across the right-handed batsmen, and for now they’re disciplined enough to let them pass. Starc is not bringing it back in off the pitch, so perhaps he needs to straighten that line a little as he sets up for the yorker. We’re edging close to the tea break now and India can ill-afford the loss of another wicket.

54th over: India 139-4 (Rahul 73, Karun Nair 12)

A big section of Indian fans rise to their feet and start going wild here. Revealing a little of my current snack shortage, I will admit I assumed it was due to a tray of hot, delicious-looking samosas that were being carried into their vicinity, but they’re just trying to get on TV. Rahul and Nair continue to turn the strike in a manner no other pairing has managed today. But that matters not. I now just want a samosa.

53rd over: India 135-4 (Rahul 71, Karun Nair 10)

In a win for India, if we’re being realistic, Mitchell Starc returns now. Karun Nair is straight after him, neatly clipping four to fine leg and then getting unlucky when a straight drive cannons into his partner. Another thing I like about Nair: just a subtle hint of pudgy midriff. Gives us all hope. In most other senses he’s rock solid.

52nd over: India 131-4 (Rahul 71, Karun Nair 6)

At the risk of speaking too soon for no less than the fifth time today, Karun Nair actually does look totally comfortable at the crease, and far more convincing than Rahane before him. Let’s see if I’ve just consigned him to the gallows with that mozz.

51st over: India 128-4 (Rahul 70, Karun Nair 4)

Sunny Gavaskar’s criticisms of Lokesh Rahul aren’t quite as frequent now, because the Indian opener is the only who has truly dug in today. The Australians are all over Karun Nair and needling the rookie six at every opportunity, but if it’s making him uncomfortable it doesn’t show in his batting so far.

The home team's current predicament has the Chinnaswamy crowd a little pensive #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/pfY6KV8FwL

50th over: India 124-4 (Rahul 67, Karun Nair 3)

Rahul and Nair are turning the strike well enough at the start of this new partnership, and the new man gets forward confidently to the buoyant Lyon. He’s got a real battle on his hands in his return to the side.

49th over: India 121-4 (Rahul 65, Karun Nair 2)

“Last time I played this bloke...” we hear the abrasive Matthew Wade say behind the stumps as Nair faces up, but then the audio cuts out, so we don’t hear the end of what surely must have been a bon mot to rank with Jimmy Ormond’s take-down of Mark Waugh (“At least I’m the best player in my own family”). But Nair gets off the mark with two from the bowling of O’Keefe. “Every dog has their day when it comes to playing spin,” says Matthew Hayden. Perhaps a Border Collie would do better than India right now.

48th over: India 119-4 (Rahul 65, Karun Nair 0)

Karun Nair is the new man at the crease. He made 303 not out in his last Test knock. Even a third of that would do his team the world of good here, because Nathan Lyon is in the mood.

Ajinkya Rahane has gone mad! What was he thinking there? The Indian No5 charges halfway down the wicket in search of another hefty blow and misses it, and he’s so far down the pitch that not even a fumble and scramble from Matthew Wade behind the stumps can save him. He’s stumped by a mile. Lyon has another!

47th over: India 118-3 (Rahul 65, Rahane 17)

“Bowled!” bellows Brett Lee now, abandoning any sense of objectivity and openly barracking for a Steve O’Keefe wicket. He might burst through the glass if it happens. “Every ball is a brand new racing event,” adds Matthew Hayden. “You just have to let it go.” If you can translate that into English for me, answers on the back of an envelope and all that. O’Keefe has 0-17 off 11 overs.

46th over: India 117-3 (Rahul 65, Rahane 16)

Nathan Lyon continues to turn the ball sharply and with angular threat. Sitting in the sheds as that is happening is Virat Kohli. If looks could kill, he’d be on a murder spree right now after falling cheaply. It’s actually not Lyon’s best over, to be honest. Four off it.

45th over: India 113-3 (Rahul 62, Rahane 15)

Matthew Hayden is back, and he says the tension is now mounting, which is certainly true of my own state of mind at the very least. He reckons 350 is a par score in the first innings, and this like all of his utterings comes in the anguished cadence of a man dictating his bank pin code to mugger. Rahane meanwhile, burgles a boundary when he takes a full toss from O’Keefe and biffs it through mid-on. You don’t get many of those from SOK.

44th over: India 107-3 (Rahul 61, Rahane 9)

Oh dear. Australia have David Warner at leg slip for Rahul, who duly sweeps it straight at him, but he shells the tough chance, getting his hands up in time but failing to make it stick in his right hand. Lyon really should have a third wicket here. There will be talk that it was a very hard chance, but you should be taking those at Test level.

43rd over: India 106-3 (Rahul 61, Rahane 9)

O’Keefe is into his ninth over now and with another maiden, he’s only conceded 10 runs thusfar. It’s really applying the squeeze at one end, and very sound partnership bowling. Meanwhile, I need an answer to the below:

I missed the end of that, but did Clarke just say Wade's daughter was watching her dad "do his business behind the stumps"? Brilliant if so.

42nd over: India 106-3 (Rahul 61, Rahane 9)

It’s an in-out field for Lyon, Michael Clarke points out, which genuinely is the kind of thing a special comments man should be telling you about. The Australian fieldsmen are all in catching positions, either in the deep or in close. Owing to that, Rahul is keeping it on the deck, where you can’t get caught. It’s a maiden over for Lyon.

41st over: India 106-3 (Rahul 61, Rahane 9)

Twin spin? Probably. O’Keefe comes back now to replace Hazlewood, and Rahane turns him for a single. I’ll be honest: I’d like for Rahane to make some runs here because he’s a glorious player to watch when he finds his groove.

40th over: India 105-3 (Rahul 61, Rahane 8)

India pass the hundred mark now but Nathan Lyon has both batsmen in a bit of bother here, and is producing a quite magnificent spell of spin bowling. Sunil Gavaskar is calling it “brilliant”, and he’s not a man given to undue praise for Australians. Right as I type that, Rahane pitter-patters down the track like Fred Astaire and hoists the spinner over cow for a boundary. Good one Sunny.

39th over: India 99-3 (Rahul 60, Rahane 3)

“They’re better than what they’re playing like at the moment,” is Michael Clarke’s appraisal of India, and there is probably some truth to that. Virat Kohli can’t keep getting out cheaply, for one. Lokesh Rahul, meanwhile, takes a ball that Hazlewood angles in to him and quite deliberately opens the face to edge it through gully for four. Earlier Clarke was begging the Indian opener to turn the strike more often, and here he does so, sort of: a single from the final ball.

I thought @NathLyon421 bowled really well in Pune but he has been even better today. Absolutely brilliant.

38th over: India 94-3 (Rahul 55, Rahane 3)

Another biiiiiig appeal from Lyon, who draws Rahane a long way forward and jags one back into his front pad, but when Umpire Llong turns it down it is the bowler himself who talks Steve Smith out of a review. The Australians are appealing like hyenas at the moment, I must tell you for the sake of balance. Calm down gents.

37th over: India 93-3 (Rahul 54, Rahane 3)

Rahul gets a single to mid-off at the half-way mark of this Hazlewood over, but there’s nowt else on offer for the batsmen as the burly paceman does his thing. I know I’ve said it before, but he does present a challenge to the OBOer: how to explain all those dot balls in compelling terms without lying a little? Michael Clarke has replaced Matthew Hayden now, so I’ll see what gems he’s got for us.

36th over: India 92-3 (Rahul 53, Rahane 3)

More trouble behind the sight screen now, as people wander around in front of it for reasons unknown. Rahane needs as few distractions as possible right now. Anil Kumble said before the Test that he’s not playing for his spot, but there is plenty of pressure from the rest of the country nonetheless.

35th over: India 91-3 (Rahul 53, Rahane 3)

Josh Hazlewood is back to replace Starc, and we’re faced again with the possibility of a quite strange Indian collapse. This pair at the crease are handy, of course, and so is Karun Nair, but it fell away badly after that in Pune and there will be some nervous bowlers in the Indian change room right now. Hazlewood’s over is tidy but Rahane looks comfortable.

34th over: India 89-3 (Rahul 52, Rahane 1)

Overthrows to finish the over! It’s all happening. Out-of-form Ajinkya Rahane is off the mark and Nathan Lyon is a genius. He’s now removed Virat Kohli five times in Tests, drawing him level with Jimmy Anderson for that honour.

Kohli departs! Sensational stuff from Nathan Lyon. That thing I said about taking him off? Clearly I was kidding. Here he has the Indian maestro shuffling across the crease in front of his stumps but Kohli inexplicably leaves it. It pitched outside the line of off stump and spun in at a decent rate but with no shot offered and contact coming in line with middle stump, it’s about as out as you can get. Remarkable! Nathan Lyon has done it again. Three balls earlier Kohli hit a sublime cover drive for four. Now he looks a chump.

Holy moly. This looked out, and Nigel Llong gave it, but we shall soon see.

33rd over: India 84-2 (Rahul 52, Kohli 8)

Mindsets are art forms, Matthew Hayden tells us now. If that is true, mine whilst listening to this commentary is one of the paintings Gerhard Richter hated so much he burned it to a crisp. Mitchell Starc is still chugging in, but there is no masterpiece in this over.

32nd over: India 82-2 (Rahul 51, Kohli 7)

With a flick to the leg side Lokesh Rahul now brings up his half-century from 105 deliveries. He’s hit eight boundaries so far, and been prepared to bide his time to hit them. Both he and Kohli are handling Lyon very well now. Might be time for the old switcheroo to bring Steve O’Keefe back.

31st over: India 79-2 (Rahul 49, Kohli 6)

I know I shouldn’t dwell on the commentary, dear readers, but there is something utterly maddening about listening to Matthew Hayden commentate a cricket game. It makes you wish you were reading one of his cookbooks. Throw Brett Lee into the mix and you start hoping for a padded cell. Virat Kohli, meanwhile, presses forward to Starc’s final delivery of the over and lathers a quite sublime cover drive to the fence. This is going to be fun.

30th over: India 75-2 (Rahul 49, Kohli 2)

Kohli strokes a single off Lyon to get off the mark and his most obsessive fans are almost fainting at the sheer magnificence of it all. “There is a crush of humanity in this country,” says Matthew Hayden, which is a worrying way to start a sentence. Fear not, he adds that this is “infectious”. He’s off on one. Lyon, on the other hand, is not looking quite as threatening as before lunch, but the stakes and atmosphere are both slightly different now.

29th over: India 72-2 (Rahul 48, Kohli o)

As Mitchell Starc returns, and the hostilities resume, the presence of Matthew Hayden and Brett Lee in the StarSports commentary box means that the conversation immediately turns to ... curry. We wouldn’t stoop to such levels of content-padding on the OBO, but if you’re interested I’ve had to make do with some wasabi peas and a can of Pepsi Max: the choice of absolutely no generation. Starc bowls a maiden. He’s probably just wolfed down a bowl of chia seeds and kale.

28th over: India 72-2 (Rahul 48, Kohli o)

After a predictably rowdy reception from the Bangalore crowd, Virat Kohli glides out to the crease and faces up to Nathan Lyon, who claims an inside edge with the final ball of his over from before lunch. Tense.

Not the greatest omen: Fox Sports are currently playing the Laxman-Dravid mega-partnership of 2001. Why? Whyyyyyyy? Fans of Michael Slater should look away now. In other news, much of India is about to grind to a halt as Virat Kohli arrives at the crease to bat. We’re a few minutes away from the second session on day one.

But...a word of warning

You can never get too far ahead of yourself on Indian tours.

India 2-72 at lunch. Last time they batted first in Test here v Pak in 2007 they ended 1st session 4-65 - and went on to make 626 #INDvAUS

Che Pujara is practically Nathan Lyon’s bunny

Lyon has now dismissed Pujara five times in Test cricket. Pujara's average against Lyon is just 28.60. #IndvAus

Nathan Lyon, take a bow

Lyon this session

Incredible grouping. Varied pace. Took wicket. pic.twitter.com/5Z61ckD9iN

That is a real drag for Pujara, but he won’t be back after lunch as both sides now file off the ground. He goes for 17 and his side is 72-2, with Lokesh Rahul undefeated on 48 and Virat Kohli due in. Nathan Lyon gets the breakthrough to go with Mitch Starc’s early dismissal of Abhinav Mukund.

Nathan Lyon strikes! Oh dear, that is a disaster for Che Pujara, who was shielding his partner from the strike brilliantly in the closing stages of the session but from Nathan Lyon’s penultimate delivery, gets an inside edge onto his leg and can’t do anything to stop Peter Handscomb swooping on it at short leg. Perhaps he didn’t deserve that, but Lyon is rewarded for a very handy spell of bowling and gets a crucial wicket for his side.

27th over: India 72-1 (Rahul 48, Pujara 17)

The highlight of this over is a slow-motion, side-on replay of Che Pujara’s forward defence to Mitchell Starc. It showcases how the Indian batsman can make even the most express pace look pedestrian, playing it late and comfortably. I wish I could do a single thing as well as that. Blimey. He also glances one down to fine leg off the last ball of the over to retain the strike. I wouldn’t bet against that being an attempt to save impetuous Lokesh Rahul from himself in what might be the final over of the session.

26th over: India 71-1 (Rahul 48, Pujara 16)

Pujara is on power-saving mode now, happy to play back and straight if Lyon is going to continue to look for big spin. There is nobody on the 45 so both batsmen are also happy to just flick it into that region when things get awkward, so Smith brings in a leg slip after the horse has bolted. There has been a bit of that today.

25th over: India 68-1 (Rahul 47, Pujara 14)

Sunil Gavaskar is talking Lokesh Rahul down a bit here, but he’s done pretty well so far this morning. With a little under 15 minutes until the break he’s moving closer to a half-century and weathered a few probing spells. Full tosses help, too. Starc gives him one off the final delivery here and it’s dispatched for a boundary.

24th over: India 64-1 (Rahul 43, Pujara 14)

Lyon has a deep mid-wicket and long-on in place for Pujara, which seems ludicrously optimistic at this juncture. He’s really given no indication he’d like to start lofting them towards the stands. With some sharp turn from the off-spinner Pujara turns a lovely glance down to fine leg for one. Lyon is very unlucky a delivery later when a fuller one stays low and beats the outside edge, the stumps, and wicket-keeper Matthew Wade to dribble away for four byes. Wade might not want to look at that replay.

23rd over: India 58-1 (Rahul 42, Pujara 13)

Mitchell Starc is the only wicket-taker so far in the first session and he returns now for one last burst before lunch. He’s got a slip and two gullies for Rahul but no short leg or leg gully, which is proven as silly as suspected when Rahul bunts a short one into that region. What is Steve Smith not seeing her? Rahul has another stroke of luck when he lazily drives at a wide one outside off and the ensuing inside edge hits his pad and not the stumps. Maiden. Good one.

22nd over: India 58-1 (Rahul 42, Pujara 13)

Who needs fortune cookies when you’ve got me, eh? Nathan Lyon does indeed appear now to replace Steve O’Keefe, and immediately there is sharper turn and bounce. In saying that, bounce and turn aren’t much god when they’re angling down leg side and allow Lokesh Rahul to paddle one over fine leg for four. Matthew Wade’s first ten cries of “Niiice Gary” ring out across the world, which is a fair effort considering there are only six balls in the over. Lyon finishes it with an LBW shout, but he’s dreamin’.

21st over: India 52-1 (Rahul 38, Pujara 11)

What would Mitchell Marsh’s bowling be if it was a band? Badfinger? Snow Patrol? Ben & Jason? I can’t get as excited about it as Rod Marsh used to, I’ll say that. At least it’s normally tight. He’s stump-to-stump again here but Rahul looks determined to see this through until lunch.

Pujara has come down the pitch 432 times in his Test career bringing him 370 runs and he has only been dismissed twice. #IndvAus

20th over: India 51-1 (Rahul 38, Pujara 11)

O’Keefe continues with his accurate straight ones, but the Indians are no longer jumping at shadows when the spinner wheels away, and it might be time to bring Nathan Lyon on in his place I reckon. We’re half an hour from lunch and it’s probably worth a try for something different.

19th over: India 49-1 (Rahul 37, Pujara 10)

Mitch Marsh appears now for his first bowl of the game, and he gets some awkward bounce sending it down to Lokesh Rahul. At least with his first ball. The rest of it is pretty pedestrian, but he’ll look to hassle and nag them into an error.

18th over: India 48-1 (Rahul 36, Pujara 10)

This will mean nothing to non-Australian readers (though I suppose you can probably watch on YouTube, eventually), but on tonight’s ‘Cricket Legends’ episode on Fox, the Australian cricket journalist Mike Coward is the guest. That should be a beauty. Coward’s book ‘Cricket Beyond the Bazaar’ – about Australia’s triumphs and disasters touring India and Pakistan – is a classic. Maiden for Steve O’Keefe.

17th over: India 48-1 (Rahul 36, Pujara 10)

Explaining that Handscomb drop, Matthew Hayden ponders whether “the gods” are on Lokesh Rahul’s side today. The half-volley gods certainly are for this Indian pair. Again Hazlewood over-pitches and this time Pujara cashes in, flicking him for a quite casual boundary. Another is squirted through point by Rahul. India were right up against it half an hour ago. Now they’re profiting from their resilience.

16th over: India 38-1 (Rahul 31, Pujara 5)

At the start of the over the biggest risk of a wicket right appears to be a run-out, as both batsmen have a moment of hesitancy when there is a clear single, but then Peter Handscomb drops Rahul at short cover and in bizarre scenes; he hadn’t taken off the helmet he was wearing at silly point. Did it make a difference? Maybe. He dived to his left and got a hand to the drive, but it didn’t stick.

Aussies looking for wicket No.2 #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/8l1IovZ3HP

15th over: India 34-1 (Rahul 29, Pujara 3)

I’ve been focusing on the cricket so far, but it bears mentioning that either side of this pitch, the square has been turned into a bizarre, eye-gashing grid system. Why? I’ll try and find out, but it’s not a pretty sight. You could build a wall in the middle and play Battleship on it. Anyway, again Rahul has pounced from the last delivery of the over when Hazlewood over-pitches and gets driven down the ground.

14th over: India 29-1 (Rahul 25, Pujara 2)

Pujara gets his first single in a while to rotate the strike, glancing down to the 45 to pick up one, but both batsmen are still content to let O’Keefe establish his own rhythm as drinks approach. I can’t help but feel as though some of their predecessors might have gone on the attack by now.

13th over: India 28-1 (Rahul 25, Pujara 1)

The home crowd has had so little to cheer in the last half-hour they go absolutely bonkers here when Rahul gently clips two runs through mid-wicket when Hazlewood strays onto his pads. He’s a very neat and organised player, Rahul, but it’s a wonder Australia didn’t further explore the idea of roughing him up with the short ball. Against Starc he looked particularly susceptible. He deals far better with half-volleys, of that I’m sure. Hazlewood offers one up to finish the over and Rahul smokes it between point and cover to get four.

12th over: India 21-1 (Rahul 19, Pujara 1)

He isn’t spinning it to a degree that can be picked up by current camera technology, but Steve O’Keefe is angling and flighting the ball well and has a throaty appeal for leg before against Rahul to start this over. Had it turned, Rahul might have been in trouble, but it was likely sliding down leg and the Aussies decide not to review Nigel Llong’s not out verdict.

11th over: India 21-1 (Rahul 19, Pujara 1)

Starc has a rest after his first five-over spell, and Josh Hazlewood returns for another. The right-armer has changed ends but not his approach; to Pujara he’s angling it in towards middle stump and looking for the LBW. Pujara drives slightly impatiently towards cover but can’t pick the gap to Peter Handscomb’s right. At the end of the over Pujara calls for new gloves. He can’t buy a run, but it’s sweaty work all the same.

10th over: India 20-1 (Rahul 18, Pujara 1)

O’Keefe keeps going at Che Pujara, who is perhaps a little deferential in this over. Might India end up playing the reputation the left-armer established in the first Test, rather than the actual ball? We’re set for a nice little spell here to find out.

9th over: India 20-1 (Rahul 18, Pujara 1)

Starc continues to search for that toe-crushing yorker, which means he’s sending down the occasional full toss, but he’s never less than a threat. He sends one across towards first slip with Lokesh Rahul on strike, and though the batsman leaves it easily enough, Starc shakes his head at him as though he’s just been beaten all end’s up. “He’s such a lovely guy off the field,” Brett Lee says of Starc. More of those insights as they’re at hand.

8th over: India 20-1 (Rahul 18, Pujara 1)

Spin time! Hazlewood cools his jets a while and Pune Test hero Steve O’Keefe comes into the attack for his first bowl of the game. His Test figures leading into this encounter: 5 Tests, 26 wickets at 20.34. He’s wheeling away to Che Pujara first up, and the Indian No3 gets after him immediately, driving twice to cover and getting off the mark with the second, which brings a single. Lokesh Rahul is not quite as convincing when he skips down the track and flicks towards leg. We could have a nice little battle here.

7th over: India 18-1 (Rahul 17, Pujara 0)

Starc slings a rising bouncer down the leg side and though it draws no comment from the commentators, Matthew Wade does a helluva good job to dive to his left and save it. It was fizzing away for a certain boundary otherwise. A leg bye brings the first run not belonging to Lokesh Rahul, and Starc goes after the latter with the old one-two of a bouncer and a yorker. Rahul gets an inside edge from the latter and it trickles through mid-wicket for a couple. He was biffing them through cover in the first over. It’s a little harder graft now.

6th over: India 15-1 (Rahul 15, Pujara 0)

Hazlewood is wobbling it down at decent pace too, but zeroes in on Rahul’s front pad, applying his pressure with a monotonous, stump-to-stump line. It’s another maiden, and with that, it’s time to bask in some sweet memories...

First mention of Warnie’s mural for the Test. Here it is (with names provided) for those who haven’t seen it pic.twitter.com/uweQ6wRCt7

5th over: India 15-1 (Rahul 15, Pujara 0)

Starc chooses to slide them across Pujara to start with, probing away outside off stump and trying to draw him forward to glide. There are two slips and a short leg in place, and Pujara is his normal unflappable self, squinting into the sun between deliveries, then dropping his wrists and swaying out of the way when the short one comes through at 147kmph.

4th over: India 15-1 (Rahul 15, Pujara 0)

No third slip for Halzewood either, though he might not have saved a boundary that flies through that region from Rahul’s outside edge. That is the only damage for the over in what is looking like a testing little session for both batsmen. Both bowlers have hit a decent early rhythm and Starc’s yorker is working. That’s never fun to face.

3rd over: India 11-1 (Rahul 11, Pujara 0)

Cheteshwar Pujara is the new man at the crease now. He has one delivery to face and keeps out a yorker. Of interest before Starc’s wicket: only seven balls into his spell he lost his third slip, who moved across to extra cover. A tad pessimistic in the first 15 minutes of play? Either way, Rahul really doesn’t look comfortable when it’s short and angled at him from over the wicket. I’d be getting a leg gully in position pronto, personally.

Mukund departs! Oh dear, that’s an absolute shocker. It might have been heading marginally down leg, but being that it was a full toss from Starc and struck the opener’s front pad on the full, the umpire had no choice. Mukund consults with his partner, but he probably knows the answer before it’s given. Off he trudges for a duck in his first Test in six years. Sad!

2nd over: India 10-0 (Rahul 10, Mukund 0)

Abhinav Mukund is a little more circumspect than his partner as Josh Hazlewood wheels away. In ten Test innings so far the Indian opener has managed only the single half-century, and the last of those appearances was in August 2011, so he’ll be desperate to impress.

1st over: India 10-0 (Rahul 10, Mukund 0)

Mitchell Starc grabs the new ball for the Australians, stops at the end of his run-up and arcs his back into one final stretch to loosen up. Richard Illlingworth and Nigel Llong are our umpires for this game and they’re called into action before has been bowled, because some buffoon is moving around beside the sight screen.

Stat attack! This is a bit mad, really. But India have never been big on sticking with an opening combination for long, with so many versatile batsmen sliding around the order. News at the ground: the anthems are grinding away now, and we’ll have play in a couple of minutes.

Mukund and Rahul will be India's eighth different opening pair in the last 12 months #IndvAus

The bright side for Australia bowling first here is that Starc, Hazlewood and Marsh couldn't really be much fresher. #INDvAUS

Ahh, the soothing sight of Ryan Harris

There is something incredibly calming about the former Australian paceman’s presence, though sadly he won’t be opening the bowling today. He’s sitting in the Fox Sports studio and says fast bowlers get very excited indeed by the sight of “live grass” on the pitch, which is what we’ve got here. Whatever floats your boat. I sense that things will get bleak for the Aussies if they can’t strike while the ball is still moving around a bit.

“It looks like a good track to bat on, so we’d like to put some big runs on the board.,” says Kohli. “The guys are going to come out with much more intent in this game.” Murali Vijay is out with injury and Abhinav Mukund comes in for him, while spinner Jayant Yadav is dropped for an extra batsman: Karun Nair, the 25-year-old who made 303 not out in his last Test innings. That’s a fairly handy “in”.

“It’s going to be important to score big first innings runs,” says Steve Smith, who adds that early wickets are crucial. Stuff we don’t already know is thin on the ground. He’s not giving much away, but clearly would have preferred to bat.

Preamble

Hello all and welcome to day one of the second Test in Bangalore, in which Australia will be looking to extend their dominance of Pune but are likely to face a much sterner challenge from the chastened home side. Russell Jackson here to take you through the first two sessions, and Adam Collins will make an appearance later with the old ball.

Russell will be here shortly. In the meantime, check out Adam Collins’ take on what Australia is likely to face after India’s humbling loss in Pune.

Related: Australia end wait for win in India as Steve Smith backs his words with action | Adam Collins

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Australia nudge ahead of India in Bangalore Test - as it happened

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  • Australia finish day two at 237-6, 48 runs ahead of India’s first innings
  • Matt Renshaw (60) and Shaun Marsh (66) the stars for tourists

So Australia’s day, though perhaps not by a huge margin, and a victory for those who love struggling, attritional Test cricket. India fought hard, didn’t let the scoring get out of control, but couldn’t snap up wickets quickly enough.

The visiting side came into today with 40 on the board and no wickets down. Warner and Renshaw pushed on to another 50 opening stand before the more dashing of the pair was dismissed for 33, bowler by an Ashwin pearler. Smith played a long innings for not many, gone just before lunch, then Renshaw and Shaun Marsh dug in for another 50 stand.

106th over: Australia 237-6 (Wade 25, Starc 14)

Starc to face the last over. Ashwin bowling. And Starc enjoys pretending to be a top-order batsman, kicking balls away outside leg, leaving them outside off. For all his tricks, Ashwin can’t find a way through, and the day ends with a solid defensive push of the bat, something which sums up India’s inability to get past Australia today. Six wickets, yes, but the visiting team with the chance to add to a lead that while currently modest, could still be crucial on this pitch.

105th over: Australia 237-6 (Wade 25, Starc 14)

Second-last over. India can’t wait for this to be done. Umesh to bowl it. Wade gets a run with a glide, Starc goes to a similar area via the edge. Breezily 14 from 13 balls after everyone else today struggled to get close to a strike rate of 50.

104th over: Australia 235-6 (Wade 24, Starc 13)

The specialist back on for the part-timer, Ashwin with the ball. Wade defends five balls, negotiates five safely, then the last one kicks up at him and he gloves it solidly away. Punches it, in fact. And it flies just wide of Rahane in at short mid-off. The batsmen pinch a run.

103rd over: Australia 234-6 (Wade 23, Starc 13)

This is the damage Starc can do when he comes out late. Gets a short ball fomr Yadav, pulls it four four. Then drives a couple of runs over cover. Smack, smack. The lead out to 45.

102nd over: Australia 228-6 (Wade 23, Starc 7)

Karun Nair on for a trundle, as the lead bowlers are cooked, and given India left out the extra bowler in Jayant Yadav, they’re short of options. He bowls trash, some very wide stuff, but the boundary scored from him is trash too, Starc under-edging past the keeper.

101st over: Australia 221-6 (Wade 22, Starc 1)

And a drop! Umesh nearly had two, as Starc nicks his third ball wide of the keeper, and Saha gets the flap of the glove to it as he dives across.

He finally goes! Renshaw fell on 196 balls, Marsh goes from his 197th. He’s surely exhausted, but so must Umesh Yadav be, and finally the fast bowler gets some reward. Standard straight ball, Marsh flicks across the line and chips it straight to midwicket for a comfortable, Pietersen-versus-Siddle catch.

100th over: Australia 220-5 (S Marsh 66, Wade 22)

More ticking over, five singles from Jadeja.

99th over: Australia 215-5 (S Marsh 63, Wade 20)

Wade jams Umesh Yadav away for a single, Marsh glides another, and there’s a fifty partnership for this pair. Both subject to plenty of criticism, and this performance means a lot. The last wicket fell at 163. Both lefties find another single thanks to glides behind point. Ticking over a bit more now after some very slow and patient stuff.

Reverse view. What a ground. #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/fSirrb5Xm5

98th over: Australia 211-5 (S Marsh 61, Wade 18)

Jadeja back on for his 16th. Marsh plays a single off his pads without fuss. 60 on the board, there’s the distant spectre of what would be a career-defining hundred here. Wade tries to sweep, top edges that ball away for another streaky four! Well, he’s getting the results, I guess? Execution another story.

97th over: Australia 205-5 (S Marsh 60, Wade 13)

Shaun Marsh soaking up the vast bulk of the strike here. Leaves a couple of Ishant balls, then is hit in the ribs as he shapes for a pull but can’t time it. There’s yet another lbw appeal, Ishant over the wicket, but that was angling too far across the left-hander and would have been easily missing off stump.

96th over: Australia 204-5 (S Marsh 60, Wade 13)

Marsh edges Ashwin this over, not controlled, but has the presence of mind and the positivity to rush back for a second run even this late in the day, and dive into his ground. That’s commitment. Flicks a single next ball.

95th over: Australia 201-5 (S Marsh 57, Wade 13)

Shaun Marsh is a study in discipline today. He played well in Colombo, but I’d gauge this innings as happening in more testing conditions. He leaves the ball with precision through three Ishant deliveries, then when a short ball surprises him he keeps it down for a single.

94th over: Australia 200-5 (S Marsh 56, Wade 13)

Ashwin, getting loose as he tires, fires four byes down the leg side. The day grows late. And then comes the clincher. Another shocking review. Padded away by Wade. Ashwin thinks it caught some glove as it turned across the left-hander. The replay shows the ball hitting pad-flap, then leaping well over the gloves into Wade’s shoulder. Nowhere near. India, both reviews gone, and still five wickets to get. The 200 comes up with a Marsh single.

The evidence is back, and once again, Wade ain't gloved shit. #INDvAUS

93rd over: Australia 194-5 (S Marsh 55, Wade 12)

Edging up to drinks, and just a couple more runs from Ishant’s 21st over as Marsh plays a stylish cut shot away behind point. Once again looking in supreme control when he scores. And the patience - closing on 200 balls - has been exemplary.

92nd over: Australia 192-5 (S Marsh 53, Wade 12)

Ashwin going back to the approach that got him Warner’s wicket, with two lefties at the crease. Off spin, over the wicket, pitching outside leg and turning across. Marsh is using his feet with confidence now, though. Three singles from the over, several kicked away, Australia now in front.

91st over: Australia 189-5 (S Marsh 51, Wade 11)

Yadav has been so impressive. Still running in, belting the ball down, good pace, discipline outside the off stump. He beats Wade thoroughly from the third ball of the over, but it doesn’t take the edge. Wade jams a single thereafter, and Marsh levels the scores with a drive through cover. Australia still with five wickets in hand, but only the tail to come. This partnership is now worth 26 and growing in importance.

90th over: Australia 187-5 (S Marsh 50, Wade 10)

A casual bat-wave as Marsh drives Ashwin square for one. He’s been good. Plenty of luck with those close lbws, but he’s held his composure, and his actual run-scoring has looked quite comfortable, even if his defence has been tested plenty on a difficult pitch. Very important innings given the currently low team score. Wade sweeps another single.

89th over: Australia 185-5 (S Marsh 49, Wade 9)

Edged! Marsh is teasing the Indian bowling side now, as Australia grinds on towards India’s first innings score. Thick edge into the ground, and Kohli at slip slaps it away falling to his left. Marsh gets off strike next ball with a flick, and Wade blocks out the rest of the over.

88th over: Australia 184-5 (S Marsh 48, Wade 9)

It wasn’t under dispute, but India are the worst reviewing side imaginable. We’ve just passed the 80-over reset mark, there’s yet another appeal against Marsh, and they review even though Marsh smashed that Ashwin delivery about six inches laterally off the inside edge into his pad. Marsh is settling now, gets a single via a steady on-drive, another through cover, while Wade uses the main weapon he has chosen for this trip and gets his run via a sweep.

87th over: Australia 181-5 (S Marsh 46, Wade 8)

This pitch is becoming a minefield. A lead of 50 could be significant in the circumstances. This one from Umesh Yadav keeps very low, but somehow Marsh survives again as it misses his stumps. Only a isngle from the voer, cut from the last ball.

86th over: Australia 180-5 (S Marsh 45, Wade 8)

Another lbw reprieve for Marsh! And another tough moment for Sharma, this time his own fault because he has overstepped. Marsh looked pretty well done frmo that ball, it moved in towards him from around the wicket and hit him in front. but the heel was over the line at the bowler’s end. The batsmen scramble an extra run to make the tally two no-balls. And they collect three singles from the over, the lead is almost gone for India.

85th over: Australia 175-5 (S Marsh 44, Wade 6)

Double seam attack. What even is this? They haven’t taken the new ball yet either, in the 85th. Umesh Yadav, who was so good in the first Test. Draws a few leaves, then another good ball! Marsh given out lbw but reviews. Umesh around the wicket, angles a fast ball in, hits the front pad as Marsh tried to come across the line of the ball. Given by Umpire Illingworth, but the on-spec review strikes gold: the ball is found to be marginally striking the batsman outside the line of off, even though it was hitting half halfway up middle stump according to ball-tracking. I think those laws are garbage and that ball should be out. This ‘outside the line’ business is a hangover from the days of amateur and professionals. Who’s with me?

84th over: Australia 175-5 (S Marsh 44, Wade 6)

Edged this time, and four streaky runs for Wade. He’s a left-hander, and the tall right-armer Ishant is working him over form around the wicket. That ball moved away from this now crumbling pitch. It’s deteriorated even over the course of the day, from my vantage point. Edged just past Saha on the bounce. Then again! After leaving a couple, the next leaps at Wade, jabs into the outside edge, as he yanks his hand off the bat and the ball skews away on the bounce to slip. Gets him a single. Marsh serenely stuns the last ball into cover to take back the strike.

83rd over: Australia 169-5 (S Marsh 43, Wade 1)

Four! Not without risk. Marsh comes down the wicket and lofts Jadeja, but it only just carries the long-on, who is two third of the way back to the rope. That’s the first ball of the over, and Marsh goes defensive thereafter.

82nd over: Australia 165-5 (S Marsh 39, Wade 1)

Ishant Sharma has been good today. Very frugal, accurate. 25 runs from 17 overs. Make that 18. A maiden to Wade, working him around that off stump. Some blocks and leaves.

81st over: Australia 165-5 (S Marsh 39, Wade 1)

Jadeja to start up. A casual single for Senior Marsh to mid on. Matthew Wade comes on strike. Unloved, criticised, maligned. The urban ibis of Australian cricket, as per the cricket commentary I was listening to earlier. He does what the junior Marsh couldn’t, and gets off the mark. A swept single. Get ready for some one-sentence Jadeja overs.

Just by the way. This is some keraaaaazy stattology. Meg Lanning has just won a series decider against New Zealand with an unbeaten century, sure, that’s good. But think about this. She’s set the world record for most ODI hundreds in the women’s game - given women’s cricket has struggled to get huge numbers of games, that mark is 10. She’s the first into double figures. But what makes it really remarkable is the speed. Lanning has made her 10 hundreds in 57 games, but she too the record from England’s Charlotte Edwards, who made nine in 191 games. Think about it: 191 versus 57. Not far off a quarter as many matches. And an absurd rate on its own.

Related: Meg Lanning guides Australia to Rose Bowl series win over New Zealand

Goooooood gracious. Wickets from the last ball of sessions. Aren’t they great? I don’t mean those hokey fake ones where it falls from the fourth ball of the over and then they call a break. I mean the genuine last ball, x.5 overs down, one last opportunity for the bowler. And then. “Got him! The last ball of the day, can you believe that?” Those Bill Lawry words are burned in the memory, courtesy of whoever cut together that opening segment that ran on the TV for so many years. Ishant Sharma. Well.

Hello! Geoff here. Thanks Russell. Let’s play cricketball.

Well, that wasn’t ideal for Australia

But Ishant deserved that wicket, and replays reveal that Donald George Bradman himself probably wouldn’t have got bat on it. That’s it for me. Taking you through the rest of the day’s play is Geoffrey Lemon, who will be with you shortly.

WICKET! Mitch Marsh LBW Ishant Sharma 0 (Australia 163-5)

80th over: Australia 163-5 ( S Marsh 38)

79th over: Australia 162-4 ( S Marsh 37, M Marsh 0)

Nervy times for Mitch Marsh, who is now nine deliveries into his innings but yet to move off his duck. Let’s be honest: all of Australia is watching this. Poor bloke. Hopefully he gets some runs today for the sake of national harmony.

78th over: Australia 161-4 ( S Marsh 36, M Marsh 0)

I believe this is only the second time the Marsh brothers have batted together in Tests, so get all of your jokes in while it’s still possible. Are they the most unpopular Australian siblings since Shane and Bindi Paxton? Probably.

77th over: Australia 160-4 ( S Marsh 35, M Marsh 0)

A wicket-maiden for Jadeja, and we’ll have Marsh brothers batting at either end now. Gird up your loins, Australia.

Ashwin juggles a beauty! And Jadeja gets Handscomb! That was a tough chance to the right of Ashwin at mid-wicket, but with a dive and a bit of juggling as he hits the deck, the big all-rounder hangs onto it. With that, yet another wicket has fallen with a major break not far away.

76th over: Australia 160-3 ( Marsh 35, Handscomb 16)

The Australians might wish tea wasn’t so close at the moment, because Ravis Ashwin is really tiring. He sends down a very fatigued long hop to start this over and Marsh latches onto it perfectly, whip-cracking his cut through the field to pick up four. Ashwin ends the over scratching his head and a little peeved. He’s put in a fair old shift so far.

75th over: Australia 156-3 ( Marsh 31, Handscomb 16)

Jadeja is racing through his overs, but Peter Handscomb is pretty clear with his plan, which is a much more attacking one than we saw in Pune. Again he skips down the track to get to the pitch of the ball and flicks the spinner over mid-wicket for a boundary. It’s a bright start for the Victorian.

74th over: Australia 152-3 ( Marsh 31, Handscomb 12)

Bang! Peter Handcomb gets down the track to Ashwin, so that he’s right to the pitch of the ball, and deposits it over cow for a boundary. The horse has bolted, but Kohli and Ashwin immediately post a man back there. With that and three singles, it’s a profitable over for the Australians.

73rd over: Australia 145-3 ( Marsh 30, Handscomb 6)

Now Jadeja fires in a flatter one to Marsh, and that brings the short leg into play. Pujara, standing there, is soon diving to his left for a catch, but can’t quite get there. Marsh responds to the pressure by nudging one towards mid on and sprinting through for a single. An underrated virtue of his, that.

Renshaw averaging 165.25 (balls per dismissal) and 59.15 runs.
Bats time and makes runs. Pretty good, eh.#INDvsAUS

72nd over: Australia 143-3 ( Marsh 29, Handscomb 5)

Ashwin is coming around the wicket to Marsh, and close-ups of his deliveries reveal he’s trying to bring it in off the seam to the left-hander. He’s more conventional to Handscomb; over the wicket and turning it sharply towards off stump.

71st over: Australia 139-3 ( Marsh 28, Handscomb 2)

Handscomb is away with a single through cover, a run Kohli attempts to cut off in 1970s style, throwing his boot at it. It doesn’t work. Like Renshaw, something you can say of Handscomb is that he doesn’t look remotely overawed in what is a quite testing environment for a rookie Test player.

70th over: Australia 136-3 ( Marsh 27, Handscomb 0)

Ashwin gets the ball to rise up off the pitch like a cobra now, and Marsh does very well not to pat it into the hands of the man at silly point. The next curls past the outside edge, before Marsh settles himself with a rock solid forward defence. The crowd are really getting involved now, too. A tricky patch for the Australians.

69th over: Australia 136-3 ( Marsh 27, Handscomb 0)

Jadeja has a good look at Handscomb here, and India mustn’t have seen a lot of him because they continue to become excited by his unconventional and slightly ungainly defensive technique. In truth he’s a very capable players of spin bowling. He’s watchful in this over, and yet to get off the mark.

68th over: Australia 135-3 ( Marsh 26, Handscomb 0)

All of a sudden Ravi Ashwin has a little more spring in his step, as he was having absolutely no luck piercing Renshaw’s defence. Now he’ll have a right-hander to bowl to as well, though Marsh takes strike in this over and offers a straight bat throughout. It’s been tough work today, but India are still right in the contest here. If they can restrict Australia to 250, or a little less, and then put on 180 themselves, this pitch is going to be a nightmare in the fourth innings.

67th over: Australia 134-3 ( Marsh 25, Handscomb 0)

Peter Handscomb is the new man at the crease for Australia, and he’ll have about 40 minutes to contend with the Indian spinners before we head off for the tea break.

Jadeja does the trick again! Two deliveries after he’d skipped down the track and belted the first six of the innings, Renshaw ventures down again but misreads it, and with some smart work behind the stumps by Saha he’s on his way. The Australian opener is absolutely livid with himself, and turfs his gloves as he reaches the boundary. He should also feel proud of himself his 60 from 193 deliveries was a helluva knock given the stakes.

66th over: Australia 128-2 (Renshaw 54, Marsh 24)

At the risk of harping on the same point, this commentary is utterly maddening, but you need to have it on to get the audio from the ground. Is that a Faustian pact? “You can’t stand still otherwise you go backwards,” Hayden says now. I wish someone would roll his chair backwards a few metres.

65th over: Australia 123-2 (Renshaw 52, Marsh 22)

As if inspired by the conversation here, the Australians now start pushing those aforementioned singles. There is one here by Marsh off Jadeja, who fields off his own bowling by sprinting to cover and sliding, but can’t cut it off. It was at least a stylish dive. “The situation calls for a lot of game awareness,” says Matthew Hayden, just throwing a whole heap of words out in front of TV viewers and asking them to put them in whichever order they wish.

64th over: Australia 121-2 (Renshaw 51, Marsh 21)

Harking back to the Gervase Green email, I actually don’t mind this approach at all. For one thing, it’s a quite disorienting novelty compared to Australia’s gung-ho batting displays of failed Indian campaigns. It’s sort of working, isn’t it? My glass is half full for now.

63rd over: Australia 120-2 (Renshaw 51, Marsh 20)

Jadeja does indeed return now to replace Umesh, but the Australians handle him easily enough in his first over back. picking up a single apiece. “Hate to be a curmudgeon,” writes Gervase Greene, “but I do reflect on all those maidens bowled to Smith (and therefore Renshaw) that might have had two runs an over, or even a single.”

62nd over: Australia 118-2 (Renshaw 50, Marsh 19)

Ashwin has a wide slip, a short leg, and a quite deep leg gully as he wheels away to Marsh, who can tell from that configuration what he’s likely to receive. Should Ashwin not come around the wicket for a bit? He does turn one a mile in this over, but Marsh bats it down into the ground as it fizzes across towards the off stump. He’s been a diligent, determined batsman so far today.

61st over: Australia 118-2 (Renshaw 50, Marsh 19)

Further diminishing returns for Umesh Yadav, who keeps it tight in this over but still doesn’t look like breaking through, and Marsh casually flicks one off his pads to pick up three. Time for some Ravindra Jadeja? Probably. With that, we’ll have drinks.

60th over: Australia 115-2 (Renshaw 50, Marsh 16)

Renshaw is now dancing down the track and belting Ashwin for a boundary to cow corner! Sensational stuff from the rookie opener. He’s been going at a snail’s pace today, as the situation demands, but with that blow and two through mid wicket, he brings up a determined half-century from 183 deliveries. For four hours he’s resisted the best India has been able to throw at him. Take a bow, young man. This knock puts Australia in a very healthy position halfway through day two.

59th over: Australia 109-2 (Renshaw 44, Marsh 16)

Umesh is not quite nailing this like he did earlier in the day bowling to Smith, so the session is just fading a little as Marsh establishes himself. Umesh strays onto Marsh’s pads and he clips a couple of runs wide of mid-wicket. India have gone 17 overs without a wicket now.

58th over: Australia 107-2 (Renshaw 44, Marsh 14)

OK, my eyes are even worse than I suspected. Scrap what I said about Marsh missing that edge (though it did, to be fair). It might in fact have brushed Marsh’s thumb soon after it missed the edge, replays now reveal. That was the sound the Indians thought they’d heard. Maiden for Ashwin.

57th over: Australia 107-2 (Renshaw 44, Marsh 14)

Wriddhiman Saha is having a very taxing day at the office here, and it’s hard not to feel sorry for him. The spinners are turning it prodigiously, which is hard enough to deal with, but with the ball keeping low when the quicks are operating, he’s getting them on the bounce or around his ankles. Meanwhile, India have only one review remaining, and wisely they chose not to use it when Umesh thinks Marsh has got an outside edge to Saha. He missed it by the width of Merv Hughes’ moustache.

56th over: Australia 106-2 (Renshaw 43, Marsh 14)

Just a single to Renshaw from the Ashwin over, and when the Australian pair meet for their mid-pitch conference there is suddenly an air of command about their partnership. It now totals 24 runs from 15 overs. That is nothing to be sneezed at on a very tough day for batting.

55th over: Australia 105-2 (Renshaw 42, Marsh 14)

Umesh Yadav is back to replace Ishant, and fresh limbs means he’s getting his bouncers up that little bit higher, and Marsh almost nicks an attempted hook through to Saha. Umesh gets a little overzealous to that end, and when his third consecutive bumper just sits up in Marsh’s hitting zone, the Western Australian swivels into a pull shot and expertly dispatches it to the ropes. Marsh might have played himself in here.

54th over: Australia 101-2 (Renshaw 42, Marsh 10)

A boundary! Holy smokes, that came out of nowhere. Ashwin loops a very loose one down the leg side, and Marsh gets down on one knee to smother his sweep out to the fence at fine leg. There are four byes soon after to bring up Australia’s hundred, though you could hardly blame keeper Saha in this instance. With a single Marsh makes it nine for the over, which is a run glut compared to what we’ve seen in the rest of this second session.

53rd over: Australia 92-2 (Renshaw 42, Marsh 5)

Ishant has two standard slips, a leg slip and a short leg for Marsh, and even though he knows what line of attack to expect, the Australian cops one in the armpit when he gets his bat out the way of a bouncer. Ouch. Much like his father, he refuses to acknowledge the blow in any way. Tough. “I want to go into the brain of Matthew Hayden,” says Brett Lee, speaking on behalf of no other person on earth.

52nd over: Australia 91-2 (Renshaw 42, Marsh 4)

Marsh continues to pad up to Ashwin, or else gets back and across with a confident backward defence. From the final delivery of the over he pushes a single to wide mid-off. Ashwin has looked the goods all day, but somehow the Australians continue to blunt his impact.

51st over: Australia 90-2 (Renshaw 42, Marsh 3)

Ishant continues to Renshaw and though he’s still got the short leg in place, he poses an Umesh-like threat more than anything. Sooner or later one is going to keep so low that one of these left-handers can’t jam down his bat in time. Kohli brings in a leg gully, but Renshaw plays out a maiden without too many troubles. He’s 42 from 163 deliveries now, the 20-year-old. He’s singlehandedly distorting all those nonsense stats about the attention spans of millennials.

50th over: Australia 90-2 (Renshaw 42, Marsh 3)

“They’re whittling it away,” is Matthew Hayden’s take on Australia’s last few overs, in which they haven’t scored a run. Eventually Renshaw gets one off Ashwin, but it’s hard yakka. Shaun Marsh is in all sorts of bother against Ashwin, and has to do three things to stop one delivery; he shapes to pad up, changes his mind and blocks it, then has to kick it away from the stumps when it nearly rolls back to bowl him.

49th over: Australia 89-2 (Renshaw 41, Marsh 3)

Poor Ishant could do with a little more assistance out of this pitch as he fires down short ones to Shaun Marsh. It’s like trying to get a hacky sack to bounce at the moment. He does eventually get some bounce, but it’s backbreaking work. With Marsh not entirely comfortable, a short leg comes into play, but Marsh stands firm. Third maiden on the bounce. India are tightening the screws.

48th over: Australia 89-2 (Renshaw 41, Marsh 3)

Ashwin keeps at Renshaw, and as the Queenslander passes 150 deliveries faced, it’s probably time to start admitting he’s not doing too badly against one of the world’s best spinners. It’s not pretty, and he’s barely scoring off him, but he’s also still out there. Maiden.

47th over: Australia 89-2 (Renshaw 41, Marsh 3)

Save for his first ball of the day, which was angled down the leg side and dispatched for a boundary, Ishant Sharma has been an outstanding contributor for his side today. He’s sliding them away from Shaun Marsh to start the second session, and looking to build pressure from which Ashwin might profit. His penultimate delivery draws a throaty LBW shout against Marsh, but it was pitching a foot outside leg stump, even if it would have hit the stumps.

46th over: Australia 89-2 (Renshaw 41, Marsh 3)

We’re back after lunch with Ravi Ashwin twirling it down to Matt Renshaw, who is encircled with close-in fieldsmen but gets up and running again with a single. Not for the first time in the series, Shaun Marsh then become involved in a near run-out, though it wasn’t entirely clear whose fault it was. He gets through for the single in the end. To say he needs some runs here is something of an understatement. Usman Khawaja waits in the wings.

It’s Tests like these where I wish the old adage about your face staying fixed in a ridiculous position when the wind changes was true.

I need to frame Nathan Lyon's pitch map from yesterday. pic.twitter.com/1iL5ULJDYr

45th over: Australia 87-2 (Renshaw 40, Marsh 2)

And that is lunch on day two. Ishant gave Matt Renshaw six of his best, but the Queenslander was up to the task, and heads off for a breather with 40 runs to his name from 144 deliveries. His efforts typify the entire morning of cricket. It’s been tough, attritional cricket, and neither side has given an inch.

44th over: Australia 86-2 (Renshaw 39, Marsh 2)

Ashwin returns and has a go at Marsh now, but the only thing doing is an outside edge which flies well wide of silly point. We’ll have one more over before lunch, which looks like it’ll be bowled by Ishant Sharma. Maybe he’ll get a wicket to go with his manic gurning from earlier in the morning.

43rd over: Australia 83-2 (Renshaw 37, Marsh 1)

Somewhat surprisingly, the tiring Umesh Yadav is granted another over, though I guess Kohli will be hoping he can exploit the Australian No4’s penchant for fishing outside off stump to the quicks. Here Marsh is determined to leave, and only plays when they’re straight. It works a treat. If Umesh is done, he’s bowled a gem of a spell without taking a wicket.

42nd over: Australia 83-2 (Renshaw 37, Marsh 1)

Marsh gets off the mark with a single, which infuriates Ravi Shastri. So it’s not all bad for Australia. Super over from Jadeja. He’s done exactly what India needed before lunch.

Great bowling Jadeja. Huge wicket of the Aussie captain @stevesmith49

And there it is! Jadeja slides one in a bit quicker to Smith and when the inside edge balloons up from his front pad towards the vacant leg slip region, Saha sprints around and dives to snaffle the chance. The Aussie skipper doesn’t even wait for the verdict. He knows he’s cooked. Worse: he’s been dismissed 12 minutes before lunch, so Shaun Marsh will have to come out and face a brief spell of hostility, on a hiding to nothing.

41st over: Australia 81-1 (Renshaw 36, Smith 8)

An understatement: a late wicket before lunch will really throw the cat amongst the pigeons, and based on what we’ve seen so far in this series, it wouldn’t be an unlikely sight. Umesh continues, but I’d be tempted to bring back Ashwin if I was Kohli; he and Jadeja are a constant threat and really hurry through their overs.

40th over: Australia 80-1 (Renshaw 35, Smith 8)

We’ll have just under 20 minutes more cricket in what has been a truly magnificent morning of testing cricket for both sides, and Steve Smith continues to do very well at picking off singles. Jadeja has two LBW shouts against Renshaw when the tall lefty sweeps, but only the latter is entirely credible. Renshaw is doing that so that contact with pad or bat occurs outside the line of off stump. So far it’s working.

39th over: Australia 78-1 (Renshaw 34, Smith 7)

Yadav continues to the sounds of horns and hollering, but the ball is talking most in this over. Renshaw can only shake his head and shrug his shoulders after the paceman shapes two consecutive deliveries away from his outside edge. The first deviated off the surface, the second was reverse swing. A third merely straightens. Renshaw has a huge grin on his face, but only because he’s surviving a quite superb spell of pace bowling and one expertly tailored to the conditions.

Utterly compelling cricket - what a game these flanneled fools play @rustyjacko

38th over: Australia 78-1 (Renshaw 34, Smith 7)

Ravindra Jadeja appears now to relieve Ashwin, which is a mixed blessing. On the one hand, Australia have seen off a very threatening spell by India’s No1 bowler, on the other they have often collapsed when faced with the wares of his replacement. He’s coming over the wicket to Renshaw, with a short leg and a slip. Renshaw has a good look and finishes the over by sweeping a single. It wasn’t Haydenesque, but it did the job.

Very impressed with Matt Renshaw. Young man, playing at this level on alien pitches and with such composure.

37th over: Australia 76-1 (Renshaw 33, Smith 6)

Umesh has been trading in low bounce today, but out of nowhere he sends one whistling past the shoulder of Matt Renshaw’s bat when the ball takes a savage deviation out of a crack, and an edge follows a ball later. Should that have been caught? Oh dear. Perhaps Kohli could have caught it if he’d stayed low at first slip, but he rises to a standing position and the ball arrives on the half-volley before flying away for four. “That’s what we call the dentist catch”, says Brett Lee, throwing out a phrase I never once hear in my years playing cricket.

36th over: Australia 72-1 (Renshaw 29, Smith 6)

A five-man conference takes place before Ashwin takes his cap off to bowl this over, but the net result is nothing more exciting than a Matt Renshaw single and some stern defensive efforts by Smith. More importantly, the Ishant Sharma GIFs are now rolling in.

I can't stop watching Ishant Sharma #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/cA8CO6I3mO

35th over: Australia 71-1 (Renshaw 28, Smith 6)

Smith continues to trust his eye here, and steps back and across in front of his stumps to defend Yadav’s low shooters. Were it any other batsman in Australia you’d argue it’s foolhardy, but you can hardly argue with the weight of numbers in the last few years. Yadav has his heart in his mouth every delivery of this maiden, but Smith sees it off.

34th over: Australia 71-1 (Renshaw 28, Smith 6)

To be fair to him, Renshaw is really rising to the Ashwin challenge now, and though he rarely looks like scoring, he’s forced the masterful spinner around the wicket for a new line of attack. That is a minor psychological victory in a fairly one-sided contest.

33rd over: Australia 70-1 (Renshaw 28, Smith 5)

Renshaw v Ashwin and Smith vs Yadav are the main contests right now, if you take Kohli out of the equation (he is fighting all of Australia). Smith mixes things up a bit by getting off strike, which Renshaw is probably glad for, and he gets a low edge through gully to pick up four. Yadav isn’t quite as threatening against the left-hander, though Renshaw gets even luckier with his second boundary of the over: a genuinely unintentional edge between first slip and third. It took Renshaw 70 minutes to make his first five runs today, and he’s just burgled eight more in a few minutes.

32nd over: Australia 61-1 (Renshaw 20, Smith 4)

Another tight over from Ashwin, who has Renshaw wrapped around his little finger, but can’t quite flick him off. Kohli is doing everything bar engage in a rap battle in his ongoing conversation with Steve Smith.

31st over: Australia 61-1 (Renshaw 20, Smith 4)

Yadav gets another go at Smith after the break and he’s causing a few problems when the ball keeps low and takes deviations out of the cracks. The big threat he poses is LBW, I think, especially with Smith shuffling across his stumps. Australia’s run rate has crawled to two per over, and this is some truly absorbing, series-shaping cricket under way on day two. I’ve no idea how, but Smith survives the over without being pinned in front. I think Umesh Yadav might get at least two or three more overs based on that one. Kohli and Smith are still going at it.

30th over: Australia 61-1 (Renshaw 20, Smith 4)

“Matthew Hayden has quite a large p....ool,” says Michael Clarke, though nobody was asking. Ashwin also had a big appeal for a close-in catch when Smith was on strike, but it was all pad according to Nigel Llong. Drinks are out on the ground now and they’ve certainly earned them so far.

That was as tense an hour of Test cricket as I've seen in a long time ... but brilliant viewing #IndvAus

Oof, that was very lucky for Smith as it was only shaving leg stump, so it goes back to the umpire’s call. Nigel Llong gave it not out, and that is how it stays.

The bowler is very keen on this. Nervous times for Smith, who was attempting to pull it away from his front knee roll and missed. Or did he get an underside edge? We shall soon see.

29th over: Australia 59-1 (Renshaw 19, Smith 4)

“It’s 27 degrees in Bangalore...hardly the cauldron everyone is making it out to be,” says reader Kabir Sethi. “Probably the tension of the game more than anything else.” Indeed. Just on that, Ishant did a superb job attacking and containing from his end, but his bolt is now shot so Umesh Yadav appears for a trundle. I reckon he’ll get a couple of overs, and if he doesn’t nip one of these two out, Kohli will turn to Jadeja. Ishant is staying involved by sledging the bejeezus out of Renshaw, which is nice. Yadav is keeping it worryingly low.

28th over: Australia 59-1 (Renshaw 19, Smith 4)

It’s not just Ishant getting stuck into Steve Smith, Virat Kohli is having a dip at it as well and really trying to get under the Australian captain’s skin. Lots of spice in this one, though Smith is laughing it off for now. Ashwin continues to probe away at Renshaw’s giant front pad, and the giant front pad continues to win. For now.

27th over: Australia 59-1 (Renshaw 19, Smith 4)

Matthew Hayden is talking about “the cauldron of Indian cricket” and “the furnace of the wicket”. Someone get him in front of an air conditioner, please. Anyway, that’s not his most disturbing image. He says this of Matthew Renshaw, who is currently doing well merely to survive: “He’s not only standing up, he’s dominating!” Calm down Haydos, he’s made four runs in the last 50 minutes.

26th over: Australia 58-1 (Renshaw 18, Smith 4)

Ooft. Renshaw is dicing with danger here, as Ashwin spins them across him from the rough. The Queenslander is taking the Warner route and leaving it with his stumps exposed, which as we know, didn’t exactly come up trumps. At least in this over he gets a couple of singles to leg. Using the bat is probably the way to go.

25th over: Australia 54-1 (Renshaw 16, Smith 2)

Tense times call for tough characters, and Steve Smith’s narrow-eyed focus is abundantly clear as he faces up to Ishant. The paceman is bowling with the spirit of the Demon Spofforth right now, but Smith eventually gets off strike with a single to point. Renshaw handles the rest, but he’s copping a real barrage.

24th over: Australia 53-1 (Renshaw 16, Smith 1)

Ashwin continues his cold war with Matt Renshaw, but I sense there could some weaponry unleashed soon enough. I’ve no idea how, but Renshaw pokes, prods and pads up, and negotiates his way through the onslaught. It’s not going to get any easier. Ashwin might bowl all innings the way he’s going now.

23rd over: Australia 53-1 (Renshaw 16, Smith 1)

Every delivery is subject to a raucous wall of sound from the locals right now, and a minor verbal skirmish followed that Renshaw-Ashwin stand-off late in the last over. On top of that, Ishant has worked his way into a very handy spell. This is why they call it Test cricket. Ignoring that, Brett Lee is spending the time between deliveries counting how many fidgets Steve Smith does. I, meanwhile, am spending the same time counting down the minutes until Brett Lee is gone from the commentary box.

22nd over: Australia 53-1 (Renshaw 16, Smith 1)

Steve Smith walks out to the middle now and gets off the mark with a single thanks to a minor imbroglio in which Renshaw won’t get out the way, so it trickles down to long leg, but India are all over the tourists here and the crowd is really getting involved too. Ashwin can scent blood in the water, and the Australians have a fierce battle on their hands.

Warner is removed by a gem! Holy smokes, that is an absolute peach from Ashwin, whose first ball of the over to Warner pitches outside leg, catches the Aussie opener in two minds and then fizzes across him to take the off stump. What was Warner doing? He shuffled across and exposed all three stumps. It turned a long, long way, and I’ve got to say, it was hardly surprising. The Aussie left-handers are in for a real battle today.

21st over: Australia 52-0 (Warner 33, Renshaw 16)

Ishant’s off-side protection against Warner has moved around to deep cover now, and the opener duly clubs one out there for a single. Reader Sankaran Krishna is enraged by all this, though that might be a little harsh on Ishant. He’s bowling with a decent head of steam so far. “Lyon gets 8-50 on the first day and Virat begins the second day with Ishant???” complains Sankaran. “This is beyond dumb. Starting with Ashwin and Jadeja would send a different message altogether.”

20th over: Australia 50-0 (Warner 32, Renshaw 16)

Renshaw is looking far less comfortable against Ashwin than Warner before, and he gets very lucky with an inside-edge into his pad, which balloons over the head of the man at short leg while not quite carrying to mid wicket. The rookie opener is putting his bat away so far, which doesn’t inspire much confidence. A maiden for Ashwin, and Renshaw has plenty to contemplate.

19th over: Australia 50-0 (Warner 32, Renshaw 16)

One thing I missed at the end of that Ashwin over prior: he finished it by hurling the ball back to the keeper’s end, narrowly missing Warner’s scone. Ishant isn’t quite so puffed up, or effective, and after a single to Renshaw, Warner clatters him through the cover region with an angled bat to pick up another boundary. Ishant responds with a bouncer, which rears up awkwardly and almost clips Warner’s bat as he flinches out the way. He’s coming to life now.

18th over: Australia 45-0 (Warner 28, Renshaw 15)

Unsurprisingly given the need for an early wicket, Ravichandran Ashwin will pair with Ishant in the early stages. He’s got a gully, a leg slip and short leg for Warner, and pursues a leg-side line in the hope the left-hander will do something rash. To start with Warner just pads up, but when Ashwin straightens just a fraction, a huge off-break goes fizzing past the outside edge of his forward defence. That was a jaffa. Matt Renshaw probably gulps at the other end. It’s a maiden, and a probing one.

17th over: Australia 45-0 (Warner 28, Renshaw 15)

Ishant Sharma starts us off on day two and arrives with an absolute shocker, which is angled well down leg and glanced for a gimme boundary by David Warner. “That’s an ominous beginning,” says Sunny Gavaskar, who cannot hide his displeasure. Warner is batting well out of his crease to start with, a good half-metre or so, and cracks a single out to the man at deep point. Renshaw calmly sees off the rest.

A bit on Australia’s preparation for this series: the Dubai training camp was more about getting the pace off the ball, and practicing on wickets with less bounce, than spin per se. That according to batting coach Graeme Hick, who is talking at the sidelines now. He says this will be an “exciting day” watching the likes of Steve Smith strut his stuff. If Australia win this series 4-0, and Tony Abbott makes a late charge at the coalition leadership, we really can’t rule out a knighthood for the once-maligned English batsman. Anyway, we’re a few minutes from play now. Let’s do this.

Good stuff from Michael Clarke, though somebody needs to have a word with him about shooting his videos in landscape mode.

Aussie boys getting ready for a big day pic.twitter.com/WZJnTwOPhM

Sunny Gavaskar is out in the middle now looking at the pitch, whose hexagonal cracks make it look like the wall tiles in a Moroccan hotel bathroom. It’s like a third-day WACA wicket, reckons Mark Waugh, who ponders whether it’s actually more a mental hurdle for batsmen than a technical one. Ryan Harris also reckons there is a bit too much emphasis on the surface. We’ll see. It was taking some sharp turn yesterday. I’ll say this: if this game lasts longer than the fourth morning I’ll be very surprised.

“This is a series defining day”, says Ravi Shastri at the sidelines just now, and with his wraparound shades – straight out of a Greg Chappell Cricket Centre catalogue from 1995 – he is surely correct. He wonders aloud whether the pressure is getting to India now, which is a pretty big call six days into a four-Test series.

Premable

Hello all and welcome back to another day in bizarro world, where a reality TV show host is the leader of the free world and Nathan Lyon is a record-shattering star of world cricket. Today I’ll be taking you through the second day of the Bangalore Test between India and Australia, which will only get stranger if Matthew Renshaw decides in the next ten minutes to retire from cricket and become a basket-weaver, and Harold Holt walks out to open the batting with David Warner.

Russell will be here shortly. In the meantime, catch up on day one’s drama, brought to you courtesy of Nathan Lyon:

Related: Nathan Lyon's record 8-50 decimates India on day one of Bangalore Test

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West Indies v England: second ODI – as it happened

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Superb innings under pressure, from Joe Root and Chris Woakes, see England home from an unexpectedly difficult position; they now hold an unassailable 2-0 lead in the three-match series

So, that’s that then - England win the series, which will play to a finish in Barbados on Thursday. See youse then!

West Indies were unlucky that Shannon Gabriel got injured, but however you look at things, they got nowhere near enough runs. And when that happens, the fielding needs to spot-on, which it wasn’t, and an attack with no part-timers is required, which there also wasn’t.

Root nudges to point, there’s a misfield, and that’s that! What a brilliant partnership this has been, 102 runs in total, with Root ending on 90 and Woakes on 68.

48th over: England 225-6 (Root 89, Woakes 68) Four dots from Holder, then Woakes spots a slower ball and humps it over the top for six - that’s the hundred partnership, and the scores are level. But Holder isn’t letting this go, following Woakes as he moves to leg and burning one at his body! Lovely stuff! England require 1 off 12 balls.

47th over: England 219-6 (Root 89, Woakes 62) Single to Root, then Woakes tries to lift a long-hop over the top - it sits up and pleads for maltreatment 0 but leaning back, he toe-ends it, only doe Holder to put him down at mid-off. That was very naughty indeed. England then add three more, and it’s nearly time; if Root hits two sixes, is that a ton? England require 7 from 18 balls.

46th over: England 213-6 (Root 87, Woakes 58) Holder returns, and this match is now ambling to a finish; if Root can whack the runs required, he’ll have a century - and he’ll also have strike. England require 13 from 24 balls.

45th over: England 212-6 (Root 86, Woakes 58) Four singles from Brathwaite’s over; West Indies just didn’t have the bowling once the two frontline spinners were done. And even then, they missed some chances, Powell’s catch and the run out in particular. England require 14 from 30 balls.

44th over: England 208-6 (Root 84, Woakes 56) Carter fractionally overpitches, so Woakes panels him through extra cover - I don’t think Root has hit a boundary since he came in, nor has he needed to. On the one hand, they’ve batted brilliantly; on the other, with no scoreboard pressure, it’s been relatively easy for them to. England require 18 from 36 balls.

43rd over: England 202-6 (Root 83, Woakes 51) Kraigg Brathwaite continues, and Root nudges a single, then Woakes leans back and cuts the two which brings up an iron-stoned fifty. I say iron-stoned, but he only from my own pathetic perspective - he has looked amazingly calm throughout, the mortifyingly handsome, personable and talented so-and-so. He adds a single, Root does likewise, and this has been a lot of fun. England require 24 from 42 balls.

42nd over: England 197-6 (Root 81, Woakes 48) Holder opts to slow things down, introducing Carter, whom Woakes immediately runs down to third man. Root then nabs a single of his own - this has been one of the best low-key innings I’ve ever seen - and a further single each takes England into the 20s. This is pretty much done. England require 29 from 48 balls.

41st over: England 193-6 (Root 79, Woakes 46) Here comes the powerplay; England take three from the over, and could probably now wear another wicket. England require 33 from 54 balls.

40th over: England 189-6 (Root 77, Woakes 44) Single to Root, then Brathwaite tries a cutter, donating far too much width - Woakes doesn’t wait to be asked twice, thrashing it through point for four. This is superb behaviour from him - completely calm, rational batting, hitting that which needs to be hit, not getting out otherwise, and he’s not far off guiding his team home. But then he pulls to long-on, gets through the shot too quickly, and Powell, on for Gabriel, is well-placed to snaffle! But running around the fence, he can’t quite bring it in, letting it burst his hands and falling onto his fizog in the process! That might be West Indies’ last chance, as they run two; this partnership is now 66, of which Woakes has scored 44. What a player he now is; why, it’s almost as if the selectors know more about cricket than livebloggers! England require 37 from 60 balls.

39th over: England 180-6 (Root 75, Woakes 37) Now Kraigg Brathwaite is given a go, and Woakes has a look then lifts his third ball over midwicket for one. Root then knocks the final one to midwicket for a further single, and West Indies badly need a wicket. England require 46 from 66 balls.

38th over: England 178-6 (Root 74, Woakes 36) Carlos Brathwaite into the attack, and Root eases him to third man, before Woakes picks out the man at point when he tries a cut. But he doesn’t miss out next ball! Oh yes! A pitched-up delivery doesn’t have the pace to do anything but sit up to be clouted, so clouted it is, all the way over the fence! And then a slice for two makes that an excellent over for England, ten from it. England require 48 from 72 balls.

37th over: England 168-6 (Root 73, Woakes 27) Mohammed continues and England calmly take three - one to Root, two to Woakes. West Indies haven’t yet run out of time, but they’re not far. England require 58 from 78 balls.

36th over: England 165-6 (Root 72, Woakes 25) Holder charges in and Root pokes him to third man - Woakes isn’t necessarily up for a single, but runs one anyway, and it’s comfortable. But he’s nearly left rueing his agreeableness - now there’s a lesson for us all - when he under-edges a pull, his pads saving him from playing on. Next ball, he canes for four to midwicket, and then after they hustle a single and decide there’s another run on, Lewis is left with a shot - if he hits, Woakes is done for, but he misses! England require 61 from 84 balls.

35th over: England 158-6 (Root 71, Woakes 19) After drinks - and heaven knows, I need one - Root nurdles a single to leg, then Woakes adds one down the ground. And what’s this! Root tries a cut, the same shot that’s got out three of his mates, but misses by the width of a bumfluff beard. He then bunts a single into the off side, and experiences relief - if West Indies can get him, that will probably be it. England require 68 from 90 balls.

34th over: England 155-6 (Root 69, Woakes 18) Woakes pulls two to square leg off Holder’s second ball, and England are just easing free again, now that Bishoo and Nurse are gone. the fifth delivery sneaks past the outside edge, but then - or and then, depending on you read the situation - Woakes then wafts the next delivery just over mid-off. This is brilliantly tense stuff. England require 71 from 96 balls.

33rd over: England 151-6 (Root 69, Woakes 14) This is rapidly - ok, not rapidly, very slowly - becoming yet another innings of mature brilliance from Joe Root. He might make a player, and a captain, one day. He sensibly arranges another single, then Woakes steps down the track and launches a drive over mid-off for four. It’s not so much about the runs, that, as reasserting supremacy. Though it’s England who are nervous, West Indies would swap places in a second. England require 75 from 102 balls.

32nd over: England 145-6 (Root 68, Woakes 9) Root pushes down the track and hints at a run, so Holder makes to shy, then doesn’t bother when he stays put. This is wonderfully tight stuff now, though we’re some way from runs becoming an issue. But a pain in the midriff becomes one, when Root misses a pull and wears a stinger, bellowing a cussword in fury. He then pulls a single, the only run from the over, before Woakes narrowly avoids edging a short one and we learn than Gabriel has a sidestrain, so won’t be bowling again this evening. England require 81 from 108 balls.

31st over: England 144-6 (Root 67, Woakes 9) At Nurse’s end, Holder opts for the part-time spin of Jason Mohammed, perhaps hoping that England’s not having faced him much will help. And really, the tension 19 overs out from the close is remarkable - we should never be allowed to forget the fun of a low-scoring ODI. Three singles from the over; both batsmen daren’t get out, so we’re in this for the long haul.England require 82 from 114 balls.

3oth over: England 141-6 (Root 65, Woakes 8) So, who will it be? Holder, er, goes to, er, himself. Fair dos, at least he’ll know who to blame if it doesn’t work out: his front line batsmen. And he’s really putting his back into things, testing Root with a short one, tempting the fence before hands come inside it. One from the over. England require 85 from 120 balls.

30th over: England 141-6 (Root 65, Woakes 8) So, who will it be? Holder, er, goes to, er, himself. Fair dos, at least he’ll know who to blame if it doesn’t work out: his front line batsmen. And he’s really putting his back into things, testing Root with a short one, tempting the fence before hands come inside it. One from the over. England require 85 from 120 balls.

29th over: England 140-6 (Root 64, Woakes 8) And this is the last of Nurse, who England nudge away - though his fourth delivery bounces big on Woakes, causing minor consternation. Nurse finishes with 3-34, and a revitalised game; well done him, and and well done Jason Holder for bowling him through and supporting him with slips.England require 86 from 126 balls.

28th over: England 136-6 (Root 62, Woakes 7) Here comes your Bishoo to bowl the final over of a telling spell, and after a single to Root, Woakes cracks him square on the off side for the first boundary in absolutely ages. Bishoo ends wih 2-43 off his ten. England require 90 from 132 balls.

27th over: England 131-6 (Root 61, Woakes 3) This is Nurse’s penultimate over; Nurse Ratched, as far as England are concerned. Root shoves his first ball for one, then four dots follow before Woakes, who looks comfy, takes a single down the ground and Root does likewise to midwicket . England require 95 from 138 balls.

26th over: England 128-6 (Root 59, Woakes 2) All England need to do is not get out. Easy, right? A wide helps, then a single to Root and two to Woakes. England require 98 from 144 balls.

This is great bowling, and the dancing has begun! Moeen was still thinking about the one that left him in the previous over so when one drifted in on him, he did nothing - until it rammed middle and off, at which point he picked up his bat and returned hutchwards.

25th over: England 124-5 (Root 58, Ali 3) Moeen plays for turn, none comes, and there’s minor excitement as the ball goes past his edge. I wonder who’ll be used when these two are done - and if Holder will try and finish this, or hold back something for the death.

24th over: England 120-5 (Root 56, Ali 1) Moeen won’t have been expecting this, having been born in mere 1987. Can he persuade himself to knock the ball around, or will he thrash over the top and get himself gone?

“How about that ‘unthrillingness’ in the 20th over?” emails John Starbuck on behalf of the six others. “Apart from remarking on its awkward construction, your readers will be thinking ‘careful what you wish for’.”

We have ourselves a ballgame! Bishoo and Nurse have done exceptionally well to first apply the breaks, then the vice, and Buttler edges a cut, Hope hanging on at the second attempt.

24th over: England 117-4 (Root 54, Buttler 0) Root pushes forward and edges Bishoo! But it’s thick enough to run away for three.

23rd over: England 114-4 (Root 51, Buttler 0) Root is unmoved by the vaguely increased tension, working a single, then Nurse spins one away from Buttler. Keen to get off the mark, he then calls Root through for a single after nudging to midwicket and has to turn and fling himself back; one more step and he was toast.

22nd over: England 113-4 (Root 50, Buttler 0) So, have we ourselves a ballgame? England still have plenty of batting to come, but they also have a fair few runs left to get. They’re favourites, for sure, but won’t be wanting to lose any more wickets in the next bit.

Stokes leans back to force a cut away, can only edge, and Hope takes a smart catch behind the wicket.

22nd over: England 113-3 (Root 50, Stokes 1) Root gets one of the least memorable fifties you’ll ever see, Collingwodian in its stealthy, relentless accumulation. But then Stokes props forward to Bishoo, misses, and takes it on the pads. The ball was going down, but that’s a warning.

21st over: England 112-3 (Root 49, Stokes 1) Surely West Indies now bring on Brathwaite to try and get Stokes ego before. But, in the meantime, he’s off the mark second ball, then Root adds a two and a one.

Pitching in-line, umpire’s call on the stumps - the ball was dislodging the off-bail. Well bowled, Ashley Nurse.

This one goes on with the arm, Morgan waits for the spin that didn’t come, plays down the wrong line, and REVIEWS! Looks out to me...

20th over: England 108-2 (Root 46, Morgan 7) West Indies have staunched the flow of boundaries, at least; after a wide, Morgan bunts a single and Root takes three to point. Then another single, and, well, this is thrilling only in its entire unthrillingness.

19th over: England 102-2 (Root 40, Morgan 4) There just isn’t very much West Indies can do about any of this. Even quiet overs are fine, and in the middle are two men with the skill and temperament to guide England through as many of them as necessary. Perhaps it might be worth bringing some pace back to get at Morgan before he’s in, because there’s another over exceeding the run rate, currently standing at 3.95.

18th over: England 98-2 (Root 40, Morgan 4) Bishoo twirls through, Root sweeping a brace then a guiding a single off the final two deliveries of the over.

17th over: England 92-2 (Root 32, Morgan 0) Root and Morgan knock Nurse around. Drinks.

“90s dance produced a lot of quality,” tweets Michael Avery, “like Livin Joy’s ‘Dreamer’.”

16th over: England 92-2 (Root 32, Morgan 0) Root and Morgan knock Bishoo around - I might just store that line on my clipboard.

15th over: England 87-2 (Root 32, Morgan 0) So out comes the in-form Eoin Morgan; what a sentence that is to type.

As I was saying, Roy can’t help but swipe at one outside off - it’s a decent ball, daring him to take it on through the wind and to the long boundary - and that’s a straightforward catch at wide long-on.

15th over: England 87-1 (Roy 52, Root 33) Nurse is bowling reasonably enough, but isn’t looking likely to break through - instead, a tempered pull earns Roy two and his fifty.

14th over: England 83-1 (Roy 49, Root 32) Bishoo opens his third over with a wide, and then, after a dot, Roy reminds him what’s what, carting a shot one to the midwicket fence. And this is the problem, I guess - you create pressure and take wickets by bowling a succession of good balls. Put that insight in your pipe and smoke it.

13th over: England 73-1 (Roy 42, Root 30) This is good from West Indies just as England were threatening to pull away. Bowling very straight, Nurse limits the batsmen to four singles - still more than the run rate.

12th over: England 73-1 (Roy 42, Root 30) Bishoo is somewhat grooved now, Root’s sweep for one the only run off the over. In a way I’m surprised - England won’t want to let him settle - but on the other, little point getting all excited chasing such a low total.

11th over: England 72-1 (Roy 42, Root 29) Nurse into the attack for some more powerplay behaviour and this is the first tight over in sometime, just three from it.

10th over: England 69-1 (Roy 41, Root 27) Later than I expected, Holden turns to Bishoo, and Roy has a look, for one ball, before sweeping him left-handed, from outside off, to the fence at third man. Er, ok then! Perfectly normal behaviours!

Elsewhere, it seems that BBC 6 Music are following the 90s riff.

Wouldn't be a #DNB6Music playlist without @therealLTJbukem and 'Horizons', before that you heard 'The Bass II Dark' by Asylum

9th over: England 63-1 (Roy 35, Root 27) Root takes a single, then Roy chucks everything at a pull, minding at the past second that there’s a breeze going on and taking his bottom hand off the bat. Smart gear, that, and it saves him, the ball dropping short of the fielder as they run one, and then Brathwaite drops short so Root glances him to the fence. And four more arrive next ball, Root leaping onto tippy-toes to square-drive to the point fence, two more follow, and England are rinsing: 12 off this over, 13 off the previous one.

8th over: England 51-1 (Roy 34, Root 16) Holder continues and Root nabs three more to midwicket, then a single apiece brings Roy back onto strike. Ah. So he waits for one that’s marginally wide of off and chleanses it to the midwicket fence, then twists the next ball to square leg, raising the 50 partnership - it’s come off 31 balls.

“In other news, Chris Jordan is about to become a PSL champion,” emails Chris Drew. “Another for the CL team?”

7th over: England 38-1 (Roy 25, Root 12) Brathwaite, CRinto the attack Root turns two away towards midwicket, then charges and swipes three more - it should carry over the fence but holds up in the wind instead. Roy then turns down a single Root is certain exists, but it makes little difference - after that early wicket and scare, England look to have this squantied right down.

6th over: England 31-1 (Roy 24, Root 6) The standard of 90s pop-dance tunes really was outstanding: Haddaway, Culture Beat, Shabba (sorry, for avoidance of doubt, that was me interjecting, not listing an R&B act in a pop-dance list). Anyway, back out in the middle it’s techno techno techno techno as Roy powerstrokes a straight six. The control there was startling.

5th over: England 24-1 (Roy 18, Root 5) England are taking things gently, at least until Roy clumps Gabriel over fine mid-on. Is it just me, or does he have the game for Tests? And here he is, oh yes! Four more, whammed over cover.

To carry on Rob’s 90s revival, here’s the finest album track of the period, period. Even if later album releases ruined things by removing the rap.

4th over: England 14-1 (Roy 10, Root 4) Roy runs a single down to third man, and then Root gets himself going - must be a while since he’s faced seven straight dots - thanks to a wide, short one, slashed through backward point.

3rd over: England 9-1 (Roy 9, Root 0) Roy’s hit on the pad off a full one, but it was going well down. Well, that’s how it looked to me, the reality being somewhat closer. Either way, Roy is down the ground next ball, gliding a beautiful four. “Ah, pleasant! Sheer pleasantry, just to look at that,” says commentary. And three more follow, though these are dicily obtained, narrowly avoiding dive de Brathwaite. He has nearly pulled off two stunners, in the process pulling off zero stunners. Ah.

2nd over: England 2-1 (Roy 2, Root 0) The certainty of the fielders was persuasive, I must say. But what can you do.

Well, this is an odd one. In the absence of Snicko, Ultra Edge and Hot Spot, it’s simply a case of umpire’s judgement, or, more accurately, proof. And there’s not enough - though I’d not be surprised if the third umpire thought it was out.

2nd over: England 1-1 (Roy 1, Root 0) Roy absolutely marmalises a wide one from Holder, and Brathwaite, at mid-on, dives like a goalkeeper, leading with his top hand, but can’t quite hang on. Still, that was pretty incredible. And what’s this! Holder spirits one through Roy, there’s a huge appeal, the umpire says not, and immediately comes the call to review, led by Hope behind the stumps. The bat is miles from the pad, so any noise is likely to be incriminating.

“What are the thoughts around Finn’s performances out there, Daniel?” asks Bill Hargreaves. “For me he had the potential to be a stalwart next to Anderson and Broad had his management or development taken a different direction, possibly?”

1st over: England 1-1 (Roy 1, Root 0) That might be the series for Billings, with Hales likely to come back in for the next match. Truth is, he’s probably more suited to the middle order at the moment, it’s just his bad luck that the same is so of various other monsters. Anyway, Root, who was castled by Gabriel on Friday, edges going hard, and is relieved to see it bounce in front of slip - quite how it didn’t carry, I really do not know. Great over.

Well well well! After Roy takes a single from the first ball, a lovely delivery, full and on middle, is edged to Nurse a second slip, he parries it across to first, and that’s gone!

The players are preparing themselves ... can Shannon Gabriel get the early wickets Windies need?

“What’s with all the upbeat talk of England winning?” emails Chris Drew.
“We’re doing a 90s throwback day remember! We know how to lose from anywhere.”

Exactly - and that all begins with cheap talk.

“It is, like the rest of his appearance, stolen from Tamsin Greig,” says Dan Lucas of Finnsfringe, also a town in the Rhineland.

Meanwhile.

Wasim Akram as tv camera shows overhead view of Lahore "look at the amazing, eternal & beautiful city of Lahore" #PslFinalLahorepic.twitter.com/dzSg6O9mdk

“In an effort to tempt fate away from soling the notion that there are any certainties in life/sport,” emails Ian Copestake, “West Indies’ total is only 70 short if their bowlers up their game and/or England fail to bat like chumps.”

I know, I know, but I’m not sure either side has a Windies win in them. As for certainties, general boredom and misery is one, I suppose.

It’s been bothering me all day, but I am finally able to make an announcement: Steven Finn’s fringe is stolen from George McFly.

To ponder: are England seriously going to negotiate and at home Champions Trophy without Stuart Broad?

It’s very very hard to see how England don’t win from here. Their batting is so strong these days that someone always turns up, and chasing such a low total, that’s pretty much all it’ll take.

Meanwhile...

Darren Sammy's reaction after hitting a huge six. #HBLPSLFINAL#QaddafiStadium#PZvQGpic.twitter.com/md385BolOm

Bumble reckons Windies are 70 under par - that’s a damning verdict indeed.

Plus, Plunkett for Woakes would barely touch the overall hunkfactor of England’s attack, which has probably never been higher.

Liam Plunkett, then. He’s had some ill luck to find himself only playing limited overs gear - he had a fairly decent summer in 2014, then got injured at a bad time and hasn’t had a sniff since. I wonder if he might be more use on flat tracks than Woakes.

Ta Rob, and well bowled England, who’ve put themselves in position here. We’ve said that before!

That’s a really good effort from England, who need 226 to win the match and series. It should be a doddle. Daniel Harris will be here for the England run-chase. Bye!

Jos Buttler ends the innings with a superb run out, hitting the stumps direct with the non-striker Gabriel well short.

48th over: West Indies 221-9 (Bishoo 0, Gabriel 1) Plunkett now has figures of seven for 72 in this short series.

Plunkett gets his third wicket, zipping one through Nurse’s expansive drive to hit the stumps. This has been a pretty efficient bowling performance.

47th over: West Indies 220-8 (Nurse 9, Bishoo 0) The almost absent-minded nonchalance of Roy’s throw to Billings showed just how normal that type of one-two dismissal is nowadays. WHAT IS GOING ON OUT THERE?

Brathwaite smashes Rashid towards wide long-on, where Roy and Billings combine superbly to take the catch. Roy caught the ball inside the rope and then, as he was falling over the rope, threw it nonchalantly to Billings.

46th over: West Indies 218-7 (C Brathwaite 23, Nurse! 7) The new bowler Plunkett drifts onto the pad of Nurse, who flicks him around the corner and wide of short fine leg for four. It’s a scruffy over, with a couple of wides as well. West Indies are sneaking towards a workable score.

45th over: West Indies 207-7 (C Brathwaite 22, Nurse 0) Brathwaite, who is playing well now, crashes Rashid down the ground for four.

Holder slog-sweeps Rashid miles in the air, and when the ball eventually comes down Rashid takes a very well-judged catch.

44th over: West Indies 199-6 (Holder 13, C Brathwaite 14) Brathwaite gives us a reminder of his power, hustling Woakes through midwicket for four with little more than a short-arm jab. Eight from the over.

43rd over: West Indies 191-6 (Holder 12, C Brathwaite 8) A good over from Rashid costs just four singles. West Indies are really struggling now.

42nd over: West Indies 187-6 (Holder 10, C Brathwaite 6) With Brathwaite at the crease I’m surprised Stokes hasn’t asked to bowl, or at the very least threatened to kill Eoin Morgan with his bare hands if he doesn’t give him the ball.

For now Woakes continues to Holder and Brathwaite, two huge men who can hit the ball a long way, but at the moment can barely get it off the square. Woakes has terrific figures of 7-1-18-0.

41st over: West Indies 182-6 (Holder 7, C Brathwaite 5) Rashid is back and has a big appeal for LBW against Holder turned down. Morgan decides to review. The only issue is whether Holder actually connected with his attempted lap sweep. The umpire thought so; replays suggested otherwise. But Holder survives because the point of contact with the top of the stumps was umpire’s call. The England balcony are not impressed.

40th over: West Indies 176-6 (Holder 4, C Brathwaite 2) Woakes, not Stokes, returns to the attack to bowl at Carlos Brathwaite. His batting form has been surprisingly poor since he marmalised Stokes in the final of the World T20, and in that over he is rapped painfully on the glove by Woakes. West Indies probably need at least a run a ball from the last 10 overs to make this competitive.

39th over: West Indies 173-6 (Holder 3, C Brathwaite 0) That was the last ball of the over. Carlos Brathwaite is the new batsman.

Carter the stoppable six machine. He tried to blast Plunkett over mid-on, a bit of a premature stroke, and sliced it high to Rashid at mid-off. It was a lively innings of 39 from 36 balls but now West Indies are in the ill-smelling stuff.

38th over: West Indies 171-5 (Carter 39, Holder 2) Moeen bowls his last over, and Carter bids him farewell with a big six over long-on. Shot! Moeen ends with decent figures of 10-0-44-1.

37th over: West Indies 163-5 (Carter 32, Holder 1) “In another 90s throwback,” says Chris Drew, “we now have Carter the Unstoppable Six Machine at the crease!”

Plunkett strikes with the second ball of a new spell. It was a nothing delivery really, drifting onto leg stump, but Mohammed lifted it gently to Rashid at mid-on.

36th over: West Indies 158-4 (Mohammed 50, Carter 28) The lively Carter hustles Moeen for four more through midwicket. As on Friday, he has given the innings considerable impetus; he has 28 from 25 balls.

35th over: West Indies 149-4 (Mohammed 50, Carter 19) Ach, apologies; we’ve been having a few technical problems. West Indies have started to get a move on: seven runs from Finn’s over and now 13 from the returning Stokes’s. Six of those came from one thumping pull stroke by Mohammed that took him to his second half-century in three days. That’s a particularly good effort given that, before Friday, he has played two ODIs (across five-and-a-bit years) and scored six runs.

34th over: West Indies 136-4 (Mohammed 43, Carter 14)

33rd over: West Indies 130-4 (Mohammed 41, Carter 10) Carter gets his first boundary, rifling a half-volley from Finn back down the ground. Stokes, meanwhile, is back on the field; apparently he has just jarred a finger.

32nd over: West Indies 123-4 (Mohammed 41, Carter 3) Excellent stuff from Moeen, who keeps Carter to a single from the over and now has figures of 7-0-21-1.

31st over: West Indies 122-4 (Mohammed 41, Carter 2) Finn has troubled every batsman with the short ball today. That includes the new batsman Carter, who gets a leading edge that loops safely wide of backward point for a single. Finn’s performance in this series will probably get him into the Champions Trophy squad, though there is a lot competition for the seam-bowling places.

“If that’s your seam attack (and I’ve no problem with it), what’s you batting line-up?” says Chris Drew. “Any changes from here?” Probably just Hales for Billings, though I would definitely have Billings in the squad as he is such an impressive utility batsman. Hales’ experience and capacity to score 150 give him the edge though.

30th over: West Indies 120-4 (Mohammed 40, Carter 1) “Stokes has just dropped the IPL,” sniffs Ian Copestake.

Brathwaite’s work is done. He walks straight past a big-spinning delivery from Moeen and is stumped by a mile.

29th over: West Indies 117-3 (K Brathwaite 42, Mohammed 38) Finn replaces the relatively expensive Rashid (5-0-33-0) - and he has Brathwaite dropped off his fifth ball. It was a relatively simple chance for Stokes, running back from midwicket when Brathwaite mistimed a pull, but his positioning was poor and it burst through his hands. He injured himself in the process and is leaving the field. It looks like he has damaged the middle finger on his right hand. It’s almost surreal to see him put down a chance like that.

28th over: West Indies 113-3 (K Brathwaite 40, Mohammed 36) Mohammed is into his work now. After four dots from Moeen he slaughters him back over his head for another boundary.The rain seems to have cleared so we should be okay to go straight through the 50 over.s.

27th over: West Indies 109-3 (K Brathwaite 40, Mohammed 32) Mohammed gets down on one knee to swipe Rashid over midwicket for the first six of the innings. That was a cracking shot. It’s raining fairly heavily now, though play is continuing for now.

26th over: West Indies 100-3 (K Brathwaite 39, Mohammed 24) Mohammed scrunches Moeen to long off for a single to bring up the hundred. It’s been a good recovery from the West Indies, though Moeen is quietly doing an economical job: 4-0-13-0.

25th over: West Indies 98-3 (K Brathwaite 38, Mohammed 23) Brathwaite gives Rashid the charge, gets nowhere near the pitch and decided to mow him towards cow corner for a single. That’s one of five runs in the over - runs being the operative word in this partnership, as only eight of the 52 have come in boundaries.

24th over: West Indies 93-3 (K Brathwaite 35, Mohammed 21)

23rd over: West Indies 91-3 (K Brathwaite 34, Mohammed 20) Brathwaite heaves Rashid towards cow corner for a couple off the last ball of an over that brings five runs.

“I attended the Active Bradford Sports awards on Thursday, my primary school was nominated for an award, and was disappointed that Rashid (who was also up for an award) wasn’t there,” says Tom Van der Gucht. “At the time I had a similar attitude to Andrew Gale (when Rashid declined to play for Yorkshire at the end of the season) but hearing him in action now, I’m can almost understand why he was unable to make it.”

22nd over: West Indies 86-3 (K Brathwaite 31, Mohammed 18) It’s pretty gloomy in Antigua, and the groundstaff are getting ready just in case. Two from Moeen’s over. West Indies have rotated the strike a lot better in the last few overs; on this pitch you’d expect with the lowest dot-ball ratio to win the match.

21st over: West Indies 84-3 (K Brathwaite 29, Mohammed 17) Brathwaite pumps Rashid down the ground for four. It wasn’t a perfect stroke but he got enough on it to clear mid-on. Rashid’s reply is excellent, an even slower legspinner that growls past the edge.

20th over: West Indies 76-3 (K Brathwaite 24, Mohammed 16) Moeen Ali comes into the attack in place of Stokes. The bowling changes have been pretty mechanical so far but that’s fine; this pitch doesn’t really need funky captaincy. Seven from the over, all in ones and twos. This is good batting. Now, assuming everyone is fit, what would be your seam attack for the first game of the Champions Trophy? I’d probably go with Woakes, Willey, Wood and Stokes.

19th over: West Indies 69-3 (K Brathwaite 21, Mohammed 12) Adil Rashid is coming on to replace Liam Plunkett (4-1-11-0). His first over is on the malodorous side, with two wides in the first four balls and then a full toss. He improves towards the end, mind you, and there are six runs from the over.

18th over: West Indies 63-3 (K Brathwaite 19, Mohammed 10) Stokes is worked around for six in that over, four singles and a two. I have no idea what else to say.

17th over: West Indies 57-3 (K Brathwaite 15, Mohammed 8) A maiden from Plunkett, and that’s drinks.

“Oh!” says Chris Drew. “1990s link. That would be this.”

16th over: West Indies 57-3 (K Brathwaite 15, Mohammed 8) It’s fair to say England are on top, but this score isn’t a disaster for West Indies given the nature of the pitch. If they can beg, steal and borrow their way to 250, they will have a chance.

15th over: West Indies 52-3 (K Brathwaite 13, Mohammed 5) Mohammed opens the face to glide Plunkett through the vacant slip area for four. Actually there was a bit of edge in that and, as Sir Robert Key says on Sky, it’s unusual for Morgan not to have a slip in when the opposition are 47 for three.

14th over: West Indies 47-3 (K Brathwaite 13, Mohammed 0) “Afternoon Rob,” says Chris Drew. “Just over one month to the potentially promotion deciding clash: Northamptonshire v Glamorgan. Proper cricket is on its way back!”

Yes, but what’s that got to do with the 1990s?

Ben Stokes makes things happen, part 31204101863. It wasn’t a great delivery, short and wide, but it got the wicket. Hope threw his hands at the ball and bottom-edged to Jos Buttler. Any golden-armed all-rounder would have been proud of that wicket.

13th over: West Indies 45-2 (K Brathwaite 12, Hope 16) Plunkett hurries through another over, one from it. England have bowled very straight today.

12th over: West Indies 44-2 (K Brathwaite 11, Hope 16) It’s time for Ben Stokes, who didn’t bowl in the first ODI. His first over is adequate and brings four low-risk runs. It’s all a bit low-key at the moment.

11th over: West Indies 40-2 (K Brathwaite 10, Hope 13) Liam Plunkett replaces Steven Finn. Five from the over. No, no I wasn’t paying attention.

10th over: West Indies 35-2 (K Brathwaite 9, Hope 9) Chris Woakes has proved tens of thousands of people wrong by becoming an England regular. I wonder if he’s proved his own subconscious wrong as well. Either way he looks the part now, certainly in one-day cricket. The moment I type that, he drops short and is muscled through midwicket for four by Brathwaite. Commentator’s curse?!?!?!?!

9th over: West Indies 31-2 (K Brathwaite 5, Hope 9) Hope turns Finn just short of Despair at square leg. Later in the over, Finn drops short and is scorched through the off side for a fine boundary.

“I miss Neil Fairbrother, Rob,” weeps Guy Hornsby. “Almost as much as I miss Graeme Thorpe. Artists at forging an innings, but the former with so much unfulfilled international promise. He could’ve been a superstar. It’s great to see that skill hasn’t totally evaporated in these thick-batted, slow-bouncer times. Morgan & Billings grafted on Friday, and we’ll need that again today. All these 90s touchstones, it just makes me want to listen to Different Class. There’s a Stokes riff in there somewhere.”

8th over: West Indies 23-2 (K Brathwaite 5, Hope 1) Brathwaite slaps Woakes just wide of the jack-knifing Root at gully. It would have been a superhuman catch. The new batsman Hope then inside-edges just short of Buttler. This really isn’t an easy pitch. It’s two-paced - slow and slower - and not at all conducive to strokeplay.

“You know things are bad,” says David Horn, “when English cricket in the 90s is providing you with comfort.”

7th over: West Indies 21-2 (K Brathwaite 4, Hope 0) Every milestone in Steven Finn’s career is worth celebrating, given all he has been through and will probably continue to go through. He’s such a likeable, admirable bloke, with a spirit that is paradoxically fragile yet unbreakable. Only Darren Gough and Stuart Broad have got to 100 ODI wickets for England in fewer matches than Finn’s 67.

“Was intrigued to read of an ‘insinuation of swing’ earlier,” says Brian Withington “Any chance of a ‘semblance of seam’ too?”

Steven Finn gets his 100th ODI wicket. Powell tried to pull a short ball that was too wide for the stroke, and it lobbed straight up in the air for Finn to take a simple catch.

6th over: West Indies 21-1 (K Brathwaite 4, Powell 9) Chris Woakes has quietly become the leader of England’s seam attack in ODI cricket, and he has started superbly here. He is bowling very straight and just short of a length, making him hard to get away on this tacky pitch. His figures are 3-1-4-0.

5th over: West Indies 19-1 (K Brathwaite 3, Powell 8) After five dot balls, Powell punches Finn classically through mid-off for four. That stroke notwithstanding, this looks a difficult pitch to score on. Funny that, as it’s the same pitch that was awkward to score on the other day and now it’s even more tired. Identifying what is a decent score will be so important for the West Indies; even something as low as 240 might be enough, though they’ll probably want nearer 270.

4th over: West Indies 15-1 (K Brathwaite 3, Powell 4) Brathwaite is dropped by Morgan off Woakes at mid-on. It was a brilliant attempt. He dived high to his left, extended a telescopic left arm to reach the ball... but couldn’t hang on. A maiden from Woakes.

“Scrolling through on my phone and coming across that Neil Fairbrother video, I knew right away who was doing the OBO today!” says David Horn. “Your 90s nostalgia gives you away. But what a player he was. England’s first ODI specialist. The spiritual Godfather of Morgan and Buttler. I remember watching him once against Surrey and the way he moved his feet was quite incredible. He seemed perpetually on the move.”

3rd over: West Indies 15-1 (K Brathwaite 3, Powell 4) Powell is quickly off the mark, forcing Finn through point for four.

“Dear rob.smyth,” writes Odell. “We are looking for employees working remotely. My name is Odell, I am the personnel manager of a large International company. Most of the work you can do from home, that is, at a distance. Salary is $2700-$5800.”

Lewis has gone! He tried to turn Finn to leg and got a leading edge towards short cover, where Billings took a smart catch diving forward. It looked like the ball stopped in the wicket a bit, and that’s likely to be an issue all day on this used pitch.

2nd over: West Indies 11-0 (K Brathwaite 3, Lewis 8) Chris Woakes will open the defence from the Sir Andy Roberts End. There’s an insinuation of swing to the right-handed Brathwaite, no more than that, but his line is good and there are just two from the over.

1st over: West Indies 9-0 (K Brathwaite 1, Lewis 8) It used to be the bowlers who opened the attack. These days it’s the batsmen, and in this case Evin Lewis. He slams his first two balls, from Steven Finn, through the offside for four to get the West Indies off to a flyer.

The Joy of One, England v West Indies in ODIs

Neil Fairbrother’s magical innings at Lord’s in 1991, one of the more bittersweet hundreds scored by an England player in the 1990s.

In other news, there is a belting Test match going on in Bangalore. England need to improve a fair bit if they are to compete in the Ashes next winter.

Related: Renshaw and Marsh edge Australia ahead of India in Bangalore Test

West Indies K Brathwaite, Lewis, Powell, Hope (wk), Mohammed, Carter, Holder (c), C Brathwaite, Bishoo, Nurse, Gabriel.

England Roy, Billings, Root, Morgan (c), Buttler (wk), Stokes, Moeen, Woakes, Rashid, Plunkett, Finn.

They are unchanged, as are England. Next!

Good afternoon. The pitches in the West Indies bear approximately 0.00 per cent resemblance to those in England. In that sense, a series win here would have very little significance when England attempt to win this summer’s Champions Trophy. But confidence, individual and collective, is something you can take all round the globe. Maurice Mentum has the world’s most powerful passport.

In that sense a victory would be valuable, especially if it involves individual success for key players like Eoin Morgan and the type of nuanced batting performance that shows England have more than one way to skin a bowling attack. They will need another such performance today, as we are playing on the same wicket that was used for the first ODI. I say ‘we’; I’m not putting on my pads, I haven’t taken guard on middle stump, Dude.

Related: Fate hands Alex Hales return to England fold after troubled winter

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India gain the upper hand in Bangalore thanks to Pujara – as it happened

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  • India 213-4 at stumps on day three, 126 runs ahead of Australia
  • Che Pujara (79) and Ajinkya Rahane (40) dominate late in day

Related: Pujara puts Australia on the back foot after Kohli decision controversy

After eight sessions of carnage it would have been little surprise to find the second Test all over inside three days. But out of nowhere this odd surface in Bangalore calmed down, Australia’s intensity wained and the finest partnership of the series so far ensued. An unbroken 93-run stand between Cheteshwar Pujara and Ajinkya Rahane has dragged India from a perilous state of effectively 33/4 and guided them to a lead approaching favouritism.

It was hard to imagine such an outcome at the start of a day that began with a flurry of Australian wickets, nor heading to the tea interval when both Virat Kohli and Ravindra Jadeja had recently perished. But this latest chapter adds another layer of intrigue to an engrossing Test match that seems set to deliver a grandstand finish.

72nd over: India 213-4 (Pujara 79, Rahane 40)

Starc to bowl the final over of the day and he almost makes it a short one, Pujara edging his first delivery but it flies wide of the solitary slip Smith. In response, Smith brings Handscomb into second slip, under a lid, and about five metres closer to the stumps than Wade. Pujara survives, finds a single from the penultimate delivery to secure his appearance at the crease tomorrow. Rahane dabs the final ball safely into the offside, high-fives his batting partner and leaves the field to warm applause.

71st over: India 208-4 (Pujara 74, Rahane 40)

Terrific umpiring as India try to minimise the number of remaining overs with a drink and physio break but India’s support staff don’t reach the square before they’re told to hop it. Now both the striker and non-striker are trying to delay O’Keefe. And while Rahane’s so focussed on playing out time he almost chases a lovely delivery into Wade’s gloves.

70th over: India 208-4 (Pujara 74, Rahane 40)

Mitchell Starc is recalled in a bold late move by Steve Smith. He’s looking for fast reverse swinging yorkers, hurling down javelins to Rahane’s toenails. One after another, like he’s trying to nail the batsmen to the ground. This is an excellent effort late in the day by the big fast bowler, but Rahane survives and even farms the strike with a single from the final delivery.

@JPHowcroft This is why test cricket is so vital. Looking for a way to get off work early tomorrow. Fascinating stuff, could go either way

69th over: India 207-4 (Pujara 74, Rahane 39)

Pujara is delivering a masterclass out there for India. Solid in defence, watchful, but still alert to scoring opportunities. A stellar innings in this match and series. What else can Australia do?

68th over: India 205-4 (Pujara 72, Rahane 39)

Lyon’s come out of nowhere to start making things happen again. Two overs in a row with more turn and bounce but with two set batsmen nearing the close of play they’re avoiding the pitfalls of previous sessions.

Australia searching for that fifth wicket late on day three... https://t.co/iGxoJAaz64#INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/fEFEFiDW4R

67th over: India 198-4 (Pujara 70, Rahane 38)

Australia rattling through the overs now as play draws to a close. O’Keefe beats Rahane’s forward prod but again there’s no edge.

66th over: India 198-4 (Pujara 70, Rahane 38)

The first delivery to take off in ages rears at Pujara from Lyon - and another immediately afterwards! The luck is with India though and there’s no gloved chance to a close catcher. Better for Australia, who have gone from chirping in the field to some positively village geeing-up.

"Come on lads" pic.twitter.com/uqlOIXyvXH

65th over: India 198-4 (Pujara 70, Rahane 38)

Rahane’s playing with fire to O’Keefe, padding up outside off-stump but despite the appeal O’Keefe concedes it probably didn’t do enough to warrant a review.

64th over: India 194-4 (Pujara 70, Rahane 34)

Under half an hour remaining of play as this partnership, unbroken for the final session, seems set to be the decisive factor in another gripping day of Test cricket.

63rd over: India 192-4 (Pujara 69, Rahane 33)

Another over from O’Keefe seen off without much fanfare.

62nd over: India 191-4 (Pujara 68, Rahane 33)

India’s lead stretches beyond 100 as Lyon spends an over with his hands on his head. This pair are playing so well form deep in their crease Lyon’s prodigious turn is not bothering them and anything loose is being scored off.

61st over: India 186-4 (Pujara 63, Rahane 33)

O’Keefe to make it spin from both ends and the left-armer gets a little bit more out of the surface but not enough to disturb what is now the highest partnership in the match.

60th over: India 183-4 (Pujara 60, Rahane 33)

Whereas earlier in the day KL Rahul was farming the strike to see off Lyon, now both batsmen are looking to score off Australia’s premier spinner. The spite in this surface has evaporated. The odd one is keeping low and the odd one is still spitting but nowhere near the extent we’d become accustomed to.

59th over: India 180-4 (Pujara 59, Rahane 31)

Rahane into his stride now, driving gloriously against Hazlewood but a superb stop by Shaun Marsh in the covers denies what would have been a textbook cover drive four. He does pick up two with a patient cut later in the over.

Nathan Lyon
1st inns: 22.2-4-50-8
2nd inns 22.0-1-56-0#IndvAus

58th over: India 178-4 (Pujara 59, Rahane 29)

Rahane’s confidence starting to flood back, despite his demotion down the order. A half-volley on off-stump is swept hard for four. Strong wrists, risky shot, but another indication of how this pitch has changed its behaviour since tea. This is not the crazy paving we’ve seen in previous sessions.

57th over: India 171-4 (Pujara 59, Rahane 22)

Hazlewood also recalled to the attack and he’s greeted by a deft late cut from Pujara to guide a four down to fine third-man. Two more with a confident push to the cover sweeper is followed by another two, cut behind point. That brings up the 50 partnership, a cheer from the crowd and an acceptance that this pair are digging India out of a massive hole.

56th over: India 163-4 (Pujara 51, Rahane 22)

Lyon returns to the attack after drinks and his drift is evident immediately but without the prodigious turn and bounce of the first innings Rahane is able to play him from the crease off the back foot into the offside.

55th over: India 159-4 (Pujara 50, Rahane 19)

50 for Pujara, just the fifth of the match, and it’s been a vital calming knock, keeping India ticking over despite the drama at the other end before tea.

Pujara has done more grinding than is seen in most nightclubs. Helped admirably by Rahul early. This Test rocks. #INDvAUS

54th over: India 157-4 (Pujara 49, Rahane 18)

More action from O’Keefe at the start of his over. One beats Pujara’s outside edge and then one looks to beat him on the inside prompting a vocal appeal but there was a big edge on closer inspection.

53rd over: India 156-4 (Pujara 48, Rahane 18)

Marsh plugging away as you’d expect but this pitch has gone into its shell a little. Whether it’s the older ball, more accomplished batting, or what, it’s hard to say, but this game has entered an unlikely phase this evening compared to what went before.

In the first innings Lyon landed 96% of his deliveries on a good length; in this innings he has only landed 39% on that length. #IndvAus

52nd over: India 155-4 (Pujara 47, Rahane 18)

O’Keefe not getting much turn from around the wicket, making the dangerous delivery, the straighter one, less of a variety. Another over comfortably seen off.

"There's been a lot of talk about his batting.That will come good if he's given an opportunity." Brett Lee on M Marsh, playing his 21st Test

51st over: India 153-4 (Pujara 45, Rahane 18)

Hold your horses! What’s this? It’s the lesser spotted Mitch Marsh to trundle in for just his third over of the series. You’d fancy him on this surface, bowling those heavy stump-to-stump quicker-than-you-expect seamers. If there is uneven bounce, his line and high action should exploit them.

50th over: India 153-4 (Pujara 45, Rahane 18)

Smith packs his off-side field for O’Keefe, trying to repeat Rahane’s Pune dismissal but India’s number six is reaching the pitch of the ball comfortably and sees out a maiden.

49th over: India 153-4 (Pujara 45, Rahane 18)

Starc has yet to find his groove since he came on, his line outside off from around the wicket being left alone and anything straight worked with the angle to leg for runs.

48th over: India 149-4 (Pujara 44, Rahane 15)

Double change with Steve O’Keefe replacing Nathan Lyon. The first Test superstar has found a decent partnership blossoming for India, both right-handers judging length and turn beautifully since tea. Not much doing for SOK.

47th over: India 148-4 (Pujara 43, Rahane 15)

Sandeep has his wish... on comes Mitchell Starc for Hazlewood, and he is bowling from around the wicket, really wide with that slingy left-arm action of his. The sightscreen will need to be at extra-cover.

Australia bowled 16 maidens in 71.2 overs in the first innings; they have bowled one in 45 in this innings. #IndvAus

46th over: India 146-4 (Pujara 42, Rahane 13)

This pair looking increasingly adept at facing Lyon, Rahane now unfurling the sweep, although it’s perhaps not the most advisable stroke considering the prodigious bounce Lyon can generate. One does turn sharply but stays low and there’s an LBW shout. It would be hard to give it moved so far but replays show it was an umpire’s call on DRS. Blimey, who’d be an umpire?

45th over: India 145-4 (Pujara 42, Rahane 13)

Excellent from Rahane. Despite the pressure of the situation he’s still able to cut a rare Hazlewood loosener to the point boundary. You can see what Hazlewood’s trying to do though, find a length just shorter than normal for the shooter - and he hits the spot with his fifth delivery - but an unplayable rolling boulder is outside the off stump and no threat to Pujara.

44th over: India 140-4 (Pujara 42, Rahane 8)

This pair are using their feet well to Lyon, smothering most of the grenades by stepping forward and then defusing the ones that spit by being so deep in their crease they have time to play them with soft hands.

43rd over: India 137-4 (Pujara 41, Rahane 6)

And just for pure comedy value Hazlewood’s opening two deliveries barely get above ankle height, the first of which provokes a stifled cry for LBW. This pitch is so unpredictable.

42nd over: India 134-4 (Pujara 40, Rahane 4)

Pujara noticeably using his feet more against Lyon, especially to anything tossed up. The benefit of that is Lyon readjusting to a shorter length allowing the batsman to move back deep into his crease with plenty of time to whip runs on the on side.

41st over: India 131-4 (Pujara 38, Rahane 3)

Hazlewood shares duties with Lyon and his radar is slightly askew in his first over after the break. A number of deliveries angled down the legside could have been punished but despite Pujara’s intent the bowler escapes with just a couple of singles damage.

40th over: India 130-4 (Pujara 38, Rahane 2)

Lyon to open proceedings after tea. 32 overs to be bowled in the session.

So, what is a dangerous total for Australia to chase? Anything over 100? 150? You wouldn’t fancy chasing more on this shocker of a strip.

Aniket has completed the Venn diagram of current affairs with this thought provoking email.

“This test match ranks among the most exciting I have ever seen. Truly absorbing. There is an interesting analogy here. The general consensus here in India was that the Australians are going to be steamrolled and that they will be whitewashed, much like what Hillary Clinton, most of America and the the rest of the world thought that Trump will lose by a landslide. But as we can see, the tables have turned, and the Australians are playing magnificent cricket. Sadly, Trump has not been a magnificent president.”

Aus seem to me to giving a top display of how to use a balanced bowling attack to best effect. Know your conditions

Well, well, well. This is already a modern classic of a Test match and hurtling at pace into a defining one for this young Australian outfit. Those two wickets just before tea have transformed this Test from an ominous one for the visitors with Kohli looking to assert himself into another that could be over inside three days.

Much has come down to Steve Smith’s captaincy, and as the old adage goes, it doesn’t matter if you’re good if you’re lucky, and Smith’s luck came in just at the right time courtesy of Hazlewood’s golden arm.

Test cricket, eh?

India lead by 35 runs as my spell finishes, but JP Howcroft will be stopping by shortly to relieve me, and he’s a master of reverse swing. Do make him welcome.

39th over: India 122-4 (Pujara 34, Rahane 2)

And that is tea on day three. What a finish to the session by Australia’s Josh Hazlewood. He’s got 3-37 from 11 overs as he leads his side off, and they’re right in this game. Ajinkya Rahane was dropped down the order – which didn’t work when Ravi Jadeja was nipped out for 2 – and endured a minor nightmare in this over. The first ball he faced from Hazlewood spat up off the pitch to rap him on the knuckles, but he gets off the mark with two and survives until the break.

Ravindra Jadeja’s middle stump just landed somewhere in Wednesday! Josh Hazlewood is producing an absolute gem of a spell here and gets another. This time it’s full and straight and swinging in, and with India’s makeshift No5 playing all around it, his timber is splattered. What a game of cricket this is.

38th over: India 120-3 (Pujara 34, Jadeja 2)

We’re close to tea now on what has been another enthralling day of Test cricket. And to think there are still two Test left after these. I might need oxygen tank. Pujara just needs to get through to the next session, so pads up to the off-spinner. “Good Gary,” says Matthew Wade, giving himself wiggle room for grander compliments when it spins even more than this. Which is quite a lot.

37th over: India 120-3 (Pujara 34, Jadeja 2)

Sohid Ahmed writes in now. “Russell, we have work to do. cCn you please not make it so exciting? I am on the verge of asking my boss for a half day.” To misapply a well-worn quote from former Australian Prime Minister Bob Hawke, any boss who doesn’t give his staff a half-day to watch this is a bum! Hazlewood continues here. Have I mentioned that he’s a genius, and that Steve Smith was very smart to bring him on? I hope so. Hazlewood finishes this over with another throaty LBW shout against Jadeja, but Nigel Llong shakes his head. He’s had a reasonable day today, the ump.

36th over: India 119-3 (Pujara 33, Jadeja 2)

I’m currently receiving a lot of emails containing the words “benefit of the doubt” and “batsman”. Sorry folks, that is not a rule, and never has been. Tough for Kohli, but as the third umpire said, he could see nothing to conclusively prove that the Indian skipper got bat on it. Meanwhile, Nathan Lyon is back on the ground and back on to bowl. He starts with a shocker, and Pujara batters it over mid-wicket for four. Jadeja faces the last couple and remains circumspect, nudging two runs to leg to get off the mark.

35th over: India 112-3 (Pujara 28, Jadeja 0)

This just gets better. Now Ravindra Jadeja strides out to the middle rather than normal No5 Ajinkya Rahane, who is out of form and now sliding down the order. Bizarre, and utterly brilliant. He sees off the rest of the Hazlewood over, though Hazlewood finishes it with another LBW shout. Kohli stands in the sheds watching TV replays. He is not amused.

Kohli is gone! I take back everything I said. Steve Smith is a genius. I am an idiot. Pace has done the job. The danger man is gone cheaply again! Hooley dooley this is some sort of Test match. It took an age for the third umpire to review all the evidence, but the Indian skipper is on his way back to the pavilion and this game is well and truly alive. India lead by 25 runs but face a real battle here.

Well, well, well. Kohli is reviewing it, but this looks salmon trout. Kohli thinks he’s feathered an edge before it hit his pad.

34th over: India 110-2 (Pujara 28, Kohli 13)

Something is up with Nathan Lyon, and he departs the ground. Glenn Maxwell comes out as sub-fielder, and O’Keefe takes Lyon’s end. Not ideal for Australia. With only a small amount of diplomacy, Michael Clarke is starting to rip into Steve Smith’s captaincy here, particularly his (under)use of the spinners. He wonders why O’Keefe doesn’t have a short leg in place in this over, and I can see what he means.

33rd over: India 106-2 (Pujara 27, Kohli 10)

Hmm, right as I’m waxing lyrical about the pressure being built by O’Keefe, Steve Smith reintroduces the pace of Hazlewood. His first ball strays onto Kohli’s pads and gets tenderised on its way to the deep mid-wicket boundary. Deary me. Kohli will be loving this. Unless Australia nip him out cheaply this could get very desperate very quickly. That tail end collapse is looking even worse now.

32nd over: India 100-2 (Pujara 26, Kohli 5)

Oooh, Pujara gets very lucky here, dancing down the wicket at Lyon and missing an on drive. The ball thuds into his pad but might have snuck through a gap for a stumping opportunity. Matthew Hayden is talking about building up the bricks. Hopefully whatever wall eventuates will keep him away from the microphone. A single to Kohli brings up 100 for India, and they now lead by 13 runs. Push that past 150 and Australia might be in serious bother. Much is at stake in the following half-hour, and whatever comes in the final session.

31st over: India 98-2 (Pujara 25, Kohli 4)

O’Keefe must wish he could roll up the Indian wickets and take them home with him, the way his career has turned the corner in the last two weeks. He’s probing away again in this over, but the main threat for now is at Lyon’s end. What O’Keefe is doing far better than the pacemen before is building pressure. He’s got a wicket, but he’s also bowled plenty of dot balls.

30th over: India 96-2 (Pujara 23, Kohli 4)

Pujara is a little more comfortable to Lyon now, and drives handsomely to long on for a single before Kohli dices with danger by pushing one inches past the right hand of Handscomb at short leg. He gets two but he’s still not comfortable. “No idea, Gaz!” cries Wade, which is a bit rich given the way he’s been keeping in the last few Tests.

29th over: India 94-2 (Pujara 23, Kohli 2)

“Bowling SOK-y” cries Matthew Wade behind the stumps, reminding everyone of what his mouth is missing. O’Keefe beats Kohli’s edge was an absolute peach, and must weather a testing little spell here from the Australian spinners. The stage is perfectly set for his combative genius, I reckon.

28th over: India 93-2 (Pujara 22, Kohli 2)

“Seriously great advert for test cricket here after England’s rather tame regression to the home team dominance paradigm,” says reader Brian Withington, and for the sake of stopping an argument, I think he’s a Brit. Pujarafinishes the Lyon over with a single and looks switched on, though Matthew Wade is carrying on as though he’s facing up with the wrong end of the bat in his hands.

27th over: India 92-2 (Pujara 21, Kohli 2)

There is no escape from the spin now for Pujara, and he’s looking only slightly more comfortable against O’Keefe than he was early on against Lyon. With the left-armer rushing between balls, Pujara tries to make him wait, and O’Keefe does a good job acting as though these demands are completely unreasonable. Buckle in for a thrilling final hour of this second session, folks.

26th over: India 89-2 (Pujara 18, Kohli 2)

Kohli is getting a huge stride in as he gets forward to counter the sharp spin of Nathan Lyon, but even a batsman as brilliant as him looks human in the face of some sublime bowling. Lyon has a slip, a leg slip and a short leg, and by the end of the over he’s also wearing a slightly sadistic grin by his affable standards. He probably fancies another eight poles here.

25th over: India 87-2 (Pujara 17, Kohli 1)

“If catches win matches then Australia have already won,” says Matthew Hayden, who might actually be demented. Anyway, O’Keefe’s introduction has had the impact we all thought it might, scores are now level, and batting wizard Virat Kohli is at the crease. What else would you rather be doing on a Tuesday, I ask you?

Steve Smith = FREAK!!!! #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/nX9kYs6Cg6

Steve Smith you genius! But also not... The Aussie skipper took an age to bring Steve O’Keefe on, and now that he has they’ve combined for the wicket of the danger man. The act itself was remarkable: Smith leapt to his right at first slip and reeled in what looked an impossible chance. It’s a one-hander of the highest order. Holy moly. Rahul can’t believe it. but he has to go.

It’s a pity. Rahul made this dicey pitch look like day two in Adelaide. His half-century has India on the brink of a lead and that’s no mean feat. It took a miracle catch to dismiss him. How good is cricket?

Holy crap. What a catch by Steven Smith. Watch the replays. #AUSvIND#Australia#Indiapic.twitter.com/UiAH58RbI7

24th over: India 83-1 (Rahul 51, Pujara 14)

Rahul faces up to Lyon and gives about 1/8th of a chance when he turns one hard to leg. It gets to Handscomb very quickly at short leg, and you can’t really fault him, or call it a drop. In relative terms, Pujara is also more comfortable against the off-spinner and gets one. This is genuinely absorbing Test cricket at the moment.

23rd over: India 81-1 (Rahul 50, Pujara 13)

In a surprise to absolutely nobody bar Steve Smith, the Indians continue to profit from pace bowling when Rahul lathers a half-volley through cover for another boundary off Starc, then flicks off his pads with class to pick up two. Might Darren Lehmann or the bowling coach David Saker send a memo out to the skipper at this point? O’Keefe stands with his hands on his hips as Rahul strokes a single off the final delivery of the over, which brings up his half-century from 82 deliveries. He’s making batting look ridiculously easy when you consider the grim efforts of the other 21 batsmen in this game.

22nd over: India 74-1 (Rahul 43, Pujara 13)

Fascinating stat: Lokesh Rahul averages 60 in the first innings of Tests but only 16 in the second. This is now his highest score in the second innings. He’s playing with house money. In an odd moment of this over, he backs away as Lyon moves in and gets bowled by a dead ball. Somebody is moving around in front of the sight screen again. Lyon had an opportunity to work Pujara over here, but his first delivery of the over was short and allowed his bunny to pull a single. Rahul handles the rest with aplomb.

21st over: India 70-1 (Rahul 40, Pujara 12)

A run-out is the last thing India needs at this point but Pujara almost perishes running to the danger end for a Rahul single. It was Pujara’s call, to be fair. A direct hit from gully might have had him in trouble but the throw misses. But more to the point, why is Mitchell Starc replacing Hazlewood and not Steve O’Keefe? Spin is the clear threat here, so it’s all a bit baffling from Steve Smith. Pujara has a grand old time flicking the paceman to leg and restoring his confidence a little.

20th over: India 66-1 (Rahul 39, Pujara 9)

Again Rahul decides it’s best to concede the over to Lyon and shield his partner, though Pujara might actually want to face a ball at some stage. Probably at the other end. Rahul eventually takes a single from the penultimate delivery, and Pujara’s in all sorts for the final one. So...the original plan was a good one.

19th over: India 65-1 (Rahul 38, Pujara 9)

Somewhat surprisingly, Hazlewood gets another over. Personally I think it’s time for some Steve O’Keefe, which is underlined when the tired paceman fires one down the leg side and gets turned for a gimme boundary. Puzzlingly, Rahul tries to ramp a short one over the cordon, which doesn’t seem wise. Luckily for him he fails to make contact. That aside, he’s continuing where he left off in the first innings, and boy didn’t India need his 90 runs then. They’re starting to feel like 200 as this game wears on. He’s also kept the strike for Lyon’s over.

18th over: India 60-1 (Rahul 33, Pujara 9)

Lyon’s bowling to Rahul again in this over, and turning it sharply to put his close-in fieldsmen into play. There is a slip, a leg slip and a short leg, but when his third delivery keeps low, Rahul does very well to get bat on it and avoid an LBW demise. It’s fantastic bowling by Lyon. It actually has the vibe of those times when Harbhajan Singh was off on one and tormenting the Aussies. Rahul gets a single from the final delivery to keep the strike. He’s shepherding Pujara to safety here. Brilliant batting under immense pressure.

17th over: India 59-1 (Rahul 32, Pujara 9)

Pujara is on his fourth life here, and takes advantage by opening the face and gliding Hazlewood down to third man for a boundary. The big paceman might be out of gas here, so from the next over at his end we might see a change.

16th over: India 55-1 (Rahul 32, Pujara 5)

“87 is an unlucky number in the Australian culture,” says Brett Lee, referring to Australia’s first innings lead. It’s utter hogwash, of course, though Nathan Lyon might be starting to disagree. This over he manages to avoid any further frustration, though it’s only because Pujara is standing at the non-striker’s end throughout.

15th over: India 53-1 (Rahul 30, Pujara 5)

Something worth mentioning as Josh Hazlewood is hit for Lokesh Rahul’s 1000th run in Test cricket: Che Pujara has been dismissed five times in Tests by Nathan Lyon. In the last ten minutes he’s given no less than three chances as Lyon works him over. This is the primary contest right now, and it’s enthralling. Rahul will have the strike to start with in the next over. He might want to keep it.

14th over: India 50-1 (Rahul 27, Pujara 5)

Rahul turns a single towards fine leg to get off strike, which seems a good idea the way Lyon is bowling. Sure enough, the second ball of the over is ANOTHER DROPPED CATCH! It passed Wade’s right pad – and really should have been his – but it’ll go down as a Steve Smith drop. The Aussie skipper dived to his left at first slip but he couldn’t see the ball until it was until late, and it just slaps into his palm before hitting the turf. Matthew Wade is having a shocker here. Lyon is bowling like a dream here but he could do with some help. Pujara survives.

13th over: India 47-1 (Rahul 25, Pujara 4)

Hazlewood continues with diligent intentions, but he’s a little inconsistent with his line and length so there are singles on offer for both batsmen. He attacks the stumps again with his final delivery but Rahul keeps it out. Strap in for some more of that Nathan Lyon chaos in the next over. This could be fun.

12th over: India 44-1 (Rahul 23, Pujara 3)

Ooft. Big turn for Lyon with his first delivery of the session. Rahul is forward to it but it jags in at an alarming angle to rap him on the front pad. Matthew Wade being Matthew Wade, he screams for an LBW decision, but there’s nothing doing. Rahul composes himself and gets off strike, then Pujara pushes through cover for two.

11th over: India 41-1 (Rahul 21, Pujara 1)

Che Pujara is the new man for India, and he’ll be aiming to improve on his strange showing in the first innings, where he looked well set on 17 before getting himself out. He’s off the mark with a single and Nathan Lyon will pair with the wicket-taker Hazlewood in the next over.

What a start to the second session for Australia! Josh Hazlewood appeared after the break with a few innocuous deliveries but then ripped through the defences of Indian opener Abhinav Mukund from around the wicket, castling him with the fourth ball of the session. Perfect start for Australia.

Some very sad news for lovers of great Australian sportswriting

Trevor Grant, the longtime sportswriter at the Herald Sun, Sunday Press, The Age, Sporting Globe and Newsday, has died at the age of 65. There is a tribute to him here by his former colleague Jon Anderson, but it suffices to say he was one of the most inquisitive, humane and excellent sports journalists in Australia, and a must-read cricket writer for much of his almost 50-year career.

RIP Trevor Grant one of the best sports journos I ever had the pleasure to work with. Gone too soon. #shortone

I have no idea how this is calculated but it looks good for India

An great morning session for India has seen their #WinViz rise from 14.8%. #IndvAuspic.twitter.com/yBvKknKyDV

10th over: India 38-0 (Rahul 20, Mukund 16)

Lyon’s over is an accurate and probing one, but Rahul and Mukund both push singles on their way to seeing off the threat. They couldn’t have done much better in this 35-minute barrage. They’ve chipped off 38 runs to trail by 49, and didn’t lose a wicket. The Australians will be a little disappointed with that. None of the four bowlers used produced anything compelling. The net result: India’s best session of the series.

India have had a great session there, but the last ball from Lyon was the first ball that has kept low all morning.

9th over: India 35-0 (Rahul 18, Mukund 15)

Steve O’Keefe does indeed appear for a pre-lunch over now, but it won’t be the last of the session. Rahul nudges a single to cover and knock me down with a feather, but Mukund drops his glove as he runs through for it, eking out a bit of time in the process. Then he pulls away from the final delivery as well. It doesn’t work. O’Keefe is through his six deliveries in a flash, so Lyon will have one more over.

8th over: India 34-0 (Rahul 17, Mukund 15)

Hmm, there was a little more to the Starc-Mukund conversation at the end of the last over, though it was a one-way street. Starc was unloading on the Indian opener. I wonder what Ian Healy will think. Lyon continues to left-handed Mukund, and he’s getting a decent amount of spin in this over, coming around the wicket and fizzing it past the outside edge. In a moment of madness, Mukund leaves the last, which goes on with the flight and misses the off stump by a matter of inches. Mukund chuckles, but that wasn’t his finest moment.

7th over: India 33-0 (Rahul 16, Mukund 15)

Steve Smith might have been tempted to give Steve O’Keefe an over here but sticks with Starc. The Indian openers continue to take brisk singles, which has been an obvious ploy to set a tone early in their innings. So far it’s working. Mukund can’t cash in on a wild and wooly short one from Starc, which he attacks with a full-blooded hook shot but misses. Brilliantly, he does latch on to another, top-edging it rather unconvincingly but picking up a six in the process. Starc laughs because crying wouldn’t inspire confidence.

6th over: India 25-0 (Rahul 15, Mukund 8)

Spin time now as Nathan Lyon wanders in to replace Josh Hazlewood. That seems sensible to me. Something needed to change, and he’s worth a go before lunch. He’s also on a hat-trick after taking wickets with his final two deliveries of the first innings. Mukund keeps the first one out with a solid forward defence, and when he’s on the back foot he’s offering a dead straight bat. Without a diving stop from Warner at point, Mukund also might have picked off a boundary from a half-tracker but contents himself with a single. Not much turn for Lyon in his first over.

Related: Former Australia cricketer Ian Healy 'losing respect' for Virat Kohli

5th over: India 24-0 (Rahul 15, Mukund 7)

We’ll have 15 minutes more play before lunch, which probably means three overs after this one from Starc. He comes around the wicket to Rahul but both he and his partner are handling things comfortably at the moment. They might not want to go off the way the early momentum has gone in their favour.

4th over: India 20-0 (Rahul 12, Mukund 6)

Remember half an hour ago when I floated a theory about India being bowled out for 75? Funny thing: I was hacked. The IT boffins tell me the security breach has since been fixed. Speaking of remedies, Josh Hazlewood seems to have reined his line in a decent amount now, and this is much tidier in his second over. A single to Rahul is the only damage and there’s a quarter of a LBW shout against Mukund from the final delivery. Not out.

3rd over: India 19-0 (Rahul 11, Mukund 6)

Rahul is making himself a little vulnerable in one sense; Starc’s extra pace means he’s not opting to bat outside his crease as per the approach of the Australians, thus he’s a greater liability to be trapped in front by Starc’s yorker. Still, the big left-armer has to nail one for that to be a problem. At the moment he’s taking the Ishant approach and pitching it a yawning distance outside off stump.

2nd over: India 14-0 (Rahul 11, Mukund 2)

Matthew Wade is grimacing already, and you can’t really blame him. Hazlewood steams in with a wide one and as well as taking off at right angles towards the cordon, it bounces a couple of times before Wade has to stop it. I hope he’s wearing a mouthguard. The next ball takes off like the pitch is the WACA circa 1975. Rahul continues his bright start by clipping a compact and effective straight drive to the fence when Halzwood over-pitches. This is a dreadful start by Australia’s opening bowlers. Both have bowled six entirely different deliveries. Line and length would do the job here. Even Mukund gets a couple.

1st over: India 7-0 (Rahul 6, Mukund 0)

We’re away in India’s second innings, and facing up to start with is Lokesh Rahul, the only major contributor of the first innings. He immediately clips Starc down to fine leg for a single. Less settled in this line-up is Abhinav Mukund, who hasn’t played a Test in six years and looks a bit rusty when he fences outside off stump to Starc first up. The Aussie laughs, then literally licks his lips.

Losing 4-7 is hardly an ideal way to finish

Though Australia’s nose is slightly ahead here. In more good news, Robert McLiam Wilson’s migraine must be clearing. He writes: “Reasons to wish you were Australian: Vol I – every single time any Aussie ever says ‘crook’ or ‘strides’ (I was born to say such things but neither work convincingly with my accent). Mind you, I feel something the same when Americans say ‘doofus’ or ‘No shit, Sherlock’.”

WICKET! Hazlewood c Rahul b Jadeja 1 (Australia all out for 276)

That is that. Jadeja finishes with 6-63 from 21.4 overs having done a superb job finishing off the Aussies. The final wicket was Hazlewood, who thumped one down to long on but not far enough to avoid Rahul in the deep. The tourists lead by 87 runs and will have somewhere in the vicinity of 35 minutes to jag a few wickets before lunch.

87 run lead for the Aussies. Very well played in tough batting conditions once again

122nd over: Australia 275-9 (O’Keefe 3, Hazlewood 1)

Does anyone else get the sneaky feeling India might be bowled out for 75 on this track? Just me? A qualifier: Josh Hazlewood is playing Ashwin comfortably in this over, and he’s hardly Sir Garfield Sobers.

121st over: Australia 275-9 (O’Keefe 3, Hazlewood 1)

Hazlewood survives the hat-trick ball and gets a single to boot. Having bowled half as many overs as Ravi Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja now has 5-62 from 21 overs of canny left-arm spin. That was an outstanding over to reduce the Australians to nine down. They lead by 86 runs at the moment, and that could have been a far bigger deficit for India.

Jadeja is on a hat-trick! Lyon is gone for a golden duck and things are falling away very quickly for the Australians. Often their tailenders have got them out of bother, today they’re falling like nine pins. The tourists have lost their last three wickets for five runs.

It’s given, and Lyon opts for the last chance saloon review. If he fails, Jadeja is on a hat-trick!

Wade’s gone! It was a hit and hope referral, that one, but it was heading straight for the stumps when it struck him in line. Off he trots and the rest of them stop for drinks.

Well that answers the question about Jadeja’s fitness, though Matthew Wade’s stay might be over. He’s been given out and he conferences with O’Keefe before asking for a review. Worth a shot.

120th over: Australia 274-7 (Wade 40, O’Keefe 3)

Hmm, has Ravi Jadeja just crocked himself diving in the outfield? He’s certainly grimacing in pain after Wade scurries through for a single. It looks like his hamstring or buttock is the issue. Sod’s law has it that he’s forced into another chase soon after. In the next over we’ll see how it’ll alter his delivery stride, if at all.

119th over: Australia 271-7 (Wade 39, O’Keefe 1)

Steve O’Keefe gets off the mark with a single, and it is worth mentioning at this point that he too can handle a cricket bat. In first-class cricket he averages 28.74 with nine half-centuries. One more here would just about get Australia over the line.

118th over: Australia 269-7 (Wade 38, O’Keefe 0)

OBO favourite Robert McLiam Wilson arrives now with his first dispatch of the Test. I won’t hold it against him that it’s taken until day three, because it appears he’s crooker than that Nigel Llong decision from earlier in the over.

Starc goes! Finally he latched onto a slog sweep, but I was wrong about the distance covered; he picks out Jadeja at cow corner, though the latter has to do some very smart work moving around to take the catch. With that wicket down, Australia have three more in the bank and lead by 80 runs. Forty more and they’ll be reasonably content.

OK, I was completely wrong on that one. It’s been overturned! Starc lives to fight another day.

And it’s been given! Starc immediately reviews but the replays don’t look good for him.

117th over: Australia 267-6 (Wade 37, Starc 25)

This is actually much better from India. Jadeja has a wide-ish leg gully in place as he comes around the wicket to Wade and when he claims an inside edge the ball nearly reach that man. Wade weathers a searching five deliveries and then plays a beautiful stroke, dancing down the wicket and gently driving past mid-off for a boundary.

116th over: Australia 262-6 (Wade 33, Starc 24)

Ashwin changes his plan of attack and comes around the wicket to Wade. He’s got a slip, a silly point and a man on the 45 (that is a close-in fine leg or a deep leg gully, in case you’re wondering). At least it gives Wade something else to think about, and he’s watchful and defensive in this over. Maiden.

115th over: Australia 262-6 (Wade 33, Starc 24)

Kohli’s seen enough of Ishant now, and I don’t entirely blame him on that front. Ravindra Jadeja appears for his first bowl of the day, and Wade is crouching low to sweep him for a single down to fine leg. Starc does even better, opening the face and running one to third man to pick up two. It’s all Australia so far. The Indian bowlers are really battling.

114th over: Australia 257-6 (Wade 31, Starc 21)

This is turning into a pesky partnership for Virat Kohli and his side. It now totals 35 runs from just under 13 overs, and Australia’s lead has stretched to 68 with a couple of bys in this over. Ashwin has half a LBW shout against Starc but it’s a rather desperate one, and not taken seriously by Nigel Llong.

113th over: Australia 255-6 (Wade 31, Starc 21)

Ishant was approaching Wade from around the wicket before, but he comes over now, which means he’s a bit straighter in his approach, and no less likely to miss out on an LBW if he’s not going to bowl straight. He draws Matthew Wade into a thick outside edge but it’s low and wide of the cordon, and runs away for four. Unlucky.

112th over: Australia 249-6 (Wade 25, Starc 21)

Ravi Ashwin is coming over the wicket to Starc, spinning it from a fourth stump line outside leg, but when he straightens up a bit Starc angles the bat and gets a couple through gully. He’s also throwing the kitchen sink at those slog-sweeps I mentioned earlier, but can’t quite make contact. When he does it might clear the stadium roofline.

111th over: Australia 247-6 (Wade 25, Starc 19)

Starc misses out on clipping one to fine leg but Wade scurries through for a leg bye, making his ground well before Saha throws down the stumps with his glove still on. Fair effort, that. I know containment is the name of the game for Ishant, but his economy rate is a moot point when Ashwin isn’t taking wickets at the other end. BOWL IT AT THE STUMPS, ISHANT!

110th over: Australia 246-6 (Wade 25, Starc 19)

Ashwin continues to Starc, who is often shaping to slog sweep but having difficulty wedding his premeditated stroke to the delivery in question. Matthew Hayden wants him to hit it flat and straight, which is his best suggestion in a while. A misfield gives Starc a single, and he retains the strike.

109th over: Australia 245-6 (Wade 25, Starc 18)

Ishant returns and finally gets one in the vicinity of the stumps, but it’s angling into Starc’s pads and he clips it away for three hany runs. So far so bad from the Indian paceman, who was excellent yesterday if a little wide with his line. Something else worth asking, re the Mitch Marsh debate: is he really needed when Starc is batting this well? Another thing: I haven’t received one publishable email about Ian Healy yet, but will keep checking them all off with the lawyers.

108th over: Australia 242-6 (Wade 25, Starc 15)

Ravi Ashwin is on from “the spinner’s end” of the ground, and will settle in for most of the morning I would think. Starc greets his first with a gigantic front pad, and then he plays an accidental French cut through his legs before four byes fly away to the boundary. It might be a tough morning behind the stumps for Wriddhiman Saha.

107th over: Australia 237-6 (Wade 25, Starc 14)

And we’re off on day three. Ishant Sharma has the ball in his hand first up and Matthew Wade faces up, whipping his hand off the bat and shaking it when the Indian paceman gets one to rear up and rap him on the gloves. Others keep lower, and I might make an early suggestion that Ishant takes on board a lesson from his dismissal of Mitch Marsh and just bowls it at the stumps. Crazy, I know, but you’re not bowling anybody or trapping them in front by pitch it a foot outside off stump on an up-and-down pitch. Balls three, four, five and six are all pitched outside off, drastically reducing the chance of a wicket as Wade gropes around. Get it together, Ishant.

Ian Healy has taken a decent old swipe at Virat Kohli

We’re still five minutes from the first ball and the hostilities have begun. The former Australian wicketkeeper says he’s “losing respect” for the Indian skipper after his verbal skirmish with Steve Smith yesterday. “The pressure is starting to tell on (Kohli),” Healy said on Melbourne radio station SEN this morning. “I’m losing respect for him. He’s not only now continuing his disrespect of the Australian players and umpires, but I think he’s putting pressure on his own players now.”

The pitch

“It looks like a totally different morning, this morning,” says Brett Lee, explaining the key differences between the concepts of yesterday and today. The pitch? The cracks are opening up like sinkholes. It’s an alarming sight on day three. We’re going to see a lot of deliveries staying low, and t’s going to be very fun to bowl on. “If Australia get the lead to 120, India’s going to have their backs to the wall,” says Sunny Gavaskar, and he’s pretty much spot-on there. “It’s almost been a pitch of two halves,” adds Lee. Somebody gag him, please.

On Shaun Marsh

“I don’t really know why he comes under the scrutiny he does,” says national selector Mark Waugh of Australia’s No4. Waugh is, remember, a member of the national selection panel, so has something of a vested interest in Marsh’s success on this tour. It’s tough on Usman Khawaja, who really should be in this side instead of Mitchell Marsh, but the older brother was magnificent yesterday. He’s not quite as stylish as Khawaja, but there is something inarguably artful about his batting on Asian pitches. He had a bit of luck in his 66 yesterday, but he did precisely the job he was brought in for.

Preamble

Hello all and welcome to day three of the Bangalore Test. Russell Jackson here to take you through the first couple of sessions on what will prove the pivotal day in deciding the result. In actual fact, I have a feeling that 45 minutes of big hitting by Mitchell Starc could put India out of the game and with it, the series. If you disagree, please do hit me with an apoplectic email or tweet.

Russell will be here shortly. In the meantime, here’s how yesterday went down. It was enthralling stuff.

Related: Renshaw and Marsh edge Australia ahead of India in Bangalore Test

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India beat Australia by 75 runs in second Test – as it happened

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  • India 189 & 274; Australia 276 & 112 | India win by 75 runs
  • Series levelled at 1-1 with two Tests to play

And some heated reaction:

Related: Virat Kohli lays into Steve Smith and Australia following second Test incident

Here’s our match report from Adam Collins:

Related: Australia put in a spin as India complete remarkable comeback in second Test

What a game, and what a result for India. The series stays alive, the Border-Gavaskar trophy is up for grabs. The home side looked baked for all money after Nathan ‘Nathan’ Lyon eroded them through the first session and took his 8-50. But how quickly things can turn: he got none-for in the second innings, and made two runs in two hits with the bat.

Australia should really have found their way to a win with a first innings lead of 87 runs on a very difficult pitch. But Rahane and Pujara took the game away with their 118-run stand, the only century partnership of the match, and KL Rahul was equally important with his scores of 90 and 51.

Related: Australia put in a spin as India complete remarkable comeback in second Test

Edged a couple of runs, Lyon, then tries to drive the flighted ball and Ashwin finishes the game himself with his sixth wicket. Takes the simple return catch and India’s players descend into a huddle of yelling faces and pumping fists.

With 78 to get, Handscomb decides he needs to get some of them quickly, and tries for a big slog-sweep. The bat ends up almost vertical, the ball goes up the chimney, and Saha trots a couple of paces back behind the stumps to be there for the drop.

35th over: Australia 110-8 (Handscomb 24, Lyon 0)

Lyon tries to get himself out by slogging to cover, but fails. Survives four balls of the Jadeja over. somehow.

India on the verge now! This pitch has gone from difficult to unplayable, at least as far as some deliveries were concerned. Left-arm around to the right-hander, the ball hits a flat spot, and commando-rolls into middle stump in a manner untouchable by any bat made by man.

34th over: Australia 110-7 (Handscomb 24, O’Keefe 2)

Handscomb a defensive masterclass against Ashwin. Watches the turn, waits back, sharp reflexes. Blots out a maiden.

33rd over: Australia 110-7 (Handscomb 24, O’Keefe 2)

Yadav bowls straight, attacking the stumps. Handscomb is good enough to work a couple of singles through square leg, while O’Keefe is hit on the body and gets a leg bye. Yadav couldn’t resist the short ball to a tailender.

32nd over: Australia 107-7 (Handscomb 22, O’Keefe 2)

Alarm, alarm, alarm. O’Keefe edges a single. Handscomb flicks a more confident one. Then O’Keefe plays a similar shot, but squarer, and there’s hesitation with the calling. O’Keefe would have been run out at the non-striker’s end had the throw hit. It doesn’t. They get a valuable run, just before Handscomb is beaten on the outside edge by an absolute snorter that spits on straight. Ashwin battled in the first innings without huge reward, but he’s putting on a display here. Handscomb isn’t fussed, coming outside his off stump to nudge another run square on the leg side.

31st over: Australia 103-7 (Handscomb 20, O’Keefe 0)

Handscomb isn’t quite sure what to do here. How to approach this? He’s doing it amturely, just trying to calm things down, get settled, instil some confidence in his batting partner. He defends the entire Umesh Yadav over, and when the last ball rears up and hits him high in the ribs under his front arm, he cracks a broad grin and laughs at the bowler. Loving the contest. This is a great tell about a player.

30th over: Australia 103-7 (Handscomb 20, O’Keefe 0)

O’Keefe can also defend - remember he was part of Australia sitting on 8-161 for a session against Sri Lanka in Pallekele. He defends Ashwin’s last two balls with positive footwork.

I typed all that for nothing. Starc defends a few balls but looks uncomfrtable against Ashwin’s bounce. Then one from the off spinner comes in from around the wicket, holds its line, bounces high, zips past the inside edge of the defensive stroke, hits Starc in the armpit, and knocks down the off bail.

29th over: Australia 103-6 (Handscomb 20, Starc 1)

Mitchell Starc has 117 runs so far in the series, in his three innings. That makes him fifth on the runs list, behind only Rahul, Smith, Renshaw and Pujara. If he gets another decent knock here, he could top the list for runs by an Australian No8 or below in a series against India. More importantly, if he gets another decent knock here, Australia wins a Test and retains a trophy. Umesh bowls short, Handscomb stylishly cuts a run, then Starc opens his innings by nudging another into the leg side.

28th over: Australia 101-6 (P Handscomb 19, Starc 0)

Last ball of Ahswin’s over, as he took the wicket before tea, and Starc defends it.

Send me a tweet, send me an email, do. I’ll try to read them between my interlaced fingers.

Wellity wellity well. Get your lunch containers ready indeed, lambies and gooseberries. Inhale, exhale. Think of the work of Telepopmusik, or The Prodigy: breathe. This is a wonderful Test match. This is the business end of it. Another fast Mitchell Starc innings could turn it over. A couple of quick Ravi wickets, whether (ndra) or (chandran), and it flips the other way. But wait... if something flips in either direction, it lands the same way up. So to go the other way it needs to not flip at all. Oh, I don’t even know anymore. Hello. Geoff here. Almost having a coronary already. Farewell, Russell, goodnight sweet prince. And flights of appeals sing thee to thy rest.

With that Wade wicket, Australia now stare into the abyss. At tea they’re 87 runs short of the win and India’s spinners will be bowling at the tail. Can Mitchell Starc and Peter Handscomb pull it off? Find out when Geoff Lemon stops by shortly. I’m off to fold myself into the foetal position, or maybe blow into a paper bag for a while. Blimey.

It’s happening! The collapse is on. Now Wade presses forward hard to the final delivery of the Ashwin over and when it bobbles up off his pad, Saha sprints past the vacant short leg region, dives and reels in a superb catch. India are right on top!

27th over: Australia 101-5 (Handscomb 19, Wade 0)

Australia had just overcome another symbolic psychological hurdle by moving into triple figures before Marsh perished, but to speak like Matthew Hayden for a moment, this has really put the cat amongst the pigeons, cats, mice, plus both sleeping and top dogs. Matthew Wade is at the crease now and Jadeja paired with Ashwin. Buckle in.

Mitch Marsh goes! Oh dear, that is unfortunate. He was back and across to the returning Ashwin and feathers an edge into his leg before short leg swoops on it. He was looking very solid until then, but now he’s on his way The person I envy: Geoff Lemon, who will take you through the evening session. We can’t be far off the tea break now. 87 to win for Australia

25th over: Australia 98-4 (Handscomb 16, M Marsh 13)

Ishant Sharma is back to replace Umesh, and I like this a lot. He really set the wheels in motion with his fiery spell earlier, but right as I type that Handscomb lathers him through cover for a boundary to reduce the target to two figures. He’s also nudging the singles when they’re on offer. Equally as good is a four Mitch Marsh punches through mid-on, with a perfectly straight bat. That means Australia have reached the half-way point in this chase, and it gets even better when Marsh angles another boundary through the cordon. Super shot.

22 runs off the last two overs from Umesh and Ishant. This match is now about winning small phases.

24th over: Australia 85-4 (Handscomb 11, M Marsh 5)

Ravindra Jadeja has 0-3 from six overs at this point, and I reckon Kohli should keep him on a while longer while he’s applying such suffocating pressure. The temptation, of course, will be to bring back Ashwin, who bowls a higher number of wicket balls.

23rd over: Australia 84-4 (Handscomb 10, M Marsh 5)

Yadav gets another over and why the hell not, because he’s heauled his side back into the contest and every time you think his threat is disspipating he takes a wicket. Having said that, Peter Handscomb has just deposited him to the fence at deep point with a quite magnificent square drive and Mitch Marsh drives confidently to get four too. With six wickets in hand, Australia need 104 runs to win.

Exciting Test cricket is the most sickening of all the excitements. #INDvsAUS

22nd over: Australia 75-4 (Handscomb 5, M Marsh 1)

Maiden from Jadeja. He’s absolutely bloody loving this. So am I. Who wouldn’t?

SH*!......

Height was the issue in the end. It was clipping the top of off stump, but it went back to the umpire’s call.

They’re not dead keen on it, and it wasn’t given, but Jadeja is being Jadeja so it’s reviewed. Brilliant.

21st over: Australia 75-4 (Handscomb 5, M Marsh 1)

Holy moly there will be some stink about this Smith thing. Yadav has finished another superb over now, but replays show that Kohli was enraged by Smith’s attempt to seek assistance from the stands. We’ve barely had time to notice that Mitch Marsh is at the crease and off the mark. Gird up your loins, Australia. This could get very ugly. Kohli is winding his arms around and whipping the crowd into a frenzy. It’s all gone a bit UFC. I think I need a double shot of something luridly coloured and petrol-tasting.

Chaos in Bangalore! Steve Smith had been trapped dead in front by Yadav but in the process of asking Handscomb whether he should review it, he also seems to be seeking guidance from the change room, which is a no-no. Nigel Llong strides at him like a traffic warden who has noticed someone parked across two spots, and Virat Kohli is also incensed. Either way, the Australian skipper walks off the ground.

20th over: Australia 71-3 (Smith 28, P Handscomb 2)

I’ve just realised how this pans out, dear readers: Ravindra Jadeja takes 7-20 and Mitchell Marsh gets out without playing a shot, having frozen on the spot pondering an unintelligible passage of Matthew Hayden’s commentary. Just a maiden for Jadeja here. He’ll swing the wrecking ball through any minute, I’m sure.

19th over: Australia 71-3 (Smith 28, Handscomb 2)

The other person who’d better get Australia home in this game is Steve Smith; it did indeed seem to be the Australian captain who talked Shaun Marsh out of reviewing that dismissal. The problem with that is that Smith was practically standing at mid-off as the ball struck his partner, and the bowler was coming around the wicket. Smith was about the least qualified person in the ground to make a call on that one. In further bad news for Australia, Handscomb now cops one in the bread basket from Umesh. By his reaction it didn’t tickle. “I have no fingernails left,” says reader James Lane. “Is it too early to start drinking Indian rum?” Not at all.

18th over: Australia 71-3 (Smith 28, Handscomb 2)

I wouldn’t say this will be the making of Peter Handscomb, because he’ll certainly cut the mustard regardless, but what wonders it might do for his confidence if he can channel his powers of playing spin here and get Australia home. He’s been solid enough in this series without going on with it. Here he faces Ravi Jadeja, who is wearing sunglasses from the props department of Point Break.

17th over: Australia 70-3 (Smith 28, Handscomb 1)

The pressure of this contest is almost unbearable now, not that you would know it from the way Steve Smith shuffles across in front of his stumps to Yadav’s shooters. He gets an underside edge on one here, which is lucky because he would have been LBW otherwise. Some are coming through at little more than ankle height, others popping up. Australia need 118 to win this Test. What else would you rather be doing?

16th over: Australia 68-3 (Smith 27, Handscomb 0)

Jadeja is back into the attack now to replace Ashwin but I’ll be honest, all the drama in this over has been focused on replays of Marsh’s dismissal. If they’d reviewed it he would have survived! Perhaps they were fooled by how much it jagged in off the pitch, but there was daylight between the ball and off stump when it was put through ball-tracker. Deary me.

15th over: Australia 67-3 (Smith 26, Handscomb 0)

He was taken off so Jadeja could send down a speculative over of spin, but Umesh Yadav has come up trumps in his second over.

Oh my word! Shaun Marsh has left and in-ducker from the returning Umesh Yadav and been trapped in front. The umpire’s finger goes straight up and after a moment of consultation with his skipper he makes the long walk back to the pavilion. Australia are in trouble here. Worse: replays reveal it was both hitting him outside the line of off stump and also just missing the stumps by a matter of inches. Good grief.

14th over: Australia 65-2 (Smith 25, S Marsh 8)

Ouch. Ashwin drops short and wide, and Smith doesn’t miss the opportunity to cash in by cutting it to the ropes. Marsh is content to push singles, and it’s sound judgement early in his innings. As they stop for drinks, Australia have eight wickets in hand and require a further 123 runs to clinch a memorable victory.

13th over: Australia 59-2 (Smith 20, S Marsh 7)

Virat Kohli saw enough of Umesh Yadav in that one over, and I don’t entirely blame him. There are not many runs to play with, so Ravindra Jadeja appears and produces a maiden first up. Funny that.

Much politicking throughout the summer to arrive at the Marsh-Wade axis at 6 and 7. Could the stakes be any higher for them than today?

12th over: Australia 59-2 (Smith 20, S Marsh 7)

“Nine an over for 15 overs would be nice,” says Matthew Hayden, outright barracking for a minute. Sunil Gavaskar finally gets his revenge, pointing out that such an equation would still leave the tourists 15 runs short. Sunnyboy indeed. Back in the middle, Marsh faces up to the marauding Ashwin and makes an absolute mockery of the game situation, caressing a cover drive to the fence like he’s playing in the backyard. He cops a lot of stick, Marsh, but his sheer talent is surely unquestioned. Australia need 129 to win from here.

11th over: Australia 53-2 (Smith 19, S Marsh 2)

Umesh is indeed the man who comes into the attack, and has no luck to start with as a thick outside edge from Steve Smith passes through the left hand of a diving Virat Kohli at seconds slip. What would have been good: a first slip. What else would be good: if this is all over today so our nerves aren’t shredded any further. Nine off the over for Australia.

10th over: Australia 44-2 (Smith 11, S Marsh 1)

Australia, meet your saviour: erm, Shaun Marsh. Let’s be honest, he played a gem of an innings to get 66 earlier in this game, but there is also the fact he had more lives than every single cat to have appeared in a Matthew Hayden idiom.

And so it begins: Warner is gone! He was attempting to sweep Ashwin there, and it got a little out of reach. Umpire Richard Illingworth had no hestitation and with ball-tracker showing it would have hit off stump, the third umpire stays with the original call. Warner falls one short of the blazing 18 I predicted of him, but confirms every other suspicion I had. This match is on a knife edge.

Warner does not look confident here, which is a very bad sign for Australia. Smith appeared to overrule, probably figuring his partner is a man who can win this game in 45 minutes of decent batting. We shall soon see.

9th over: Australia 42-1 (Warner 17, Smith 10)

Kohli does indeed grant Ishant one more over, but he’s a diminished force as it wears on. It’s very hard yakka to bowl long spells in this heat. Australia might have seen off the residual danger, though Yadav has a knack for taking early wickets. Whether he gets a go before or after first-innings spin hero Ravindra Jadeja is the question from here.

8th over: Australia 40-1 (Warner 16, Smith 9)

Bang! Warner hits a big six off Ashwin, nailing it over long on for a maximum. Risky, but it’s paid off. One thing I do love about Matthew Hayden is the way he refers to Sunil Gavaskar, scorer of 10,000 Test runs, as “Sunnyboy”. If you don’t speak Australian, that is a sugary ice block in a cardboard box. He also says this is a game of cat and mouse where there can be only one top tog. He’s wandered off to the zoo again.

7th over: Australia 31-1 (Warner 10, Smith 7)

Ishant keeps charging in with the firm belief that he’s the second coming of Dennis Lillee, which is an admirable character trait in conditions like the ones he’s normally bowling in. Warner runs a single through gully and gets off strike again, leaving his skipper to feel his way in a little further. Will Ishant get another over? I’d be tempted to allow him one more, but Umesh Yadav is probably warming up right now.

6th over: Australia 29-1 (Warner 9, Smith 6)

Cometh the hour, cometh the David Warner reverse sweep. What a madman. Anybody else would go into their shell right now, but he’s dancing about the crease doing a one-man recreation of Torvill and Dean’s bolero. They didn’t even have a Gray-Nicolls Kaboom to whack stuff with either, the jokers. A single gets him off strike, which is for the best on a number of levels; he can’t self-immolate when he’s down the other end, and Smith batters Ashwin for four through mid-wicket and then two through cover. Is anyone else’s face really hot? This game is giving me a fever.

5th over: Australia 22-1 (Warner 8, Smith 0)

Steve Smith is at the crease now, and he’s the subject of a very optimistic LBW shout from Ishant first up. That one hit the Australian skipper closer to his hip than his knee. His troubles aren’t over though; Ishant thunders one down and hits one of those crater-like cracks in the pitch, so the ball snakes away from Smith’s outside edge and almost ends him. It ends up a wicket-maiden for Ishant, who bowls like a demon throughout.

Ishant strikes! There was a prolonged delay as technicians tried to get Spidercam away from Matt Renshaw, and then something even nastier approached him: Ishant Sharma with an off-cutter. The left-hander fences unconvincingly and feathers an edge through to the keeper Saha. India have the breakthrough!

4th over: Australia 22-0 (Warner 8, Renshaw 5)

Calm down, Davey. Warner goes after Ashwin now, failing to heed the lesson learned by Renshaw two overs ago and attempting to flog it to cow corner against the spin. Not wise. Next ball Ashwin sends a textbook off-break fizzing past his outside edge. Superb bowling. Warner looks a rube in the face of such brilliance.

3rd over: Australia 18-0 (Warner 8, Renshaw 5)

Ishant comes around the wicket now when he’s bowling to Warner, and I’m not sure it’s by his own free will because a conversation with Kohli preceded the new approach. Warner still profits, working two through mid wicket before gently pushing one down to long on for three. Of note: this might be the last time he bats with that humongous Gray Nicolls ‘Kaboom’ bat, because it’s about to be banned. Ishant, meanwhile, has a spirited LBW shout against Renshaw but I think he knows it hit the pad outside the line of off stump, so there is no review. Australia now need 170 to win.

2nd over: Australia 13-0 (Warner 3, Renshaw 5)

Four more valuable runs to Australia here as Ravi Ashwin is favoured to open the bowling with some spin, and Warner pads him to the fence at fine leg. Australia will take them any way they can get them today. Warner gets a quick single too, and has started with typically manic intent. Renshaw gets a leading edge attempting to hit against the spin through mid-wicket, but picks up a single, then there is another to Warner. With minimal fuss, Australia are 13 from two overs.

1st over: Australia 6-0 (Warner 1, Renshaw 5)

Aaaaand we’re back in Bangalore, with Ishant Sharma bounding in to David Warner. “I’ve just found out during the break that 17 of his 18 hundreds have come in either Australia or South Africa,” says Michael Clarke. He’s talking about Warner, of course, but the note of incredulity is what’s so brilliant about the statement. He genuinely can’t believe it.

Damien Martyn might be the only person not watching this game of cricket

Remember when it was revealed that Martyn was among the 47 people followed by Donald Trump? Good times.

Which do you use the most? #snapchat#Instagram#SocialMedia#story

Australia need 188 to win. Their highest successful chase in India was 194 at the same ground in 1998, when Mark Taylor made 102* #INDvAUS

So we can breathe. India started the day at 214-4, and Pujara looked perfectly comfortable in adding 24 more runs before Rahane was trapped in front by Starc, triggering a monumental collapse. India lost 5-20 from 19 balls at one stage, and 6-36 all up to squander a chance to put this game beyond doubt. Now? Australia have a sniff. Even a chase as small as this will be very tough work, and they’ll have the 40-minute lunch break to think about it.

WICKET! Ishant c S Marsh b O’Keefe - 6

Ishant goes, holing out to Marsh at cover after a determined little knock. And with that wicket, Australia will chase 188 for the win.

97th over: India 274-9 (Saha 20, Ishant 6) - India lead by 187

Saha is a brick wall at the moment, and rather showing up some of his team-mates. He’s batting a good half-metre out of his crease to Hazlewood and that is no mean feat. Right as I say that he offers a chance but Warner’s dive is unsuccessful at mid-off. But there is a throw at the stumps and it hits. It’s reviewed, but Ishant survives.

96th over: India 274-9 (Saha 20, Ishant 6) - India lead by 187

Says Matthew Hayden as Steve O’Keefe replaces Nathan Lyon and his blistered finger: “He may as well go home because that’s not going anywhere, that injury... It’s time to move on I think.” Blimey. I’d hate to be a patient of Dr Hayden. ‘Look, I’ve seen a bit of a graze on your knee there...Sorry, but there is nothing we can do. You might be a goner within days. Take care of your financial affairs and say your goodbyes.’

95th over: India 273-9 (Saha 19, Ishant 6) - India lead by 186

Josh Hazlewood’s analysis was 6-66 at the start of this over, and it’s been ominous stuff for India. He took three of them yesterday, and has ripped the heart out of India’s second innings with a startling spell today. But...this is turning into a pesky partnership. It’s worth 15 very handy runs now.

Oof, a fair portion of the ball was clipping the leg stump but not enough to reverse Llong’s call.

He also might not have. Nigel Llong doesn’t like it, and he’s usually pretty sharp.

94th over: India 272-9 (Saha 18, Ishant 6) - India lead by 185

Nathan Lyon has a blister on his finger, apparently. His spinning finger. He hasn’t been playing the guitar at the team hotel or anything. Right now it appears to be troubling him, and that means he’s not troubling the batsmen. Ishant, meanwhile, is looking very solid. “He’s showing a lot more responsibility than the batsmen who preceded him,” notes Sunny Gavaskar, adopting the tone of a peeved headmaster. He’s not angry, he’s just disappointed.

93rd over: India 269-9 (Saha 16, Ishant 5) - India lead by 182

Hmm, with Hazlewood reappearing now in a change of ends, Saha goes back to refusing singles. From the fourth delivery of the over Saha decides to finally take one, and Ishant repays his faith by surviving the final two balls of the over. Things have calmed a little now after the stump-flying mayhem of the 30 minutes prior to this partnership.

92nd over: India 268-9 (Saha 15, Ishant 5) - India lead by 181

Bang! Ishant responds to the arrival of Lyon by dropping to one knee and proposing a sweep. It works, and the ball tumbles away to the fence. Then he gets off strike, and looks like a proper batsman all of sudden. He wants the strike now, and Saha allows it. Lyon has an LBW shout near the end of the over but decides against a review; it clearly hit the pad well outside the line of off stump. A significant understatement: another 20 runs would be very handy for India.

91st over: India 262-9 (Saha 14, Ishant 0) - India lead by 175

Of interest as Mitchell Starc stars the 91st over is that lunch is due in thirty-five minutes, and Wriddhiman Saha continues to refuse singles early in the over. He saw enough from Ishant in the last over to know he’s a liability. Starc bounds around the wicket and delivers from very wide on the crease, but the angle isn’t troubling Saha too badly. The penultimate delivery brings a stifled LBW shout, but only Steve Smith and the bowler are interested. Eventually Saha clubs an inside-out drive to the fence at long-off, and Smith shakes his head as though he’s never been so disgusted in his life. Nathan Lyon will come back to bowl the next over.

90th over: India 258-9 (Saha 10, Ishant 0) - India lead by 171

A Josh Hazlewood over without a wicket counts as a win for India at the moment, though again it’s a maiden, so they’re only delaying the inevitable. Ishant faces this one, and he’s hopping around like a cat on a hot tin roof to counter the Australian’s bouncers. A very tall cat. Hazlewood engages in some lovely pantomime at the end of the over, shaking his head and ruing his inefficiency for only bowling six dot balls.

89th over: India 258-9 (Saha 10, Ishant 0) - India lead by 171

Poor Mitchell Starc has produced a beautiful spell today but doesn’t have the wickets to show for it. Saha takes the responsibility of handling him in this over, and as that happens I’m just seeing a few more replays of Hazlewood’s Ambrose-to-Blewett style dismissal of Ravi Ashwin. It shot through at ankle height before breaking the stump at its base. Brilliant. Not so much for Ashwin, I guess.

88th over: India 258-9 (Saha 10, Ishant 0) - India lead by 171

India have just lost 5-20 in 19 deliveries of brainless batting, and Australia will be daring to believe they’ll win this Test match and with it the Border-Gavaskar trophy. Quite remarkable, really. Brian Withington has a question: “Heard any more about the art of captaincy from Sankaran Krishna (over 82) I wonder?” Ouch.

I am between 85 and 90 percent convinced this match is ending in a tie. It’s the only outcome that makes sense at this stage. #INDvAUS

Holy smokes, that is a terrible shot from Yadav! Hazlewood had considered a review when he thought he might have trapped the tailender in front, but didn’t. It mattered not a ball later when Yadav lost his mind and slogged one straight to Warner at wide mid off. Virat Kohli will have steam coming out his ears. Dreadful, but what a session for Australia and Hazlewood. He has six wickets!

87th over: India 258-8 (Saha 10, Yadav 1)

Umesh Yadav reaches the crease now, though I can imagine he faced a scramble not to be timed out. India have lost four wickets for eight runs for him to be required. Not long ago they lead by 150 with six wickets in hand. Now Australia can knock them off with another two poles. Saha senses the urgent need for more runs, and clubs a rather artless boundary through mid-on from the bowling of Starc. Saha is also turning down runs so as to keep Umesh off strike, which is probably wise.

Now Ashwin goes in a moment of madness! This is a bit absurd now. Ashwin was the new man at the crease for India, and though he’d immediately unleashed a beautiful square drive through the vacant point region to pick up four, Hazlewood attacks his stumps with the next ball and it keeps low to splatter them. Hazlewood has five wickets! Even better, as he was running in to bowl the delivery in question, having already taken a wicket in the over, Matthew Hayden said the following: “Josh Hazlewood’s job here is containment.”

Now Pujara goes! Hooley dooley this game is going mad. He’d just turned a boundary down to fine leg to move into the 90s, but then, having never been dismissed so close to a hundred, he wafts at a short one outside off and guides a catch to Mitchell Marsh at gully. India are collapsing exactly as Australia did in their first innings. Madness.

85th over: India 238-6 (Pujara 88, Saha 0)

What an over from Starc. Two wickets and two runs were the result, and the course of the game has altered just a little. India lead by 151 but Australia will fancy keeping their target under 200.

But only just. Holy moly what a ball. It was full and fast and swinging in, and the Indian keeper gets an inside edge into his pad. Time for the dark underpants, I would think.

Starc strikes again! This time he castles the new man Karun Nair, who made 303* in his last Test but gets an in-swinging snorter first up here – castled for a golden duck. Starc is producing a gem of a spell.

Starc gets the breakthrough! It was a superb knock by Rahane, but the new ball has done the trick for Australia. Starc was full, straight, and swinging it in just slightly, and the batsman got only a small stride in before it cannoned into his front pad. It’s hit him dead in front. Gorn!

It looks pretty good to me.

84th over: India 235-4 (Pujara 88, Rahane 51)

Big swing, no ding. Pujara unfurls a very optimistic cover drive when Hazlewood pushes one well wide of off stump, but it’s a fresh-air shot for the batsman. Reader Raymond Reardon has sent me an email about the churlishness of Australians, but it is too churlish to be approved by our lawyers. I’ll have to file it with all the ones I received after writing about Todd Carney’s “bubbling” affair. Maiden for Hazlewood. Good areas and all that.

83rd over: India 235-4 (Pujara 88, Rahane 51)

Starc bounds in and unleashes a Harmisonesque sideways wide, which almost takes out Steve Smith at first slip. “I’d like to see some toes and nose stuff,” says Matthew Hayden. Not at your team-mates though, surely. Starc is bowling very quick indeed; 150kmph first up, then 143, 149, 151, 148 and 152. Steve O’Keefe has a ping at the stumps when Pujara sprints through for a quick single to finish the over, and it was a fiery one from Starc.

82nd over: India 232-4 (Pujara 87, Rahane 51)

No surprises now as Josh Hazlewood pairs with Starc, ambling in on the hunt for more wickets to go with the three beauties he took yesterday. As that happens, reader Sankaran Krishna has some thoughts on Steve Smith’s captaincy, which I will post in the interests of balance: “Lyon and O’Keefe were causing the batsmen all sorts of problems. But the minute the second new ball became available Smith didnt hesitate at all – took it. Gotta love how uncomplicated the Aussies keep the game.” Shots fired!

81st over: India 232-4 (Pujara 87, Rahane 51)

In fact Steve Smith does take the first opportunity to unleash Mitchell Starc with the second new ball, and in these sorts of situations it normally takes the giant speedster an over or so to warm up. Right on cue, a loosener is lathered through cover by Rahane and with that he’s reached 50 from 128 deliveries of patient, game-turning batting.

80th over: India 224-4 (Pujara 84, Rahane 46)

Rahane skips down the track again and batters Lyon out to long-on, but there’s a man posted out on that boundary so it’s a lot of energy expended for a single. Lyon’s approach to Pujara is from a regulation angle over the wicket, and he might soon be tempted to use the bowling crease a little more and come wider. Pujara’s defences, which looked leaky in the early stages of his innings, are suddenly watertight.

79th over: India 223-4 (Pujara 84, Rahane 45)

The new ball is due soon, but might not be taken the way Lyon is bowling. Owing to that, both batsmen are doing their best to pick up singles from O’Keefe. There’s one each for them in this over. Tension building.

78th over: India 221-4 (Pujara 83, Rahane 44)

Lyon continues to Rahane, and you get the sense he’s getting close to a wicket here. He tosses one up to tempt Rahane forward and the batsmen nearly drowns in honey, flapping away at it but fluffing an attempt to put it back in row Z. He’s quite lucky it doesn’t slip through to Matthew Wade behind the stumps. There is a nice bit of rough for Lyon to bowl into here, and that is the secondary reason the batsmen are getting forward at every opportunity; they need to negate the prospect of the ball shooting low or doing something completely unpredictable. A lot of people whinged about this Test, but you can’t argue with the quality of the cricket it’s produced. Enthralling.

77th over: India 221-4 (Pujara 83, Rahane 44)

Twenty minutes ago Sunny Gavaskar was telling us that it was spinning slowly, now Michael Clarke says it’s spinning fast. Either way, batting is a very tricky business with the Australian spinners bowling with accuracy and plenty of pressure from the close-in fieldsmen. A single to Rahane is the only damage in this over, a very good one by Steve O’Keefe.

76th over: India 220-4 (Pujara 83, Rahane 43)

The Australians were utterly convinced that was out, but Richard Illingworth has had a bit of a shocker there. It was spinning well past leg stump, though Pujara was well back and pinned to the crease. He survives the rest of the over as Lyon continues to work him over.

Pujara survives! It was missing leg and he knew it, the Indian No3. He lives to fight another day but Nathan Lyon is in the mood here.

Pujara has reviewed it, and it did spin a mile so I think that’s fair enough.

75th over: India 220-4 (Pujara 83, Rahane 43)

As Pujara and Rahane bring up a superb 100-run partnership, the Australians can’t decide betwen SOK-a, SOK-y and SOK-o as Steve O’Keefe’s nickname. More on that as it’s at hand.

It clearly bounced. As you were.

Nigel Llong gave it out, short leg Peter Handscomb wasn’t sure if it carried, so we’re going upstairs

74th over: India 218-4 (Pujara 82, Rahane 42)

Rahane backs away and has a good look around the ground before facing up to Lyon, but I’m not sure an outside edge was his plan first up. Fortunately for him it doesn’t carry to Steve Smith. Lyon has a leg slip, a short leg, but no silly point and no cover, so they’re encouraging Rahane to drive. The cover comes back for Pujara. There is a big shout from Wade for LBW, but Lyon is too honest to go along with it. It struck Pujara’s front pad a decent distance outside the line of off stump.

73rd over: India 215-4 (Pujara 80, Rahane 41)

Steve O’Keefe has the ball to start with and that’s because the new one isn’t due for eight overs. Pujara turns him around the corner for a single first up and by the sounds of things, there are thousands of singing kids in the stands. Or just 50 very loud ones. There is not much spin from O’Keefe, though that’s not really his bag. It’s keeping just a touch low, which very much is his bag. A solid start from him, and Nathan Lyon will bowl from the other end.

As the players trot out, here’s our first reader email of the day

And it’s from OBO chum Robert McLiam Wilson. “Confident prediction has always been nature’s way of telling you that you are an arsebiscuit,” he starts. “As all those who relaxed about Trump before the election (and who are still similarly relaxing about Marine Le Pen) will testify. Notwithstanding, I’m not sure I have ever seen a game which so so categorically uncallable. Anything could happen. India could get 350. Or not. Lyon could get nine [editor’s note: this would be brilliant, as there are only six left to take]. Or not. It’s richly unpredictable. So, I’m making my call. Something will happen today that produces a wave of disobliging remarks about the umpires and then Jimmy Neesham will tweet something funny about it. There.”

Matthew Wade’s keeping

...is bound to be a topic of conversation when this series is done in dusted, perhaps less so if Australia pull off a miracle series win. But this little video highlights a recurring issue in the way Wade rises too far too quickly, falls off balance and has his foot flying off into the air. Don Tallon would be turning in his grave.

Fifteen minutes until the first ball of a massive day four at M Chinnaswamy Stadium #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/SjOiShho6V

More on the pitch, whose cracks are really starting to open up

Here it is in terms of what the batsmen need to do: “It really is going to be a test of how quick you make the adjustment – how quick you get down when the ball keeps low,” says Sunil Gavaskar. He reckons it’s slowed a bit now, so it’s easier to make said adjustments. Good news for Australia? Maybe, but also perhaps for Pujara and Rahane. I refuse to believe it’ll be much fun to bat on by late tonight.

This is already my favourite day of the Test. I can’t wait. #INDvAUS

The Virat Kohli controversy is still bubbling away

Ryan Harris adds to it now by saying that the Indian captain’s decision to wave his bat about as he left the field – indicating he thought he’d hit the ball before it had struck his pad – amounts to dissent. Whether it is pursued by the match referee accordingly, we will wait and see.

Here's the pitch #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/jGF2KtsaTu

Steve Smith is out in the middle now

And he’s got a bat in his hands, eyeing off the pitch and making a mental plan for what’s ahead. His side need to take six wickets first, mind you. Nathan Lyon snared eight in the first innings and hasn’t got one yet in the second. Related to all this: the new ball is due in eight overs, which works reasonably well for Australia. The bowlers will get a feel for things before the call is made and the batsmen may have to reset with its arrival.

Preamble

Hello all and welcome to day four of the second Test between Australia and India in Bangalore, in which we’ve seen three of the more compelling days of cricket you could ever hope for. As per the first Test in Pune, India looked down and out heading into day three, but a combination of Ravindra Jadeja’s mercurial bowling, and the contrastingly brilliant batting of Lokesh Rahul, Che Pujara and Ajinkya Rahane has India 126 runs ahead.

Russell will be here shortly. In the meantime, read how Virat Kohli has succeeded in ruffling a few Australian feathers so far this Test series:

Related: Former Australia cricketer Ian Healy 'losing respect' for Virat Kohli

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West Indies v England: third ODI – live!

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3rd over: England 15-0 (Roy 7, Hales 8) When you go to the cricket, what is your pickernick basket never without? The samosa place which I used to frequent for precisely this purpose is now closed; it was a sad day. Anyway, Roy is early on a pull, which drops just short of Mohammed and short midwicket, then a bit of extra bounce sends another attempted pull into the air ... it lands safe. And Roy isn’t going to waste time introspecting - he’s right over the next delivery, pulling it hard to the fence.

2nd over: England 10-0 (Roy 7, Hales 3) Alzarri is a magnificent name; not as magnificent as Jason, obviously, but magnificent nonetheless. Hales pulls a short one, just about keeping it down, and they add one before Roy adds one more - Joseph is bowling at 84mph. Hales then square-cuts another two, and there don’t look to be any demons in the pitch.

1st over: England 6-0 (Roy 6, Hales 0) It’s a breezy day in Barbados, though it is only 9.30am. Jeff Dujon doesn’t reckon the cracks will open much, as Holder finds some bounce and carry, Roy leaving his first three balls alone. He then has a bang at a wide one, but picks out the man at backward-point, before coming forward to present the full face, sending four rushing over mid-off and to the fence. A push then nets two more, and that’s a decent, effortless start for England.

Jason Holder will open the bowling from the Big Bird end.

Humungus queues outside #KensingtonOval. Plenty going to miss the start. Laughable organisation of queues and security #WIvEngpic.twitter.com/TrjetFjZWW

Anyway, we don’t need to think about spin quite yet - we’re about to watch old Alzarri on a greeninsh, grassyish track. That is going to be fun.

James Taylor is fine young man, and looks like waxwork of James Taylor. He’s talking about England’s collapses against spin, saying that they’re improving all the time. I think that’s a tad generous.

Back to the preamble, middle initials: what are they all about? Mate, you’re still called Donald. We’ve not forgotten.

Hales has missed international cricket “a helluva lot”. He’s nervous and excited, “a good feeling to have”, and is planning to give himself a chance. So, as usual, we can expect it to be Roy pushing the pace at the start.

“What do you think of Hales’ sleeve tatt,” tweets Jonny Walsh.

I can’t get my head around how they don’t make your arm warmer or heavier.

.@AlexHales1 averaged 61.9 across his 13 ODIs in 2016; only Virat Kohli (92.4), David Warner (63.1) & Rohit Sharma (62.7) were higher. pic.twitter.com/4BesUdJeVr

Hales has been talking about playing Tests in the middle order. I’d be surprised if that ever happened, though not disappointed.

One change for England: Hales for Billings. Morgan explains that his partnership with Roy has been crucial to the team’s success. He is surprised by how much grass is on the wicket, particularly at one end, but isn’t sure what to expect from the pitch.

There’s some grass on the wicket, so something there for bowlers. Joseph is indeed in for Gabriel.

There’s a slight delay on the toss. We’ll get there.

And talking of Pakistan, as we briefly were...

Related: England ready to recall Alex Hales for the final ODI with West Indies

Get in the mood with this.

Jason Roy wants to be known for winning matches by scoring centuries. By @Cricket_Alihttps://t.co/SGDSpACBSp

Outside a radio shop in Holborn listening to the Test match at The Oval, Eng. v Aus. 5th Test, 4th day, August 1953 pic.twitter.com/VcvyM2GrZz

West Indies could really do with a win here. They’re currently just off Pakistan, sitting in ninth spot in the ODI rankings, and play them next; in all likelihood, only one of the two will qualify for the next World Cup automatically.

So, what’s what? Well, according to Cricinfo, Plunkett is warming up, so presumably he’ll be ok to play, while it looks as though Alzarri Joseph will replace Shannon Gabriel.

We live in strange times in a strange world, and as such, are processing some strange combinations of words: consider, for example, “President Donald J Trump”; “England manager Gareth Southgate”; “fashion beard”; “male grooming”.

But none are quite so strange as “England are a fine one-day cricket team”. And yet they are! Their batting is strong enough and deep enough such that skittling them is virtually impossible; they field like they’ve swapped hemispheres; are captained with enterprise; and sometimes bowl well. Most recently, they got themselves into trouble chasing a moderate total, before composing themselves to chase it down with calm authority. I know!

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Australia's Smith and Maxwell pile on runs in Ranchi – as it happened

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  • Australia 299-4 at stumps on day one of the Ranchi Test against India
  • Steve Smith and Glenn Maxwell’s 159-run stand edges tourists ahead

And one final thing: here is the report from day one in Ranchi.

Related: Steve Smith and Glenn Maxwell dominate India on day one in Ranchi

A wonderful day for the visitors that looked in some doubt when Maxwell joined Smith. It was the second time a partnership had ended just after passing 50, and India would have felt some confidence about running through Australia’s lower-middle order if they could just do it one more time. But they wouldn’t, for the rest of the day.

Smith and Maxwell’s 194 minutes together has netted 159 runs, and will continue again in the morning. Smith’s fate, a 19th Test ton, was never in doubt at any stage today. Total control.

90th over: Australia 299-4 (Smith 117, Maxwell 82). Maxwell tries to cut the first. Rather unnecessary, but no edge. An inside-edgey sort of clip gets him off strike. That should be his lot for the day provided Smith is happy to see it out. Last ball of the day coming. Bit of extra noise, but nothing like Bangalore. Smith defends into the off side. And that’s stumps, my friends. I’ll gather my thoughts and wrap up the final session in a tic.

89th over: Australia 298-4 (Smith 117, Maxwell 81). Penultimate over of the day, and the final set from the northern end. Umesh has it, and he’s still bending his back. Hard not to like. He bounces Maxwell who tries to swat it away rather than getting out the way of it. For his sake, he’s lucky no contact was made. Carry on. And another! But not quite on target, so he doesn’t need to duck. His last ball of the day is carved by Maxwell down to fine leg for one, meaning he’ll keep the strike for the last of the day, presumably coming from Ishant.

Today, DiS is dedicating an entire day's worth of content to the legend that was Dan Lucas. Sit back and enjoy...https://t.co/mWSwMDwBVu

88th over: Australia 297-4 (Smith 117, Maxwell 80). Ishant running away from us here from the southern end for what will be a 12-ball spell before stumps. He was ordinary this morning in his first spell, but bounced back well after lunch. Still, nothing in that wickets column. Bowling to Maxwell, his third delivery encourages a drive but Maxwell makes contact with the outside of the bat rather than the middle. But this outfield is quick enough for it not to matter, the ball beating squarish third man to the rope for his fifth boundary (to go with a couple of sixes). A quick single, that they are still keen to take even at this stage, gives Smith the strike back. He drives the last ball to mid-on and it beats the diving fielder, able to grab a couple to end the over. He’ll sleep well tonight, the captain. So much hustle.

How Australia saw the Ranchi groundsman vs the reality #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/T4OUkTZzBm

87th over: Australia 290-4 (Smith 115, Maxwell 75). Apologies for the lack of twitter action in the OBO this session. The press box wifi really has done a number on me, so I’m just going the belt and braces approach. Hope you’ll forgive me. Will invest in a back-up option for the rest of the Test. Back to the middle, it is Umesh with the new ball this time around. Smith flicks the first for one. Maxwell gets enough on a fuller ball later in the over to take one himself down the ground. That’s the 150 partnership between the two. We all talked about Maxwell being able to play this kind of innings-changing role at number six, and he’s certainly done that today. The job isn’t done, though. Has to be there at the end, and has to progress to three figures. All the hard work is done. Smith leaves the penultimate delivery as it just holds its line outside the off-stump. And defends the last.

86th over: Australia 288-4 (Smith 114, Maxwell 74). Ashwin is livid here. Ties up Smith who manages to get a glove on it and win a boundary. Then, persisting around the wicket to Maxwell later in the over, he misfires down the legside and Saha is beaten behind the stumps. Four byes. Another expensive over with none from it all told. Oh, and the second new ball will be taken after all, Rahane signalling to the umpires that he time has come with four overs to go on the opening day.

85th over: Australia 279-4 (Smith 109, Maxwell 74). Umesh given another go from the North End. We’re at the South End. They really need new names. Let’s save that for later in the Test. It’s a good, consistent maiden over to Maxwell, who is forced to play each delivery, coming back at him with ample reverse. They didn’t bother with the new ball when the chance was there. Probably a good call with these two set. Will only race away faster.

84th over: Australia 279-4 (Smith 109, Maxwell 74). Ashwin is back. He beats Maxwell immediately with one that doesn’t go. A good bowling change, as the Victorian looked well on top the last 20 minutes or so. Oh a reverse sweep comes next! That’s our guy! He doesn’t connect, a leg-bye is taken. Smith’s turn, and now with the ton out of the way he’s on the front foot and slaying through cover on the up. Gorgeous. Less pretty an outside edge to end the over, but it goes to ground and gets him a couple more. Australia piling on the runs in this final hour.

There it is! Smashing Vijay down the ground, Smith has broken free after a long time in the 90s to reach three figures. His second of the series, and he’s really enjoyed it too. Purposeful bat-waves to the rooms, and maybe even the Indian rooms? He looked a lock for this from the moment he walked out this morning. If they can retain the trophy here in a few days time, so much will be owing to the captain’s contrinution here today.

83rd over: Australia 272-4 (Smith 103, Maxwell 74).

82nd over: Australia 266-4 (Smith 98, Maxwell 73). Jadeja into his 30th today. What a contrast to the first dig in Bangalore when he only really got a jam roll in order to take a wicket and then was off again. Rahane must like his flowing hair better than the usual skipper, who is still off with the shoulder issue. Maxwell is defending the first half of the over before shouldering arms and trying to kick away one well outside leg stump. They reckon it got glove and appeal accordingly. It didn’t. Maxwell responds by popping him back over his head for six! Oh he enjoyed that! He’s into the 70s with a bullet. Smith walks down to chat to him with one ball to go in the over. Actually, it is the other way around: Maxwell has cramp? I think that’s the go. You get cramp from whacking a bloke over the rope? Not a bad way to acquire it, I guess. A longer breather ensues, everyone having a drink. Back in the saddle, Maxwell kicks away the last one. An eventful over.

81st over: Australia 260-4 (Smith 98, Maxwell 67). Maxwell does the mind thing and gives Smith the strike after taking one to square leg off part-timer Vijay’s first ball. He has five balls to find three runs for his hundred. But not yet, a single to cover he takes himself. Maxwell really wants to get Smith back up there and takes a quick single in the same direction. But Smith is happy enough to defend the final delivery.

That moment you wake up in a strange bed with someone you barely know... #indvauspic.twitter.com/zTGLg5kim4

80th over: Australia 257-4 (Smith 97, Maxwell 65). I don’t really know how to describe the tangle Smith got himself into with Saha. After having a ball catch in his pads from Jadeja, the Indian keeper tried to pull the ball out of the flap to - presumably - claim a catch? Loose as. Anyway, to avoid that happening, Smith hit the deck and brought the stumper down with him. Some back and forth with the umpires, but the game goes on. I don’t reckon Smith liked the proposition too much to begin with though. Imagine he had of been successful. Would there’ve been an appeal? Ian Gould is laughing though. He’s one of those umpires who is more often than not. Part of his charm. Maiden it is. New ball due. Reviews reset. All that and more.

79th over: Australia 257-4 (Smith 97, Maxwell 65). Murali Vijay is the fifth bowler today. Glenn Maxwell likes that. A lot. He welcomes him to the crease by clobbering behind square for another boundary. He’s found another gear in the last half-hour. Don’t doubt he’ll be three figures by stumps if still there as well. He’s faced 100 balls in the innings as well, another small milestone, and in the context of this series, certainly not for nothing. Driving down the ground, a couple comes after he races between the wickets with his captain. Such good batting. Then he adds a couple more to end the over behind square.

78th over: Australia 249-4 (Smith 97, Maxwell 57). One of those 60-second maidens from Jadeja to Smith. I watched it while the wheels spun on my wifi connection with the previous post. But I assure you, it was uneventful. Let’s leave it there.

77th over: Australia 249-4 (Smith 97, Maxwell 57). A crowd-catch (or should I say, a Press Box catch, as a local journo starts clapping) where Smith digs a Umesh full ball back to the bowler in his follow through. Later in the over it is only Australian fans in the outer clapping, when Maxwell swivels and pulls with complete control, bisecting the two men out deep for a boundary. What a fantastic partnership this has been.

76th over: Australia 244-4 (Smith 96, Maxwell 53). Jadeja keeps going. Smith is very happy to get to this ton in singles, defending off the front foot until he’s too straight and can clip behind square. It’s the only run of the over, but I doubt they’ll mind. Jadeja’s not going to get any more potent as the day draws to a close. For the first time this series it might be the case that India actually need a third spinner.

@WhiteLineWirepic.twitter.com/OdtgzamNNI

75th over: Australia 243-4 (Smith 95, Maxwell 53). Always good to change the ball and get it hooooping first up. Smith takes it down to fine leg for a single. Maxwell is defending and leaving, but it is a probing over from the Indian quick. He’s had an impressive series.

Phil Withall on the email. Hi Phil. “At the time of Virat’s injury Russell implied it had been an attempt to motivate his side with a display of energy and enthusiasm. It could prove to be one of the worst motivational tools in history.” He’s still odd, the Indian captain. I’m sure he’ll bat, even if he’s in a sling. Even so. A big talking point, as they say.

He just looks like a proper cricketer. pic.twitter.com/fM1Hv4lp2g

Drinks, prematurely. Because the ball is out of shape. Umesh is back for the single delivery before they call out the water bottles. Probably the Maxwell six causing the damage. He’ll enjoy that post-script, no doubt.

74th over: Australia 234-4 (Smith 94, Maxwell 45). Well how about that! Glenn Maxwell has a Test half-century! With talent like his, it shouldn’t be in doubt whether he can deploy it at this level, but many have. But he’s played a clutch role with his captain today. With a nod to his other Big Show persona, the milestone is reached with a smash over cow corner beyond the boundary. The first six of the innings, and also the 100 partnership between this pair. A couple more to fine leg makes it eight from the over. Really needs a break now, Jadeja.

73rd over: Australia 234-4 (Smith 94, Maxwell 45). Now both players on milestone watch as Maxwell takes two this time down the ground to Ashwin early in the over. Very good running. When the off-spinner threw it up to entice the drive he got what he wanted, but the Victorian absolutely smashed it through the covers. Four runs for that in this game. A single out to cover keeps him the strike.

72nd over: Australia 227-4 (Smith 94, Maxwell 38). Maxwell’s highest Test score comes with a single to square leg to the penultimate ball of the over. He’s lucky to still be there after the first ball of the Jadeja set nearly glances his outside edge when playing off the back foot. Not insignificant: how good does he look batting in that baggy green?

71st over: Australia 226-4 (Smith 94, Maxwell 37). Milking them, they are now. Ashwin has a couple spit in his last two overs, but not so much here. It’s Smith turning around the corner when he’s too straight, then Maxwell taking one down the ground when too full. Smith does likewise before Maxwell ends the over with a cover driven single to the sweeper. Four singles, all along the carpet. India need something. Smith nearly has another ton.

70th over: Australia 222-4 (Smith 92, Maxwell 35). Jadeja v Maxwell, and you don’t get a chance to breathe. He’s right on these two. They take a single each to begin - Maxwell to the wide expanse at cover, Smith around the corner - before the tweaker lands four consecutive balls on a 20c piece to the former. But he’s in good nick knocking them around. Doesn’t even look tempted to do anything other than this.

69th over: Australia 220-4 (Smith 91, Maxwell 34). A bit of a half-chance, Smith getting an inside edge early in the Ashwin over. That’s the spin we were expecting from the get go. Anyway, doesn’t go to hand or anywhere near, so he can carry on. And carry on he does, into the 90s with another single to mid-on. A lot of runs for these two in the ODI-mould, down the ground then walked through. Maxwell does likewise, as if to want to prove my point. Before Smith ends the over coming down the wicket and cover driving. It’s not the most fluent of shots, but beats the field for a couple. The partnership is now 80. What they would give for it to be unbeaten when stumps are drawn in about 80 minutes from now.

Winviz still likes the home side, despite the visitors having a pretty good day so far: 31% Australia ,10% Draw, 59% India. As my colleague Jarrod Kimber says from the back of the box, that doesn’t factor in the Maxwell Aura. Obviously.

68th over: Australia 216-4 (Smith 88, Maxwell 29). Jadeja might need a breather here. He just hasn’t looked like it today, for mine, other than holding up an end. And even that doesn’t work out this time around, Maxwell handling matters with relative ease early in the over before getting deep in the crease to cut behind point. He gets three for that. It may not be the safest strategy when the left-armer has that one that comes back into the pads, but Maxwell has his eye on now. And we know when that is the case that he is incredibly hard to bowl to. Smith keeps the strike this time, with one behind square. Easy peasy, dare I say.

67th over: Australia 212-4 (Smith 87, Maxwell 30). Ashwin’s back. It was a matter of time. Smith drives him to long-off to begin before Maxwell defends and defends and defends again. Must be taking all the patience in the world from the Big Show to be anything but this afternoon. But a great shift he is putting in with his captain. A single tucked behind square keeps him the strike, as well.

66th over: Australia 210-4 (Smith 86, Maxwell 29). Maxwell gets off strike early in the over again to Jadeja. Has made a habit of that today. The contest this bowler had with at Pune with Smith was fascinating, but he’s struggled to pin him back today as he did there. A single to long-off denies any real pressure from building.

65th over: Australia 208-4 (Smith 85, Maxwell 28). Excuse the technical difficulties, a wifi problem that I won’t be leaving to press box chance tomorrow. I’m back. In this over, which admittedly I half saw, Ishant pushed through a maiden to Smith. The quick earned a half-shout for LBW, but it was denied. The skipper was happy enough in defence. As he should be this close to a ton.

64th over: Australia 208-4 (Smith 85, Maxwell 28). Oh, there he is! Surely this is the first time GJ Maxwell has faced 56 balls in an innings of any kind without a boundary? Well, it won’t be 57. He took on Jadeja’s first delivery here and blasted it within a couple of inches of the long-on rope. With the sweeper no longer in that position, it’s safe and four. A sign of things to come? Encouragingly, in a way, maybe not. The incumbent Aussies exchange risk-free singles before Maxwell plays the over out with a straight bat. Excellent work from the returning Australian number six.

63rd over: Australia 202-4 (Smith 84, Maxwell 20). A nice steer from Maxwell brings a couple and Australia’s 200. A clip gets him down the non-strikers end before Smith defends the remainder of the set.

Here’s a song Dan shared with me and I bloody loved from the moment I heard it. I think I popped it into the OBO another time actually. Anyway, give it a blast today. It’s so beautiful.

62nd over: Australia 199-4 (Smith 84, Maxwell 20). Jadeja is back, and after Maxwell bunts a single off the back foot to the sweeper at cover it is Smith. Oh and the captain has nearly thrown it away! From nowhere, he dances and swings, but the spinner probably saw him coming and rushed it through. The mishit nearly ends up in mid-on’s hands. Phew.

In case you are joining the coverage, by the way, Virat remains off the field. He did a shoulder when diving early in the second session. Hasn’t been seen since. Suggests something more serious than a glancing blow.

61st over: Australia 198-4 (Smith 84, Maxwell 19). Most productive start for Australia. Sure, the session started with Smith getting beaten by one that ultimately went under his bat. That’s the bounce he expected. Later in the over, with a bit of width from Ishant, he slaps to the boundary. Nicely waited on.

To the cricket. Australia have done superbly in the second half of that session to make the most of what the locals are saying are the best batting conditions of the day. Smith has looked on-point from the moment he walked out there. His 76th run marked 5000 in Tests, the equal 7th to reach the mark in 97 Tests. But when you consider how slow he started, it gets even better. As of this interval, he has 4380 runs in 75 hits since before his breakout century in August 2013 at 71. Cop that.

Meanwhile, Maxwell is slowly building in what is his most important Test innings to date as well after a good couple of years in baggy green exile. He resumes on 19 from 44 balls with no boundaries, let alone reverse sweeps.

Afternoon from Ranchi.

There’s a lot to talk about. But before I do that, I want to mark a place for Dan Lucas. Russ did a beautiful job earlier in his own preamble, which I nodded along to throughout. The first OBO I did in at Guardian HQ in London was with Dan. We had such a bloody good time that day as the rain fell and we talked trash about cricket and politics and music. I’ll miss his reliable company over the next two hours. I’ll also miss how caring he was when we weren’t on the clock either, which I explained over here when the awful news emerged. The OBO family won’t quite be the same.

That is it from me ...but as Australia continue to make a decent fist of this series, stick with us as Adam Collins grabs the old ball and goes to work in the final session. Honours might have tipped ever-so-slightly in favour of Australia in session two, but they’ll want far bigger runs than this by the end of the day.

60th over: Australia 194-4 (Smith 80, Maxwell 19)

And that is tea on day one. The final over was a more testing one for Maxwell as Jadeja wheeled away and attacked his stumps with a typically flat trajectory. Matthew Hayden was all the while saying something about mountains and resilience, and finishes his stream of consciousness with this: “your performances need to be solid for your family coming in behind you.” Luckily Maxwell couldn’t hear him, and sees things through to the break. He’s 19 from 50 deliveries and his skipper 80 from 161. Big ticks for that session for the tourists.

59th over: Australia 194-4 (Smith 80, Maxwell 19)

Some of the local commentators are calling for a bouncer barrage to Glenn Maxwell, and I’m sure if Ishant could hear them he’d like to get them out there with a bat in their hands. Hard work on this deck, guys. Maxwell also needs to be on strike. With tea only minutes away, Smith is watchful as he sees off this over and caresses a superb cover drive to the rope from the final delivery.

58th over: Australia 190-4 (Smith 76, Maxwell 19)

Another early single to Maxwell, another late one to Smith, and with that the 50 partnership is up from 94 deliveries and Steve Smith passes 5,000 Test runs. Bradman is only 1,996 away. He might do that by this time next year, to be honest.

57th over: Australia 188-4 (Smith 75, Maxwell 18)

As Maxwell glides Ishant down to third man, replays show the ball would have been clipping leg stump, though not enough to have overturned Chris Gaffaney’s not out verdict. It’s also a good time to point out that tea is not far away and that this partnership is nudging close to 50 in no time. Maxwell has been industrious but careful so far; exactly what the situation demanded.

So whether of not it hits the stumps is a moot point.

It’s given not out, but they’re convinced.

56th over: Australia 184-4 (Smith 74, Maxwell 16)

Right as I’m talking him up, Maxwell almost runs himself out heading to the non-striker’s end, but the 3rd umpire quickly rules in his favour and he goes on his merry way gathering more singles. That’s all prelude to quite emphatic square drive from Smith, who spears Ashwin to the boundary at deep point to finish the over. That was a glorious shot.

55th over: Australia 176-4 (Smith 69, Maxwell 13)

Glenn Maxwell is playing like a proper Test batsman, he really is. I told people this was possible, and they didn’t believe me. One to keep in mind: he made arguably the best Sheffield Shield century of the decade on a green-top against New South Wales. Victoria had been 9-6, then 32-7, before he went on his one-man rescue mission. The man can really bat.

54th over: Australia 172-4 (Smith 67, Maxwell 11)

Again Maxwell works the single early in the Ashwin over, this time driving to long on with composure. At the risk of mozzing both of them, Smith is also looking very calm and methodical as he gathers his runs. Says Dave Kallucy: “In the last innings of the last Test, there was a lot of banter about what each person could personally do, and “wouldn’t it be amazing if…” which was later followed by another wicket and eventually the fall of the Test match. So hows about a little more respect for the jinx? Find yourself some wood, get superstitious and maybe we might make 250, he says knocking on the desk.”

53rd over: Australia 171-4 (Smith 67, Maxwell 10)

Ravindra Jadeja gets shot down after an LBW appeal here, and to add insult to injury the umpire is telling him to get off the pitch as he turns it down. It was missing leg, and might have sailed path a fourth stump too.

52nd over: Australia 167-4 (Smith 64, Maxwell 10)

This is basically Ravichandran Ashwin vs Glenn Maxwell at the moment, and the Australian is so far surviving the examination. Wisely, his captain is taking as much of the strike as he can as the junior partner finds his feet. Maxwell’s 10 off 30 has been very measured so far.

51st over: Australia 163-4 (Smith 62, Maxwell 8)

In fact Umesh doesn’t have another over in him, so Jadeja returns with his spin. It didn’t work for his team-mates earlier, but Maxwell calls for his cap and ditches the helmet. Michael Clarke is loudly worrying that Maxwell won’t have the patience for this situation, but he’s been deferential and calm outside of the Ashwin scares. Not a reverse sweep in sight.

50th over: Australia 160-4 (Smith 61, Maxwell 6)

It sort of surprises me that Ravi Ashwin didn’t pursue a flatter trajectory earlier, given Maxwell’s comfort getting to the pitch of the ball when it’s tossed up. I guess he’ll keep it as his wicket ball. The first three here are tossed up and dealt with well, the fourth is quicker and flatter and brings an inside edge to fine leg. Maxwell was in all sorts there. Ashwin is doing that Warnie thing where he just seems 100% confident he’ll get him out sometime in the next two overs.

49th over: Australia 159-4 (Smith 61, Maxwell 5)

Learning from Peter Handscomb’s mistake, Steve Smith jams his bat down to an Umesh Yadav yorker and succeeds in that mission where his team-mate failed. Umesh continues to tail it in late but Smith is wise to his ways and sees off the over. He might not have many more left in this spell, so the threat has nearly passed.

48th over: Australia 158-4 (Smith 61, Maxwell 5)

Ashwin is a lot flatter to Maxwell early in this over, and that is a very sound approach because it almost pins the Australian to the crease when he tries to turn a straight one to leg. There is a spirited appeal for LBW but Gunner Gould won’t give it, and it proven correct by the ball-tracker reading. No review from India. They knew.

47th over: Australia 157-4 (Smith 61, Maxwell 5)

Hmm, actually I was wrong about Kohli. He’s still off the ground. That or he’s got a doppelgänger in the Indian changing rooms. Umesh Yadav continues to Maxwell, who turns a straight one to leg and gets off strike with a single. Umesh is the threat here, you feel. He has half an LBW shout against Maxwell late in the over but it’s going down leg.

Glenn Maxwell has batted in 6 diff positions in his 1st 7 Test inns
Eq most of any player after 7 inns (along with 11 others)#INDvAUS

46th over: Australia 154-4 (Smith 60, Maxwell 4)

Let’s not go the crow too early, but Glenn Maxwell is comfortingly casual in the way he glides down the pitch to get to the pitch of the ball and gently strokes Ashwin to long-on for a single. Attuned to his public image as he is, I’m sure he knows that right now he’s not only batting to establish an innings, but basically enduring a public trial back home in Australia. It’s 6:50pm in his home town right now – prime armchair critic territory. Let’s hope be passes this test, because he’s a sight to behold when he’s flaying bowling attacks.

45th over: Australia 151-4 (Smith 58, Maxwell 3)

Those expecting Glenn Maxwell to launch a reverse slog-sweep for six in his first few balls will be disappointed to know he’s so far playing straight and giving it the full face of the bat. “He is an incredible player when his confidence level is high,” says Matthew Hayden. “He could dominate the landscape.” Maxwell duly runs one down to third man for a single, and looks to have his wits about him so far. Smith finishes the over by glancing Umesh to the fine leg fence and with that, Australia reach 150 at the drinks break.

44th over: Australia 143-4 (Smith 52, Maxwell 1)

Ravichandran Ashwin is back into the attack now and has a slip and a short leg in place for Glenn Maxwell. Maxwell has been waiting impatiently for this moment for three years now, and will be desperate to impress. He’s off the mark with a nerve-settling single to long-on. Smith nudges one to leg to keep the strike.

43rd over: Australia 140-4 (Smith 50, Maxwell 0)

There is a lot going on here; with Handscomb gone his Victorian team-mate Glenn Maxwell is at the crease, and an entire nation inhales as one. Moments before the wicket, Steve Smith had brought up his half-century and if you looked closely at the celebration, you’d probably assume it meant a little more to him than many others. He was verging on smug as he pointed his bat towards the sheds. Now he might be a little worried. Maxwell survives four deliveries from Umesh and trots down the middle for a conference with his skipper.

Umesh does the trick again! And yet again Peter Handscomb perishes just as he looked perfectly comfortable. This time he’s done in by an absolute snorter of a yorker from the Indian paceman; it swings in late and appreciably to jam Handscomb on the toe and the minute that happens he knows he’s gone. The look to Smith for a referral is forlorn. Done.

42nd over: Australia 139-3 (Smith 49, Handscomb 19)

Ravindra Jadeja continues and Steve Smith moves closer to his half-century when he skips down the deck and hammers one to mid-on. A metre either way and it was four, but it does bring up the 50 partnership from 16.4 overs, which is pretty decent consolidation from this pair. And now a sight that will warm the hearts of club cricketers everywhere:

which shoulder is it, champ? #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/cp6hTM1eBX

41st over: Australia 137-3 (Smith 48, Handscomb 18)

Peter Handscomb has been slightly constipated in his efforts in recent overs but he’s batting Imodium here, cutting late and magnificently off the returning Yadav to pick up four runs and get himself going again. Matthew Hayden, meanwhile, has been recreating the facial expressions of the average fan listening to his commentary:

Matthew Hayden, ladies and gentlemen. (@rustyjacko) pic.twitter.com/YYFSAzqbKW

40th over: Australia 132-3 (Smith 48, Handscomb 13)

A delay now as Virat Kohli leaves the field after doing himself a mischief in the act of diving to save a boundary. You could see his idea; make a statement to his men by hurling himself at the rope and showing his commitment, but it was also foolhardy. India’s best batsman appears to crunch both his shoulder and head into the hard outfield, and physio Pat Farhart takes him from the field for treatment. Fear not: by over’s end he’s back out there.

39th over: Australia 129-3 (Smith 48, Handscomb 10)

Ishant looked to have shot his bolt last over, but Kohli gives him another one regardless. It’s all a bit grim, and Ishant is pinching the bridge of his nose after the fourth ball, perhaps as a coded signal to his skipper that he’s done with his thankless task. Hovering around the 140kmph mark throughout, he doesn’t concede a run until Smith glides the last ball to the rope at third man. Who’d be a fast bowler in these conditions?

38th over: Australia 125-3 (Smith 44, Handscomb 10)

Interesting times; Smith is very well set and Handscomb is starting to look very comfortable as well. Having taken a wicket early in the piece, Jadeja is looking unthreatening. Kohli needs to shuffle the deck here. It ain’t working.

37th over: Australia 124-3 (Smith 43, Handscomb 10)

Ishant gets another over and continues to bend his back without much joy. The broadcasters are calling for submissions under the #IshantGameFace hashtag, but I think his skipper would rather see his wicket-taking face as the moment. I won’t lie though, there are some genuinely disturbing sights via the hashtag.

Don't miss the 4th One ... #IshantGameFacepic.twitter.com/5Y3EjXsEyZ

36th over: Australia 123-3 (Smith 42, Handscomb 10)

I wish I could do just one thing as well as the cover drive Steve Smith has just belted to the fence off Ravindra Jadeja. Even if I did, it would probably be something useless like tying Windsor knots upside down, I bet. I’ll try the latter and let you know.

35th over: Australia 118-3 (Smith 37, Handscomb 10)

“That’s how he plays, that’s his technique,” says Michael Clarke of Peter Handscomb’s shuffle back towards his stumps. Translation: “I don’t think he should play like that but it seems to work for him.” You’d hesitate to be too emphatic right now, as he hasn’t made a lot of runs in India just yet. My guess: they’ll come, and he’ll be a fixture of his side for most of the next decade. “He holds it a bit like an axe,” adds Brett Lee, planting seeds in the minds of cricket fans. Ishant might have had a maiden but again Vijay errs in the field, letting a regulation stop through to concede two. Kohli’s nudging further down the Border-McDermott continuum now.

34th over: Australia 116-3 (Smith 37, Handscomb 8)

Both batsmen are using their feet to Jadeja, confidently skipping down the track to hit him towards leg. Smith lofts a single that way and then throws back his head in disgust; it should have been four, by his reaction. Adding the observation that the Warner ball was trash, Jadeja really hasn’t bowled many “wicket balls” today.

33rd over: Australia 114-3 (Smith 36, Handscomb 7)

Australia’s smart running between the wickets continues as Handscomb turns one around the corner off his pads, down towards fine leg, and figures he can get back on the arm of the man down there. He’s right, and Kohli is doing the Allan Border teapot stance again. It’s about a 6.7 on the Craig McDermott scale.

32nd over: Australia 111-3 (Smith 35, Handscomb 7)

Ravindra Jadeja is favoured to pair with Ishant first up, but he’s not yet finding any spin in this pitch and gets turned to leg for a Handscomb single. Smith gets another hitting one very firmly to mid-on and then charging through. Kohli is cheesed off (“C’mon!” he screams at the offender, Murali Vijay), while Brett Lee says it’s spoiled a maiden. He clearly nodded off at the start of the over.

31st over: Australia 109-3 (Smith 34, Handscomb 6)

OK, we’re off and away in the second session. Ishant Sharma, his man bun, and his Shaggy-style beard are all steaming in towards Steve Smith. Of Ishant, Brett Lee is full of praise for “the way he goes about his business”, which might have a bit more impact if he hadn’t already said it of the other 21 players in this game as well. Ishant is at the very least an accurate bowler in this over, and it’s a maiden.

Imagine the frustration around Australia if Handscomb and Smith stupidly bat through this session. #Maxwellball

We’re a few minutes from the second session now

...and a couple of good things: (1) if the Fox Sports coverage of this series has taught me one thing it’s that Henry Olonga is an opera singer, and (2) Glenn Maxwell might be batting soon. Good times.

Lunch break pearls from Rodney Hogg.

Hogg: "Australia is in a mega amount of trouble at lunch"

I’m sure he didn’t mean to come across as pessimistic, but...

Nathan Lyon having a good look at the pitch in the lunch break. Renshaw came out as well. #INDvAUS

30th over: Australia 109-3 (Smith 34, Handscomb 6)

And that is lunch on day one at Ranchi, where Australia rattled along at a decent clip all morning thanks to Matt Renshaw and Steve Smith, but only the latter survived and Australia might rue the loss of early wickets given the need to maximise the value of this pitch in the first innings. India, on the other hand, will be very happy with those three wickets after losing the toss. Back with more shortly.

@rustyjacko The best thing we can do for Dan is to feel everything with the passion he felt and take it all with his grace and humour.

29th over: Australia 106-3 (Smith 31, Handscomb 6)

Oof, Smith gets lucky here, sending an inside edge between his legs to pick up a boundary off Yadav, who has in fact stayed in the attack. A little more conventional is Smith’s next shot, which fizzes away past square leg for four more. The Australian pair will have one more over to survive before the break, and Ravindra Jadeja will bowl it.

28th over: Australia 97-3 (Smith 23, Handscomb 6)

I guess we’re likely to see Ravichandran Ashwin change ends now because only an over on from his removal of Marsh he’s been replaced by Jadeja. Yadav will probably be relieved of his duties next over, as India look to jam in as many as they can before the lunch break. Smith drives the final delivery to long-on for a single and keeps the strike.

27th over: Australia 96-3 (Smith 22, Handscomb 6)

Scarier stuff here for Handscomb as Umesh has a throaty LBW appeal against him early in the over, but it’s adjudged to be sailing down leg and the home side decides against a review. Maiden for Umesh, whose gone from zero to hero in the last 20 minutes.

26th over: Australia 96-3 (Smith 22, Handscomb 6)

Not perturbed by the crisis around him, Peter Handscomb arrives with a bang, driving sumptuously for a boundary to get off the mark.

Marsh is gone! It was a definite inside edge as Marsh lunged forward and the ball flew off his pad to the man in close. He went at it with a confident stride and hard hands, and now he’s trotting back to the pavilion. Australia are teetering a little now; a session that promised much is falling away.

And they’re very, very confident in that, despite the appeal being turned down.

25th over: Australia 89-2 (Smith 21, Marsh 2)

One unique thing about Shaun Marsh is that he runs between the wickets like a character in a late 90s, early-3D video game – all robotic and square, with his chest puffed out and his long-suffering back rigidly straight. It’s a bit Fifa ‘97 referee, I reckon.

24th over: Australia 88-2 (Smith 21, Marsh 1)

Not quite as metronomic here from Ashwin, who is worked for a few singles and a two to Smith. Thomas Walker arrives with an email at the point. “Well past midnight here in Chicago but this first hour has already set up the match nicely... thanks for the OBO coverage, it’s been snowing all week here so it’s nice to be reminded that it’s warm cricket weather somewhere in the world. Also, RIP Dan Lucas, very sad to hear such awful news. I loved his Phil Hughes obituary and it feels even more poignant now.”

23rd over: Australia 84-2 (Smith 18, Marsh 1)

Shaun Marsh is the new man at the crease for the tourists, and he’s straight off the mark with a single. His eternal plight seems to be the need to survive an awkward period before lunch and tea, and that is his lot here. Twenty-five minutes will see him through to lunch. Another wicket could tip the balance in India’s favour but runs are also fairly easy to come by.

Renshaw nicks Yadav to first slip! Well, that was not quite what we expected of that over but again Umesh Yadav has done the job for his skipper, with whom he combines for this wicket. A ball earlier Renshaw had teased the crowd by purposefully flicking one just short of Rahane at second slip, but his demise is a genuinely injudicious waft, from which the outside edge is well held by Kohli.

22nd over: Australia 78-1 (Renshaw 41, Smith 15)

Another accurate and tight over from Ashwin, who is pursuing a stump-to-stump line to Steve Smith but looking increasingly less likely of actually getting him out. This is a danger time for India, I sense, because once Steven Peter Devereux Smith is in, it’s very hard to get him out.

21st over: Australia 77-1 (Renshaw 41, Smith 15)

Umesh Yadav was bowling like a drain earlier, but he returns now with his sights set on redeeming things with some reverse swing. So far it seems a double reverse, perhaps, cancelling itself out. Renshaw’s not troubled and drives for one, then Smith sees off the rest. They might tuck in next over from this end.

20th over: Australia 76-1 (Renshaw 40, Smith 15)

Some intrigue here; “We might have had our first explosion of the match,” says commentator Laxmanan Sivaramakrishnan . Don’t worry, he only means it in the sense of prodigious spin. A bit dramatic. The ball in qurstion looked a lot like it had trapped Renshaw in front, but the contact with the pad had come when he was outside the line of off stump. False alarm. Jadeja wisely decides against a review.

19th over: Australia 75-1 (Renshaw 39, Smith 15)

In a symbolic win for Matt Renshaw, Ravichandran Ashwin has moved his close-in fieldsmen back to short cover and short extra cover, but persists with a slip to the well-set batsman. Renshaw takes his time over a single and Smith bobs, weaves and cuts to pick up two to finish the over.

Ranchi pitch is playing way better than anyone expected. Retractions being drafted. Best first session deck of series.

18th over: Australia 72-1 (Renshaw 38, Smith 13)

Michael Clarke reckons that this wicket is a lot easier to score on than those of the first two Tests, which is at odds with all of the pre-match outrage about the state of the strip. Renshaw and Smith look perfectly comfortable for now, I’ll say that. Meanwhile, Ryan Jones has accepted my choice of Cheese and Onion, but adds that Light and Tangy should not be left out of the conversation. He’s right, of course. A curiously maligned crisp flavour.

17th over: Australia 69-1 (Renshaw 36, Smith 12)

As Ashwin continues to ease into what will surely be a long spell, Scott Probst arrives with a delightful and unexpected email. “This talk of the Test being in Dharamsala brings to mind to local Tibetan community; Tibetans are really into their cricket. I know an ex-monk who was opening bat for his monastery. Once when I was on a meditation retreat in Nepal with a bunch of Tibetans, one of the monks made discreet enquiries as to whether I was Ricky Ponting.” That’s all on a slightly higher plane than Ryan Jones’ request for my favourite flavour of Smith’s crisps. Cheese and onion, if you must know.

16th over: Australia 68-1 (Renshaw 35, Smith 12)

Ravindra Jadeja gets us re-started after drinks and Smith is full of positive intent as he strokes him towards point and cover without piercing the field. Jadeja has a slip and a short leg, but both are moot when he over-pitches and Smith drives him wide of mid-wicket for a boundary. Jadeja has gone for 14 runs from his four overs, which actually counts as expensive by his usual miserly standards.

15th over: Australia 64-1 (Renshaw 35, Smith 8)

As drinks are called at the mid-way point of the first session, we can now reflect on what a bonanza it has been for Matt Renshaw. He’s 35 from 43 deliveries with seven boundaries and doesn’t look too perturbed by the loss of his opening partner David Warner. That said, Australia are on top for now.

Big wicket for the Aussie VC gone cheaply again.

14th over: Australia 61-1 (Renshaw 34, Smith 6)

It’s been said a million times before, but the sight of Steve Smith bobbing up and down before playing a perfectly correct forward defence really is something. It’s like he’s doing the Zorba dance in this over from Jadeja, and he gets a single to retain the strike.

13th over: Australia 60-1 (Renshaw 34, Smith 5)

I’m not sure whether it is a concerted effort to score a lot of runs before the wicket starts deteriorating or a measure of the volume of loose balls bowled, but Renshaw is hitting boundaries for fun today and gets another through cover off Ashwin. It’s Matthew Haydenesque bully-batting and he’s perhaps setting the tone for what will follow.

12th over: Australia 54-1 (Renshaw 29, Smith 4)

The flipside of Ravindra Jadeja’s madcap brilliance so far is that he’s offering up plenty of buffet balls, and that allows Steve Smith to get off the mark with a boundary when he glances a leg-side dart down to the fence at fine leg. It’s been runs galore in this first session but you can sense imminent danger for the batsmen too.

11th over: Australia 50-1 (Renshaw 29, Smith 0)

“There is no justice when it comes to batting,” says Matthew Hayden of David Warner’s dismissal. A strange interpretation of such a dismal bit of human error, but OK. Ravi Ashwin continues to Renshaw and bowls an accurate, searching over that forces the Australian to defend as the general rule.

I know they don’t allow runners any more but surely we can make an exception to get Maxwell out there early. #INDvAUS

10th over: Australia 50-1 (Renshaw 29, Smith 0)

The Australian captain strides to the crease now and has a couple of Jadeja’s best to defend first up. David Warner’s average, meanwhile, might soon dip below 48 and his struggles in India continue.

Ravindra Jadeja comes into the attack and immediately claims Warner! My word that was a terrible dismissal. Warner had just called for his baggy green cap and ensured himself an unobstructed view of the ball, but having creamed the left-arm spinner through cover for a boundary, he then plays an ugly swipe at a full toss and sends it straight back to the bowler. That was an absolute shocker from Warner. He’s furious, and Jadeja strikes again.

9th over: Australia 45-0 (Renshaw 28, Warner 15)

A hairy moment for Renshaw here as he reaches a long way forward to pat Ashwin towards mid-on, but a leading edge squirts the other way towards short cover. Ashwin is an obvious threat here, but it must be said that the Australian’s have tended to handle him very well early in the previous two Tests.

@rustyjacko Too early to have Renshaw knocking Boycott off his perch as the greatest living Yorkshireman?

8th over: Australia 44-0 (Renshaw 27, Warner 15)

Renshaw “comes across as a bloke who is very relaxed,” says Sunil Gavaskar, hardly the most chilled-out entertainer you’re likely to meet. Aside from that he’s just got a firm sense of his bearings and clear understanding of his own game; he knows where his off stump is and picks the right ball to hit. Here Umesh* gives Warner the right one; another half-volley that gets creamed through cover for a boundary.

7th over: Australia 36-0 (Renshaw 24, Warner 10)

Spin time: Ravi Ashwin first. He licks his finger, aggressively spins the ball around in his hand to get a feel for things, then sweeps his arms in those signature loops as he runs in to Warner. He’s also probably licking his lips. Warner drives and defends towards cover for the most part, then gets back and across to cut a long-hop out to deep cover for one. Not for the first time this morning, Renshaw does even better, taking the one delivery he has left to face and depositing it through mid-wicket for a boundary. This is something of a role reversal for the Australian openers, but combined they’re going at five an over. Renshaw is also the youngest man to reach 500 Test runs.

6th over: Australia 31-0 (Renshaw 20, Warner 9)

With Umesh Yadav continuing, David Warner tucks three around the corner to start the over, and I tuck into the final mouthful of a small bag of Smith’s original chicken crisps. Actually I’ll be 100% honest: I was upending the packet and it slightly obscured my view of the shot. I’m sure that happened to Neville Cardus all the time. Gunner Gould is going just as well, dodging and weaving to avoid being hit by a throw from the outfield. No worries a ball later: Umesh over-pitches and Renshaw lathers him through cover for yet another boundary. No throw required. If this isn’t the last over of Umesh’s spell, I’ll eat the actual packet the crisps came in.

5th over: Australia 22-0 (Renshaw 16, Warner 6)

Two more to Warner gets the local broadcasters agitated about bringing the Australian’s nemesis Ravi Ashwin into the fray, and soon their head-to-head stats are flashed up on the screen. To say they’re one-sided undersells it just a touch. For now, most of the hay is being made by Matt Renshaw. Again he takes advantages of some shonky length when Ishant over-pitches, allowing him to turn four more runs through deep square leg. Australia are cruising at the moment, so we’ll probably see some spin very shortly.

4th over: Australia 15-0 (Renshaw 12, Warner 3)

Having yet to establish his mojo, David Warner does the right thing and bunts a quick single towards cover in order to rotate the strike. Renshaw gets a few gifts from Umesh at that point; a full toss is cracked straight to the man at mid-off but a loose one outside off stump is beautifully angled between gully and point for a boundary. The Queenslander is establishing a decent little platform for his innings here.

3rd over: Australia 10-0 (Renshaw 8, Warner 2)

Ishant has done two very good things here; first he appears to trap Matt Renshaw in front with a gem of a delivery, but then rightly stops his skipper from calling for a review when it’s not given. It was pitching outside leg and Ishant knew it. Unfortunately, a few balls later he pitches an even shorter one on leg and Renshaw confidently biffs it to the fence wide of mid-wicket.

2nd over: Australia 6-0 (Renshaw 4, Warner 2)

Umesh Yadav isn’t quite as accurate at the start of his first over, straying onto Warner’s pads to be turned around the corner for a couple of runs. Lulled into a false sense of comfort, Warner flinches as the next one rises up off the pitch and whistles past his ears. India think he’s strangled one down the leg side a ball later, but it’s all thigh pad.

1st over: Australia 4-0 (Renshaw 4, Warner 0)

Taking guard for Australia is Matt Renshaw (Test average: currently three above the magical 50 mark) and standing at the other end is David Warner (Test average: now almost two runs below the magical 50 mark). Bowling: Ishant Sharma (Test average: hardly the point). Ishant sends them slanting across Renshaw first up and he’s got two slips and a gully in place for the edge.

We’re a few minutes from the opening delivery of the Test

And as the anthems groan away, I can’t help but think it appropriate to post a Dan Lucas-style Simpsons clip. Anthem-themed, of course.

Australian Selection

I will take any and all emails on Glenn Maxwell’s inclusion. As much as I love the desperately unlucky Usman Khawaja, it is genuinely great to see Maxwell back in this line-up because he’s a supremely talented player and a genuine competitor who offers back-up spin and a dangerous arm in the in-field. The latter is something Australian Test sides have sorely lacked in the last few years. Pat Cummins’ return is just a heart-warmer.

Steve Smith looks at the pitch and sighs rather undiplomatically. “I don’t think there will be a great deal of bounce,” he says. “Hopefully we can post a good first innings total. Hopefully we can play well in this one.”

Team news: Australia have brought Glenn Maxwell in (!!!), as well as Pat Cummins, who hasn’t played “for a while”, says Smith. Almost six years, to be exact. India have brought opening batsman Murali Vijay back into their side as soon as possible. He replaces Abhinav Mukund.

Preamble

Hello OBOers and welcome to the first day of the third Test in this fascinating Border-Gavaskar Trophy series between Australia and India, which resumes on Ranchi’s much-discussed pitch today.

Russell will be here shortly. In the meantime, here’s Adam Collins’ preview of the match:

Related: Steve Smith and Australia set for Ranchi pitch battle with Virat Kohli and India

Continue reading...

India fight back on day two of the third Test against Australia – as it happened

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  • India 120-1 at stumps on day two in Ranchi
  • Australia post 451 in their first innings
  • Steve Smith and Glenn Maxwell make centuries for Australia

Here’s your match report:

Related: Third Test evenly balanced as India build following Steve Smith masterclass

After Australia prospered this morning, India fought back in the afternoon and evening to leave the third Test beautifully poised.

451 is an imposing total but Australia’s attack looks a tad popgun without Mitchell Starc on a placid surface that’s offering very little to either Nathan Lyon or Steve O’Keefe. KL Rahul batted well for his 67 until he was undone by Pat Cummins’ persistence. Murali Vijay and Che Pujara will resume at the crease tomorrow.

40th over: India 120-1 (Vijay 42, Pujara 10)

Final over of the day to be bowled by O’Keefe. A few teasers are thrown up, but Vijay, sans helmet, or cap, knocks them away.

39th over: India 120-1 (Vijay 42, Pujara 10)

Vijay’s waited until the opening delivery of the penultimate over of the day to reveal one of the shots of the innings, driving Lyon off the front foot for a glorious four through mid-off.

38th over: India 115-1 (Vijay 37, Pujara 10)

As the shadows stretch the width of the romantically named JSA International Stadium Complex, Josh Hazlewood puts his shoulder to the wheel once more. Two slips and a short leg wait for Pujara but the batsmen ignores them all, drilling an on-driven full toss for four.

37th over: India 111-1 (Vijay 37, Pujara 6)

Vijay brings up his Cowan ton of 100 balls faced with a single as Lyon continues his angle from around the wicket to the right-handers. The bowler’s line and length are spot on, but there’s just not much happening off the surface to make the batsmen jump like they did in Bengaluru.

Stumps not far away on day two with the Aussies searching for the second wicket... #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/wGD0rrG30w

36th over: India 109-1 (Vijay 36, Pujara 5)

Hazlewood replaces Cummins as Smith maintains pace at one end but this pair now seem happy to see off the day. An up and down maiden leaves little to describe.

35th over: India 109-1 (Vijay 36, Pujara 5)

Better from Lyon, troubling Vijay from around the wicket. First almost jagging an LBW review, ended by Gunner Gould telling the bowler the batsman hit the ball, and the second an uppish push that could have gone to short leg.

34th over: India 107-1 (Vijay 35, Pujara 4)

Cummins extends his spell to six overs. Sports scientists throughout Australia hold their breath. He can’t repeat his trick of his previous over though, but nor does he breakdown. Presumably that’s his lot for today though, and an excellent shift it’s been. 10/22/1

33rd over: India 105-1 (Vijay 35, Pujara 2)

Lyon brought back for another dart but he begins expensively. Vijay sweeps three fours in the over, the third a precise lap, the second a beautiful flat drive beyond square leg, but the first was a streaky top-edge that could have gone anywhere.

It's been a long, long time between Test wickets for Pat Cummins and didn't he enjoy this one! #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/yicpXB0OtE

32nd over: India 93-1 (Vijay 23, Pujara 2)

Cummins backs up his wicket ball with a testing opener to Pujara, full and straight. On the money for the rest of the over too. Hard not to smile at the celebration of a man so cruelled by injury for so long. Well done young man. Spell of five overs one for six. Just what his country required with little happening for the spinners.

He's back!
Cummins breaks Thru with a Bouncer
Mixing up length and pace here
India 1/91#IndvAus

@JPHowcroft Botham's Shakespearean alter ego wd be either Sir Toby Belch or maybe Stephano. I'm sure the latter's subservience rules it out

Breakthrough for Australia! Cummins’ hard work has paid off. A slower shorter delivery climbs on Rahul and he can’t drop his gloves in time as it chases him inside the line, feathering a simple catch behind. Terrific reward to the young fast bowler for a wholehearted spell.

31st over: India 91-0 (Rahul 67, Vijay 23)

Rapid straightforward maiden from O’Keefe.

30th over: India 91-0 (Rahul 67, Vijay 23)

Bravo Pat Cummins. On a lifeless surface he’s bending his back and searching for every available advantage, banging the ball in and forcing the batsmen to rear uncertainly, throwing in some cross-seamers, slower balls, and finally a yorker that provokes a strangled cry for LBW.

29th over: India 89-0 (Rahul 66, Vijay 23)

“Niiiiice Socky!” has replaced “Niiiice Garry!” as Matthew Wade’s cry of choice. Although it does make me think he’s cheering on a sock-puppet, not an international cricketer.

@JPHowcroft David Boon as Bill Sykes in Oliver. Slightly more intimidating than Oliver Reed

28th over: India 84-0 (Rahul 61, Vijay 23)

Cummins bowling a white-ball over, mixing his line, length and pace to keep the batsmen honest. It’s a smart tactic, denying the set batsmen any surety in their strokes. There’s little threat though, especially short of a length, although the final delivery, a slower one, does catch Vijay on his glove after spitting off the pitch.

27th over: India 83-0 (Rahul 60, Vijay 23)

O’Keefe’s turn again, but turn is not apparent for the left-armer as straight bats push away an over containing little threat and two singles.

Really pleased to announce a great new signing for @guardian_sport: @marthakelner is to join us as chief sports reporter.

26th over: India 81-0 (Rahul 59, Vijay 22)

Cummins begins the final hour of play in just his second first-class game since 2011. Not much doing out there though with dry lines outside off stump making for soporific cricket.

Gwynfor Jones wades into the Test thesps chat while players take drinks.

Farokh Engineer- Falstaff, Ashton Agar- Romeo, Kevin Pieterson- Mercutio, Rob Key- Bottom, Geoffrey Boycott- Titus Andronicus.

25th over: India 80-0 (Rahul 59, Vijay 21)

India have retreated for a few overs with the pacemen in tandem, sensing Cummins and Hazlewood are the dangermen for Australia. Or maybe not. Rahul enjoys a briskly run two from a push to wide third-man to break the shackles and he then steps neatly inside an in-swinger angled down the leg-side to glance four more. This partnership becoming very problematic for Smith.

@JPHowcroft Nathan Lyon looks a bit like Yorick.

24th over: India 74-0 (Rahul 53, Vijay 21)

Cummins returns for his second spell of the match with four deliveries on the money before his fifth, a slower ball, comes out a drifty full toss that earns Rahul a single. Not the same swing on offer as with Hazlewood.

Love to see Pat Cummins bowl a @Liam628 spell and bowl around the wicket armpit length!#IndvAus#aggressive

@JPHowcroft After an all-time great innings, Smith is captaining like a schoolboy. Too defensive, missing opportunities, failing his bowlers

23rd over: India 73-0 (Rahul 52, Vijay 21)

Hazlewood continuing with the early-over inswingers and Vijay decides to honour them this time, playing away a maiden.

22nd over: India 73-0 (Rahul 52, Vijay 21)

Lyon from around the wicket and Vijay peels off a paddle sweep over his left shoulder with all the insouciance of a falconer inviting a Golden Eagle to perch on his forearm. Rahul ups the ante with a sweep so whippy his wrists were at risk of overtaking his hands. That boundary brings up another excellent 50 for KL Rahul, his fourth in five digs this series.

21st over: India 68-0 (Rahul 48, Vijay 20)

Hazlewood getting some dangerous reverse swing both ways. Three full in-duckers have both right-handers jamming down on their toes at the crease and then an away swinger finds Vijay’s edge but it dies as it skcuttles through the cordon for a fortunate four.

20th over: India 61-0 (Rahul 42, Vijay 19)

Lyon to persist with his new line of attack around the wicket but with only two close catchers and some nimble shot-placement and running, both Rahul and Vijay continue to prosper. The latter picks up four with a thick edge beyond the solitary slip but the shot was on.

19th over: India 55-0 (Rahul 41, Vijay 14)

Important moment half an hour into this session with Hazlewood recalled to the attack. Straight away he’s on the money, probing Vijay’s pads with a hint of reverse in-swing. David Warner is working hard on the ball to make sure any possible movement is maximised, but it’s Vijay making the ball move in the middle of the over, dispatching an overpitched delivery to the cover boundary.

18th over: India 51-0 (Rahul 41, Vijay 10)

Lyon switching around the wicket to the right-handers now and with that change comes some extra bounce and turn. Finally a little bit of encouragement for Lyon. Nothing much comes of it this over, but something to build from.

17th over: India 49-0 (Rahul 40, Vijay 9)

Reinforcing my earlier point, the host broadcaster reminding viewers that when England were here recently they scored 400 in their first innings twice and contrived to lose. Another routine over of innocuous O’Keefe deliveries and calmly placed singles.

16th over: India 46-0 (Rahul 38, Vijay 8)

Vijay much more circumspect that his partner, keeping Lyon at arm’s length for most of the over, but even he unfurls a rapidly swishing sweep to advance his score. India picking off Australia’s length here, knowing they’re unlikely to be beaten by turn or bounce. Back to the seamer’s soon you’d expect.

15th over: India 44-0 (Rahul 37, Vijay 7)

As O’Keefe continues his toil the old adage about judging a surface only after both sides have used it comes to mind. 451 is clearly a decent total for Australia but this pitch contains few demons. As if to prove it Rahul scores on both sides of the wicket off front foot and back.

14th over: India 36-0 (Rahul 30, Vijay 6)

Another over with little to report for either side. Rahul’s premeditated sweep further illustrates his security at the crease, but also the limiting effects of his shoulder injury.

13th over: India 35-0 (Rahul 29, Vijay 6)

Tidy maiden over from O’Keefe, probing a fullish length outside the right-hander’s off stump. Not much has misbehaved so far though making life sedate for India’s openers.

12th over: India 35-0 (Rahul 29, Vijay 6)

India happy to sweep Lyon away for the time being, milking singles at will while Australia wait for the ball to deteriorate sufficiently to become helpful to Hazlewood and Cummins.

11th over: India 32-0 (Rahul 28, Vijay 4)

First false stroke since Tea with O’Keefe prompting Rahul to edge just wide of the solitary slip. This fast outfield sees the insult of four runs added to the bowler’s injury. Otherwise it’s slow turn and not much bounce for O’Keefe, meaning the batsmen can play comfortably from the crease.

10th over: India 26-0 (Rahul 23, Vijay 3)

Spin from both ends as Nathan Lyon has a dart. Not a lot on offer from either Australian slow bowler so far. India’s openers work a couple of singles to keep the scoreboard ticking over.

9th over: India 24-0 (Rahul 22, Vijay 2)

Back underway in Ranchi with Steve O’Keefe charged with the first over after Tea. He’s coming around the wicket to the right-handed Rahul and after nudging a few deliveries back down the pitch the batsman rocks back in his crease and controls a square drive for four. Excellent resumption from India.

During the tea interval the Australian TV feed is recalling the tied Test of 1986 with Allan Border.

Not many people know that Dean Jones vomited during his innings of 210.

Thank you very much Mr Lemon.

A fascinating final session in prospect with Australia pushing for an early breakthrough and India desperate for the top-order partnership they need to creep their way back into the Test match.

That’s the break, India starting solidly enough in reply to Australia’s impressive total. In honesty, this pitch looks like it still has plenty of runs in it. Geoff Lemon out, and I don’t know if tones can be dulcet in the written form, but if they can then JP Howcroft will be the man to deliver them. I’ll leave you in his voicebox.

8th over: India 20-0 (Rahul 18, Vijay 2)

Cummins arriving at the end of his usual T20 spell. Not bad for a fourth T20 over, it only costs him 9 runs. The first a cover drive, the second a classic T20 edge through third man, and Rahul the batsman profiting from both. Then a single through cover, a final leave from Vijay, and that is tea.

7th over: India 11-0 (Rahul 9, Vijay 2)

Do you know what I love? Fast overs of left-arm spin. Steve O’O’O’Keefe is going to bowl one, at least, before tea. Around the wicket, wheeling in, those grenade lobs that he employs to begin a spell. A couple of singles driven, that’s all.

6th over: India 9-0 (Rahul 8, Vijay 1)

Finally a shot with some fluency. In the air, but Rahul uses Cummins’ pace as he flicks off his pads. Between Marsh at short leg and Lyon at midwicket, and four. More quick stuff from Cummins follows, up past the 90 mile mark at points. Can’t deny it’s exciting. The question is can it last?

5th over: India 5-0 (Rahul 4, Vijay 1)

The struggle is real. Another Hazlewood over for just a run, this coming again from the short ball, pulled by Rahul. Tight stuff.

4th over: India 4-0 (Rahul 3, Vijay 1)

Cummins is giving this his all. Might as well, with the new ball and not much time to use it. Puts some real venom into the bouncers, and even his shortest ball is up at 87 miles per hour. The only runs come from Rahul’s gloves, as he flinches away from a short ball and could have been caught anywhere.

3rd over: India 3-0 (Rahul 2, Vijay 1)

Hazlewood doing that thing that he does. Beating the bat on the inside edge, hitting Vijay too high to be leg-before. Then beating him on the outside edge, through into Wade’s gloves. Eventually Vijay escapes the examination by pulling a short ball. Rahul adds a run of his own on the other side of the wicket.

2nd over: India 1-0 (Rahul 1, Vijay 0)

Yes indeed. Pat Cummins last bowled in Barack Obama’s first term in office. Or Nick Fredriksson’s more charming comparison below. His first over back (Pat’s, not Nick’s) is a good one. Mid 140 km/h range, useful line, a couple of shorter ones. It’s a maiden, as Rahul plays with caution.

@WhiteLineWire Pat Cummins' previous Test match was closer to the redefining of Pluto as a dwarf planet than to today.

1st over: India 1-0 (Rahul 1, Vijay 0)

Hazlewood to start with the new ball. Nearly a run out first ball, as KL Rahul goes on a mad dash after driving to mid-on. O’Keefe misses. Vijay leaves, defends.

137.3 overs: Australia 451-10 (Smith 178)

Steven Smith, not out at the end, what an innings from the captain. He’s equalled his longest ever knock, at 361 balls faced, and his fourth-highest in terms of runs. Third-highest score in Asia by an Australian captain, as well, after Greg Chappell’s 235 and Mark Taylor’s 334. He’s remained calm, batted deep, and made India work for a day and a half in the field. That’s an imposing first-innings score to try to get past, and it’s going to be a question of whether India’s batsmen can reciprocate in terms of patience and pressure. No one is going to smash their way to supremacy on this surface, but it will reward those with a longer view.

He is the specialist at being run out at the non-striker’s end for nought, and Hazlewood does it again. It was Smith’s call, he flicked a single away behind square from Jadeja’s third ball, wanted to get back for the second, but the throw was good enough. Jadeja gathers it in front of the stumps and underhand flicks it back into the timber just ahead of Hazlewood’s bat reaching its ground.

137th over: Australia 450-9 (Smith 177, Hazlewood 0)

One wicket to fall. Hazlewood in, and Smith is clearly not too confident. He tries to murder the first ball from Yadav through cover, misses. Then drives the next into the deep but doesn’t take the single. The field well back. Same goes for the third ball. Takes the single from the fourth, after driving it into his pad from the inside edge. There is no one within cooee, and the bowler cleans up his own work. Comes round the wicket to the left-handed Hazlewood, but he survives the last two full-pitched balls.

136th over: Australia 449-9 (Smith 176)

Jaddu gets five-for. So dangerous in these conditions, so good against Australia. Lyon scores his sole run from the outside edge, but a couple of balls later the next edge goes to the man in close on the off side to end the over.

135th over: Australia 446-8 (Smith 174, Lyon 0)

Yadav celebrates the wicket by falling over as he tries to bowl his second ball at Lyon. Does an accidental leprechaun heel-click and goes rump over breast. Comes up smiling at the end of a dramatic forward roll. Lyon survives the next couple of balls.

Geological eruption! Yadav bangs in the short ball, there’s good pace on it. He’s conjured that from somewhere deep in his molten core. O’Keefe can’t resist the hook shot, and it carries down to long leg for a routine take. That’s O’Keefe’s Test highs core, and he’s lasted 70 balls. Useful stuff.

134th over: Australia 445-7 (Smith 173, O’Keefe 25)

Ashwin wheels on. This is screaming in the face of eternity. He is tiring, bowling some wide stuff, and the batsmen work three runs. This slow accumulation. Does a rock feel pain as centuries of water erode it?

133rd over: Australia 442-7 (Smith 171, O’Keefe 24)

Yadav carries on. Too wide, Smith is able to drive a single. Yadav is getting some reverse though now. Gee, he’s good. O’Keefe is watchful, waits out the rest of the over.

132nd over: Australia 441-7 (Smith 170, O’Keefe 24)

Ashwin still operating over the wicket, spinning the ball as much as he can in towards the right-hander’s pads and gloves. Smith waits back on a couple,t he comes forward to drive a single. He’s worked these spin bowlers supremely through this innings. It has been an absolute study in concentration. He’s just equalled his second-longest innings at 346 balls.

131st over: Australia 440-7 (Smith 169, O’Keefe 24)

Another misfield. India beginning to tire. It’s been a long slog. Karun Nair lets the ball through at cover for a single. O’Keefe has a couple of short midwickets, and slams the ball off his pads straight at one of them. Yadav sticking to the classic stump-to-stump theory. Then O’Keefe gets a short one to close the over, it sits up nicely and he clouts it away on the pull shot for four.

130th over: Australia 435-7 (Smith 168, O’Keefe 20)

Another Jadeja maiden, he’s going at 2.5 an over, which is expensive for him and cheap for everyone else.

129th over: Australia 435-7 (Smith 168, O’Keefe 20)

Pace. Sigh of relief for the fingers of the world’s live bloggers. Umesh Yadav is back. Smith drives a run into the covers. O’Keefe plays the classic tailender’s ‘glide’ to third man. Smith gets one that barely gets off the pitch, that’s interesting, this pitch has the possibility to become very difficult alter with some variable bounce. He gets a run after squirting the rushed defensive shot away. O’Keefe gets one too far to leg side and is able to dink it away. Four singles from the over.

128th over: Australia 431-7 (Smith 166, O’Keefe 18)

Nailed it! O’Keefe gets some width from Jadeja and pounds the cut shot for four.

127th over: Australia 426-7 (Smith 165, O’Keefe 14)

So nearly gone! The Smith single to start the over was regulation, but then Ashwin turns one into O’Keefe. The batsman stabs at it, it takes the inside edge, into the thigh pad, over the middle bail, and eludes the wicketkeeper’s gloves. Four runs.

126th over: Australia 421-7 (Smith 164, O’Keefe 10)

Jadeja stays left-arm over the wicket. It takes Smith four balls to get off strike this time. A big shout against SOK next ball, but it’s hitting bat first as it strikes him in line.

125th over: Australia 420-7 (Smith 163, O’Keefe 10)

Ashwin bowling, and Smith ticks a single through square, before O’Keefe advances and slots one straight down the ground for a much more convincing boundary then his last. I bet he congratulated himself in the third-person tense after that.

124th over: Australia 415-7 (Smith 162, O’Keefe 6)

Shot! Steve Smith on-drives Jadeja from a leg-stump line. Four runs to start the over. Tickles a single. O’Keefe is getting a lot of balls pitching outside leg stump, and kicks them away.

123rd over: Australia 410-7 (Smith 157, O’Keefe 6)

Missed! O’Keefe slashes at Ashwin outside off, thick edge, and it goes just over the cap of a crouching Rahane at slip. The stand-in captain had no chance to even see that before it was past him, I’d suggest. But I’d bet Kohli is still spitting chips.

122nd over: Australia 406-7 (Smith 157, O’Keefe 2)

Variations on a theme. Now the Smith single comes through a misfield in close on the leg side. Then O’Keefe gets a run! Irish parties around the world light up. More so because it came off an edge, through a vacant gully, where a catcher had been stationed just a ball or two earlier.

121st over: Australia 404-7 (Smith 156, O’Keefe 1)

And again, except this time the single is from the third ball. Smith’s live average is now 61.20. What even.

120th over: Australia 403-7 (Smith 155, O’Keefe 1)

Identical over bar the arm of the bowler. Jadeja delivering it. Smith drives the second ball down the gorund for one, O’Keefe is the blotter for the rest.

119th over: Australia 402-7 (Smith 154, O’Keefe 1)

Single to Smith to long on. Steven O’Keefe, the most appropriate Australian player to be commenting about on St Patrick’s Day, will really kick things off after lunch with the bat, and Ashwin with the ball. We know O’Keefe can play long, he was part of the incredible 8-161 partnership with Peter Nevill in Pallekele last year. Blocks out four balls with studious intent.

As ever, you can drop me a line - and please do take up that option, even if I’m lost in a whir of Jadeja overs and furious keystrokes. The email is over in the sidebar, and the Twitter whatsit is @GeoffLemonSport.

Hello friends and sports fans, thanks Russell for the last session. What a treat we have ahead of us. This is the series that just keeps giving. Steven Smith is a cyborg, that’s the only explanation for it. Glenn Maxwell is pure excitement, even in defence.

Meanwhile, in New Zealand...

What is this? pic.twitter.com/MfDQ4vCCtM

One final observation before Geoff Lemon steps in to the OBO chair...

India have been conservative with Virat Kohli’s injury and given the below details, that’s smart.

India have confirmed with the match officials that Kohli's injury is external so he doesn't have field before batting anywhere. #INDvAUS

118th over: Australia 401-7 (Smith 153, O’Keefe 1)

And that is that for the opening session of day two, which featured Glenn Maxwell’s maiden Test century, the inevitable continuation of Steve Smith’s 19th, and a stellar bowling rearguard by Ravindra Jadeja. He’s got four wickets to this point. Sloppy outfielding helped bring up Australia’s 400 in this over, which was fitting enough. Honours slightly in Australia’s favour, in the end? I think so. They managed 102-3 in that session. That’s a win.

117th over: Australia 398-7 (Smith 150, O’Keefe 1)

Ten minutes ago Steve O’Keefe probably wasn’t expecting to be out in the middle before lunch, but that he is thanks to Ravindra Jadeja. O’Keefe pushes forward to Ravichandran Ashwin and gets a safe outside edge down to third man to get off the mark. Steve Smith then gets a single too – it keeps him on strike and helps him to his 150-run milestone. Bit of a fizzer, the celebration, but what a knock it has been. It’s taken 315 deliveries and required significant powers of concentration. His genius is almost monotonous at this point.

Jadeja gets Cummins for a duck! That’s an absolute jaffa from the spinner. He came around the wicket to right-handed Cummins, angled one towards leg and the Australian groped at but couldn’t make contact with the ball and loses the top of his off stump. A classic spinner’s wicket, that. Jadeja is now on the brink of another five-wicket bag and India are right back in the frame.

Wade departs! And rather tellingly, he does so with a forward defensive stroke. All-out attack netted him 37 from 50 deliveries – very valuable runs for Australia – but in respecting the bowling a little more he’s been nipped out by India’s best bowler so far. It was a smart take by Saha after a thin outside edge.

115th over: Australia 393-5 (Smith 147, Wade 36)

Ashwin is perhaps pushing it through a little too quick here I reckon, though he does have a couple of hundred more Test wickets than me. Michael Clarke is laying into India, saying they’re trying to save runs instead of search for wickets. He’s not too far wrong.

114th over: Australia 392-5 (Smith 147, Wade 35)

Jadeja is over the wicket to Wade and bowling from as wide on the bowling crease as the lines allow. It matters not; Wade engages in that unorthodox trot down the pitch before swiping another sweep through mid-wicket for four. He’s becoming an absolute pest for India, and now it is they who wish the lunch break would hurry up.

Genuinely thinking about bumping Glenn up a spot on my list of forty funniest cricketers after today’s first ball. #Maxwellballpic.twitter.com/iOIcZAxc8C

113th over: Australia 386-5 (Smith 146, Wade 30)

We’re just under 20 minutes from lunch on day two and the session is really starting to slip away from India. Now Wade biffs Ashwin through square leg for four, and actually just seems to be having fun with his batting. It’s most irritating for Virat Kohli as he sits up in the changing rooms, I’m sure.

112th over: Australia 381-5 (Smith 145, Wade 26)

Every time Matthew Wade walks down the pitch and tries to sweep Ravindra Jadeja, a dog-eared copy of Don Bradman’s ‘The Art of Cricket’ spontaneously combusts. It’s a sight and a half, is what I’m saying. Still, Jadeja even rips one past the outside edge of Steve Smith in this over, and that’s not something we’ve seen very often so far. Steve O’Keefe will be liking the look of that. Smith will like the look of his partnership stats; a single here means he and Wade have shared in a 50-run stand from just 10.4 overs. Jadeja looked like running through the tail half an hour ago. Now India are labouring.

111th over: Australia 379-5 (Smith 144, Wade 25)

Ashwin finally appears! But it’s not all good for India; Wade treats him like a rental car, skipping down the track and flogging one out to cow corner for a boundary. There follow some reactionary field changes. It’s not exactly inspiring stuff from the home side. They miss Kohli like Van Halen miss David Lee Roth.

110th over: Australia 372-5 (Smith 144, Wade 18)

In lieu of any Ashwin action, Jadeja is the threat here, but even he is troubling Wade a little less than in previous overs. Wade hasn’t played himself in, has he? As you ponder that, also ponder Nicholas Jewlachow’s great shadow golf suggestion: Craig Bellamy’s goal celebration against Barcelona in 2007.

109th over: Australia 370-5 (Smith 143, Wade 17)

Still no Ravichandran Ashwin. So Umesh gets another over, and Matthew Wade gets himself another boundary by opening up the face of the bat and running one to the vacant third man region. This is real dross from Rahane and Umesh; the paceman is not looking like taking a wicket and he’s not keeping things tight either.

108th over: Australia 364-5 (Smith 142, Wade 12)

Wade is just winding the Indians up now; he and Smith get through for a three that really should have been just the two. Then the Victorian keeper plays all around a big off break, which races away for four byes. Jadeja is really bringing them in out of the rough. The expiry date on Wade’s innings appears quite close.

Virat would be going nuts over these fielding errors. There'd be rockets. #INDvAUS

107th over: Australia 356-5 (Smith 139, Wade 11)

What’s wrong with Ravichandran Ashwin? Ishant gets a rest now but it’s Umesh Yadav replacing him. Matthew Wade rejoices in his reduced risk of dismissal by hammering the paceman through cover for a crisp boundary. He’ll be loving this. Indian Twitter, on the other hand, would like a very loud word with Ajinkya Rahane about his bowler rotation strategy.

106th over: Australia 349-5 (Smith 137, Wade 6)

In fairness to Matthew Hayden, sequential replays of each of the half-dozen deliveries bowled to Glenn Maxwell before his demise provided gripping viewing a moment ago. Jadeja was forcing him back and forcing him back, and the wicket ball was just a little bit shorter and bounced a little bit more. Seeing them all on end highlighted his canny variations. He’s also conceded only seven runs in six overs today, and continues to tighten the screws on Wade. Slowly but surely, he might be turning the game.

105th over: Australia 346-5 (Smith 135, Wade 5)

Breaking: Brett Lee was wrong. The ball definitely bounced before slapping into Wriddhiman Saha’s gloves in Ishant’s last over. Why were the broadcasters so excited about it? It almost took a divot out of the ground in the end. As Ishant labours away, Matthew Hayden is talking about all of Ravindra Jadeja’s “blue balls”. I think he’s referring to pitch-map technology this time.

104th over: Australia 345-5 (Smith 134, Wade 5)

Matthew Wade is in a spot of bother here in his attempts to handle Jadeja. He’s getting a long way outside off stump to try and negate the spin coming in to him from the footmarks, but he looks like a sitting duck as he shuffles around. His brightest spot so far is the final delivery of this over, which he whips through mid-wicket for a stress-relieving boundary.

Steve Smith (134no) now has the highest score by an Australia captain in India, beating Michael Clarke's 130 in Chennai, 2013 #INDvAUS

103rd over: Australia 341-5 (Smith 134, Wade 1)

Ishant is steaming in with plenty of energy to Wade, who gets off the mark with a drive to long on. Drama ensues when Smith sends a bottom-edge behind the wicket and it doesn’t carry to keeper Wriddhiman Saha. Or does it? Replays soon show that the Indian keeper was overly cautious to wave off celebrations. It might have carried after all! Unlucky is Ishant’s middle name at the moment. Soon after Smith flays him through mid-wicket with that signature closed-face flick. Worse: Umesh and Pujara make a hash of a regulation stop at cover and it runs away for four more. Ishant is cursed.

102nd over: Australia 332-5 (Smith 126, Wade 0)

Hmm, Matthew Wade is the new man at the crease here and he’s immediately playing an impetuous sweep and copping one to his helmet. He gets a bye for his troubles but Ravindra Jadeja has done the trick again for India, ending a 191-run stand between Smith and Maxwell.

Glenn Maxwell is 13th person to score 100 in all 3 forms of international #cricket
2nd for AUS after Shane Watson#INDvAUS

Jadeja gets the breakthrough! And with that, Glenn Maxwell’s superb stand comes to an end. The ball was short and spinning away from him, and after transferring his weight onto the back foot he was trying to punch it through cover with a straight bat, but instead feathers an edge behind to Saha. The umpire’s finger is straight up and Maxwell elects not to review. That 104 came from 185 deliveries and proved every single doubter wrong. He’s a Test-quality batsman and now the entire cricket world has to admit it.

101st over: Australia 331-4 (Smith 126, Maxwell 104)

Ishant is back into the attack now, and here’s a little more on Glenn Maxwell’s hundred: it featured nine boundaries, two sixes, and is his sixth century in first-class cricket. More pressing: India have just missed an opportunity to run out Steve Smith

Maxwell looked to be in tears as he leant over. He knows it is a moment that could very well change the rest of his life. #INDvAUS

100th over: Australia 328-4 (Smith 124, Maxwell 103)

This Jadeja over couldn’t hope to compete with Maxwell’s milestone, and so it proves, though it is a maiden. Instead let’s turn to this lovely email from Daniel McDonald.

99th over: Australia 328-4 (Smith 124, Maxwell 103)

He’s done it! Glenn Maxwell is a Test centurion! It comes from the final delivery of the Umesh over, which is short and slashed through the cordon region to pick up four runs. How else would he do it? It’s taken him 180 deliveries and gotten his side out of a spot of bother, this knock. Superb stuff. Nothing less than a very dedicated cricketer deserves.

98th over: Australia 323-4 (Smith 123, Maxwell 99)

Glenn Maxwell has...played out a maiden, though not without incident. Ravindra Jadeja reckoned his penultimate delivery had claimed an edge but he’s wrong. This is very tense.

97th over: Australia 323-4 (Smith 123, Maxwell 99)

In fact Umesh gets another over, and Glenn Maxwell is watching him like a hawk. Umesh digs one in and Maxwell thinks it’s about to whistle past his ears, but it keeps low and cracks him on the shoulder. Grimaces all round. Maxwell gets a thick edge next up and it runs down to third man for one. Oof. He’s on 99. Squeaky bum time.

96th over: Australia 322-4 (Smith 123, Maxwell 98)

Time for some spin now as Ravi Jadeja rolls his arm over for the first time on day two. For Smith he’s got a silly point, a slip, and a short mid-on. “That’s a good move by Ajinkya Rahane,” says Sunny Gavaskar – words that didn’t often pass anyone’s lips yesterday. “It’s a truly benign wicket,” adds Matthew Hayden, perhaps wanting to pile further indignity on all the journalists who claimed it would be a minefield. A maiden for Jadeja. With Maxwell on strike next over and possibly nervous about his impending milestone, you’d think Ravichandran Ashwin will be asked to have a bowl.

95th over: Australia 322-4 (Smith 123, Maxwell 98)

As Umesh continues with his third over of the day, Craig Little arrives with a truly excellent shadow-sport anecdote. “Brisbane Bears forward Martin Heffernan got caught air-golfing during a game by Robert Walls,” he says. “After the game Walls asked Heffernan if he wanted to be a footballer or a golfer and he said “golfer”, thereby ending his five-game AFL career.” Brutal.

94th over: Australia 316-4 (Smith 123, Maxwell 92)

Glenn Maxwell rubbishes the 87 hoodoo by moving to 91 with an expertly-angled dab through gully, which hits he rope and leaves man-bunned Ishant shaking his head in disgust. He didn’t delete your Soundcloud account, Ishant. Nervous 90s for Maxwell. He then plays his most Maxwellian stroke so far; a duck-hook is the only way to describe it, as he was taking evasive action as he paddled it down to fine leg. He and Ishant really should collaborate on a remix.

93rd over: Australia 310-4 (Smith 123, Maxwell 87)

If you’re worried about Virat Kohli, he’s still off the ground. If you’re worried about Paul Connolly’s state of mind, and his shadow-batting form slump, fear not. “It’s the melancholy swimming in my Irish blood what does it,” he says. “Then again, my shadow penalty shots are routinely slotted into the top right corner. Unsaveable.” Related to all this: shadow golf is just not on, I reckon. Maybe I’m revealing some prejudices here but when have you ever liked someone who shadow golfs? Back in Ranchi, Glenn Maxwell has reached 87, the so-called unlucky number of Australian cricket. So unlucky, in fact, it was the year they won a world cup.

92nd over: Australia 308-4 (Smith 122, Maxwell 86)

As expected, Ishant Sharma pairs with Yadav to begin the day and he gets the same treatment from Smith as Umesh got from Maxwell; the Aussie skipper glides him down to the vacant third man boundary when his line strays a little wide outside off stump. Ishant approaches Maxwell from wide on the crease, firing it in on a middle stump line, but Maxwell is forward and defending with Dravidesque impenetrability, then sways out the way of a bouncer. Dad joke time:

@rustyjacko Maxwell batting on a "masala" pitch: does he have the tikka?

91st over: Australia 303-4 (Smith 117, Maxwell 86)

Umesh Yadav is granted the task of bowling the first delivery of day two and it SNAPS GLENN MAXWELL’S BAT IN HALF! OK, perhaps I should temper my enthusiasm here; it was only 137 kmph and Maxwell was playing a confident forward defence when it happened. Bizarre. It was a bit like the Ryan Harris-Michael Carberry one during the 2013-14 Ashes, though perhaps far less metaphoric in its ominous qualities.

We’re a few minutes away from the opening delivery

...and The Guardian’s own Paul Connolly writes in. “I need to spend more time in the shadow nets when it comes to my shadow batting,” he says. “Keep getting inside edges onto the stumps. I blame the warped floorboards.”

The pitch

“All in all, it looks like a good wicket to me,” says Brett Lee. “This is a masala pitch,” adds Sunil Gavaskar, at which point his audio cuts out. I assume he means that in a positive sense? Who knows? What is certain is that batting first is a decent advantage in this game, and Australia are surely setting their sights on 450+. Another few hours of Steve Smith and Glenn Maxwell batting and that should be a cinch.

Shadow-batting time

And there is surely no more fun thing to do in your office/living room/train carriage, is there? I’m a big fan of shadow-bowling, as well. In the two years I’ve lived in my current house, I reckon I’ve taken at least 275 imaginary wickets down the long, narrow hallway. A word of warning: always make sure the coast is clear. There is nothing worse for guests than copping the full force of your delivery stride when you’re trying to dismiss imaginary Graeme Smith. It also stops you from dismissing imaginary Graeme Smith, of course.

Maxwell shadow batting in the middle while the teams warm up around him. Play resumes here at JSCA Stadium in about half an hour. #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/96S8FzSzkk

Other things to look forward to

Virat Kohli’s return? He’s warming up on the ground at the moment, but he’s also wearing Wayfarer-style sunglasses, rather than yer wraparound type favoured by most players. Casual sunglasses! Is this a sign? Maybe.

Preamble

Hello all and welcome to day two of this Ranchi Test between Australia and India – the match that might decide this series. Russell Jackson here to take you through the first session, before Geoff Lemon and JP Howcroft swing by to mop up the tail.

Russell will be here shortly. In the meantime, catch up on all the details from day one:

Related: Steve Smith and Glenn Maxwell dominate India on day one in Ranchi

Continue reading...

Pujara century keeps India in the hunt in Ranchi - as it happened

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  • India 360-6 at stumps on day three of the third Test against Australia
  • Che Pujara and Pat Cummins the stars on an absorbing day in Ranchi

One more thing: here is the report from that gripping day of cricket in Ranchi.

Related: Pujara century defies Cummins and Australia on third day in Ranchi

31 overs in the final session of the day, the hosts taking 57 runs and Australia claiming two wickets. On the face of it, advantage Australia. And maybe that is the case. In the first hour Hazlewood brought back a beauty into Nair’s stumps and Cummins’ short ball was too hot for Ashwin to handle.

But when the hosts needed to consolidate, they did. Pujara was a model of true and pure patience today. Six hours at the crease. His 11st Test ton came along the way. He rests having faced 328 balls. Imagine having that concentration?

130th over: India 360-6 (Pujara 130, Saha 18). Last over of the day. Hazlewood it is. Saha does well, keeping him out with the ball darting back towards his stumps. It’s a maiden, and that’s our lot. I’ll step back and wrap things up shortly.

129th over: India 360-6 (Pujara 130, Saha 18). O’Keefe’s final over of the day. First ball, a rare boundary with Saha lapping behind Wade. Bold at this time of day, but fair play to him. Another single comes from a push. Appropriately enough, Pujara faces the last couple. These two have really gone at it after tea. And appropriately as well, the batsman isn’t tempted. Big, frugal shift for O’Keefe. Time for an ice bath.

CPujara now has 11 Test centuries and 14 fifties. The only other player with that record is Australia's Dean Jones. #IndvAus

128th over: India 355-6 (Pujara 130, Saha 13). Hazlewood has to continue with the difficult task of provoking a mistake from Pujara. Good luck with that. Defending, defending. Then ducking with calm when the inevitable short ball comes. A single tickled when the bowler is a bit too straight. Saha is forced to take his bottom hand off the bat when pushing the final delivery. But he’s in as well now. Hard to see where Australia finds something before stumps now. Two overs to come. O’Keefe to get the penultimate one. His best pen, yeah?

I can’t finish the day without at least dropping this tweet in. The original (before this) drove so much nonsense chat this afternoon. And sure enough, it is rubbish. Remember that when someone is YELLING AT THE MOON on social media about it later tonight. Painful.

127th over: India 353-6 (Pujara 129, Saha 12). A single down the ground for Saha to begin O’Keefe’s over reduces Australia’s lead to double digits now. Pujara then uses the pace of the ball to reflect him from round the wicket around the corner for another. Saha defends the rest from O’Keefe’s penetrative line.

Pujara's innings - absolute class. Perf example of mind over matter. Can do with picking up a thing or two. #IndvAus#whitenoise

126th over: India 351-6 (Pujara 128, Saha 11). It has been a crawl in this final session for India, but they have reached 350 now, and by the end of the over reduced the deficit to an even 100. Important milestones on the way to hauling down Australia’s 451. Hazlewood less potent this time around, Saha cutting, Pujara flicking then turning, then Saha gliding. Five from it, the ‘keeper retaining the strike.

This is 5th Pujara Test innings of 300+ balls

206* (389) v Eng
135 (350) v Eng
204 (341) v Aus
125* (317) Today
159 (306) v NZ

125th over: India 346-6 (Pujara 125, Saha 9). O’Keefe to Pujara. How often has that been the case this session? He’s back over the wicket of late, abandoning the negative line approach. So that’s something. And it helps to generate the necessary angle to beat him outside the off-stump. I bolded that to note how infrequently that has occurred today. The rest are, predictably, defended.

124th over: India 346-6 (Pujara 125, Saha 9). Pujara on the cusp of batting the entire day. He’s well behind 300 balls faced. Australians won’t need reminding the 204 he made in this corresponding series four years ago at Hyderabad. By the over, his longevity from here will determine who finishes with a first innings lead. One through cover vies Saha three Hazlewood balls to view. The first strikes him on the thigh guard coming way back into him off the seam. Or maybe some reverse? Good bowling. Then he ducks out of a pacy short ball. Nothing wrong with that approach from the Aussie quick, who will be desperate to eek out another scalp before the close. Six overs left, so he’ll probably get three of them. Looks Australia’s most likely.

123rd over: India 345-6 (Pujara 124, Saha 9). Round the wicket to Saha goes O’Keefe, but he gets off strike down the ground. Pujara takes a single to end the over, keeping the strike. Good batting. Not much else to see here.

122nd over: India 343-6 (Pujara 123, Saha 8). Hazlewood replaces Cummins from the Northern End. The obvious call, but the right one. Big Josh got it very right after tea, breaking through with a serious piece of bowling to Nair just when he looked set to do some damage. He has a wonderful record of getting on and bowling a maiden, which is the case here. Pujara leaves the first four balls from a tidy enough channel then defends the final two. Eight overs to go, so we’ll be running a bit overtime in case you have plans. Because I know that the OBO is enough to prevent you tending to life outside the world wide web.

Leading Shield run-scorers this season. Next time Hilton Cartwright gets picked for Australia lets hope it's for his batting, not bowling. pic.twitter.com/bnk9rYG7uK

121st over: India 343-6 (Pujara 123, Saha 8). O’Keefe gets smashed over mid-off early in the over by Saha for a welcome boundary. Nice use of the feet. Defending the rest, though. He’s had plenty of work today and a lot of it wouldn’t have been fun outside the leg stump trying to bore Pujara out. Might be time for Lyon to spice things up through to the close.

120th over: India 339-6 (Pujara 123, Saha 4). Oh, I was wrong. Cummins goes again. This must be the sixth of this shift for him, and the 25th of the innings. It’s all defence from Pujara. As it has been for so much of his epic stay. Oh, until Cummins drops short, when he carves past point for a boundary. Lovely shot. The Aussie quick is surely spent by now. He repeats the dose in that direction, but behind point where the sweeper Lyon tidies up, keeping it to one.

119th over: India 333-6 (Pujara 117, Saha 4). How will O’Keefe change up to Saha? Well, to begin he is around the wicket again. That’s not for nothing. But the new man sweeps well to get his account underway with a boundary. O’Keefe won’t mind that either, though. Defines defines the rest of the set.

I hope Cummins is going to be sleeping in a hyperbaric chamber overnight

118th over: India 329-6 (Pujara 117, Saha 0). Cummins again. Reckon this will be his last of the day, unless they get right into the tail. Saha isn’t that comfortable when slightly short, into his body. A bouncer follows, predictably, but he can’t get anything on it. It’s a leave/hook. A bye turns the strike over. Pujara ducks in a more convincing fashion when Cummins bounces him too.

117th over: India 328-6 (Pujara 117, Saha 0). O’Keefe holds up this end of the bargain. It’s not pretty, giving Pujara only balls to kick then push at, as he has got a solid 45 minutes now. But maybe that is the plan? Keep him down there, wear down his concentration. See what happens down the other end? Not a bad ploy while Cummins is racing in.

116th over: India 328-6 (Pujara 117, Saha 0). Pat Cummins. “Gee, it has been worth the wait,” says Pete Lalor on the radio call. Not wrong. You just cannot fault this bloke. Saha has a decent job ahead of him too now. 40 minutes (well, 14 overs) to stumps. Has to be there at the end.

And how about this? In my politics days we called that a Killer Fact.

Short balls by Cummins this innings

19 balls, 3 runs, 3 wickets #INDvAUS

He has gloved it! The slighest movement on the technology, and Ashwin will have to go. Umpire Llong confirms this after several reviews, Umpire Gaffney raising the finger. Ashwin isn’t thrilled with this, but it looks a pretty clear verdict from what the TV showed. More to the point, Cummins has done it a third time today. And has three of his four wickets from short balls that the Indians just haven’t handled. Superb bowling. India remain 123 behind Australia with four wickets in hand. It’s been real graft for the visitors today, but they have again given themselves a chance of a first innings lead.

REVIEW! Has Cummins got Ashwin’s edge from a bouncer? We will see. Umpire Gaffney doesn’t think so. Steve Smith wants to find out. Stand by.

115th over: India 326-5 (Pujara 117, Ashwin 1). Guess what? Sokka v Pujara. Outside leg, kicking away. To be fair, he beat him first up with one that really spun. But that’s the exception in this stoush. He has a couple of slips and a short leg, but the very set century maker won’t budge. When needing his bat, he defends.

Pat Cummins nearly takes a screamer off his own bowling! https://t.co/EgbDSOUWdB#INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/HhMyzninr8

114th over: India 326-5 (Pujara 117, Ashwin 1). Ashwin drives the first ball after the refreshment, but Maxwell makes a good stop. Dropped catch! Didn’t necessarily look like it, but Cummins hit Ashwin’s inside edge, onto his pad it went, then balooned. The bowler put in a huge dive! But not to be. Hand doesn’t quite get to it. A quarter chance.

OBO favourite Phil Withall writes me. Thanks Phil. Shit week for the OBO family, so it’s nice to hear from you. “Looking at Cummins pitch map for the innings I suspect it is as close to perfection as a fast bowler could get. The variation in line and length must just sow the seed of caution into the batsmans minds. Adds another layer to a wonderfully absorbing series.”

113rd over: India 326-5 (Pujara 117, Ashwin 1). Struggling to work out the plan here with O’Keefe and Pujara. Test of strength? Battle of wills? Either way, it is the batsman who wins this time when the spinner overpitches with a fully, Pujara making no mistake. A should for leg before ends the over as they walk to drinks, but it is hopeful at best. Pujara has been there 278 balls. And half way through the final session, India are 125 behind.

Contrary to what I would have thought Kohli's had four runs as bad as this one he's in right now: pic.twitter.com/HEDFQ5g0Y9

112nd over: India 322-5 (Pujara 113, Ashwin 1). Cummins has it hooping. That’s some reverse. Ashwin shows the full face, but requires the inside edge to prevent it hitting pad or stump. But he gets more confident as the over progresses. Cummins will probably only get through three or four at this stage of the day. Ashwin will know that as well. Maiden it is.

111st over: India 322-5 (Pujara 113, Ashwin 1). Fascinating struggle between O’Keefe and Pujara. Neither giving an inch. The bowler will, without question, land every ball outside leg. The batsman will, without question, kick him away. The bat required only once. How long will this last?

Hilton Meanwhile in the Shield, Cartwright has responded as well as he could to being left out out of this tour. Good on him.

Congrats Hilton Cartwright 170no today for the waca third score in a row 90+ most in form player not in the test team @White_Adam@sb_tang

110th over: India 322-5 (Pujara 113, Ashwin 1). Hazlewood has been replaced by Cummins, his job done. He was mighty in that middle session. Ashwin, surely aware of the exposure new to the crease, is happy to run the first ball behind point for one and get out of the firing line. But a Pujara single to mid-off puts him straight back there. Ashwin has bat and pad close together though, even if the ball isn’t yet hitting the middle of the willow.

109th over: India 320-5 (Pujara 112, Ashwin 0). Right. O’Keefe immediately swung back into the action from the southern end. And is right on his spot to Pujara from the over the wicket line he has been disposed to for much of the innings. He is able to kick away four of the deliveries. Plenty of patience from the bowler to persist and the batsman not to give into temptation.

108th over: India 320-5 (Pujara 112, Ashwin 0). Hazlewood really earned his entry in the book. Couldn’t have done a lot more when called on today, as is routinely the case. In the nick of time with that partnership moving, albeit slowly, to 44. Nair was just putting the foot down a bit and could have gone most of the way to eliminating India’s deficit by the close. Now, they have to start again. Ashwin gets the no. 7 job ahead of Saha this time around. He’s forced to defend the final delivery after Hazlewood sprays the first chance he gets at the Indian master spinner.

Karun Nair has got out to three pretty decent balls in this series

Hazlewood gets one more over and delivers, slipping through Nair’s gate with a ball that really hoops off a length. Superb bowling to get by and castle the Indian no. 6. When they nearly ran him out last over Smith’s men must have wondered if he would still be there at stumps. It isn’t to be, Nair on his way. Australia have plenty yet to do, but they have more than a sniff of a first innings lead.

107th over: India 320-4 (Pujara 112, Nair 23). Lyon to Nair. This is getting a bit familiar now, reflected in the latter sweeping crisply for a couple. The first time we’ve seen him do that after tea (disregarding the reverse he whipped out). But he then nearly runs himself out! Who takes on Glenn Maxwell? He’s bursting in from midwicket, where a single is taken, but the Australian doesn’t hit at the non-strikers end. A bit man bites dog about that sentence - he never misses. Oh, and Nair was well gone too. That could be the half chance they needed. India are now 131 behind Australia’s 451.

106th over: India 317-4 (Pujara 112, Nair 20). Slow going in the middle, and not much going on in the stands. Another typically warm day out there, a strong swirly breeze making it harder again for all involved. Hazlewood lets Nair off the hook at the first time of asking this over, running him off the face of the bat to third man for a single. Pujara, who hasn’t faced for a few overs, defends the full deliveries and let’s a shorter one pass. No issues for him out there. One from it.

Ian Watkins has dropped me a line thanking Mel Farrell for the “utterly lovely video” that I posted a couple of overs back. “It shows a whole new side to the county’s road system that I had not seen.”

105th over: India 316-4 (Pujara 112, Nair 19). Nair is well forward to Lyon, negating the added spin the Aussie offie seems to be getting after tea. But he slips with the last ball, cut for one. Nair again retains the strike.

All the deliveries that the Australian spinners have bowled in this innings have been there stock balls. #INDvAUS

104th over: India 315-4 (Pujara 112, Nair 18). Hazlewood gets a crack at Nair this time. He looks solid in defence and competent when leaving. Easily forgotten that he really looked the goods on the opening day in Bangalore before getting out. And made a triple ton a couple of months ago. A single dabbed down behind point keeps him the strike and ruins the bowler’s maiden.

Email in from Bryant Howie. He says nice things about Geoff and my podcast. I won’t repeat them here, but thank you. “Wondering what the general feeling is there at the moment being a journalist. Aussie media being compared to pack of dogs yet no one is really coming out to strongly suggest this is false. It is not like you guys to be passive when your integrity is questioned. From where I sit, the level of contradiction on these matters must be mind boggling.”

103rd over: India 314-4 (Pujara 112, Nair 17). Lyon races through an over at Steve O’Keefe pace. Nair used the crease to shuffle the first ball around the corner for a single. Pujara was on the look-out to score, but couldn’t through the middle portion of the set. He then throws out the front pad without a shot, exciting the Australians. But, nah. Oh, an overthrow to end it. One to mid-on becomes two when the throw is awry and Wade doesn’t collect. I assume the bounce throw was to rough the ball up for the reverse swing they relish. The price you pay.

102nd over: India 311-4 (Pujara 110, Nair 16). Big Josh Hazlewood goes again from the northern end. No wickets for him through 22 overs this innings. But he hasn’t done a lot wrong. Pujara again happy to play him with a dead bat into the ring throughout, letting a couple go as well. Only one slip in place now with the second new ball now into its own 22nd over. Softly, softly start to this session from both sides. A maiden, I should add.

Quick shout out. Those who followed the OBO on the final session of day one would remember the shocking time I was having with the wifi in the press box. Made for a more belt-and-braces commentary than I prefer. I relayed this to a good man named Subrato Karmakar, who worked his arse off to get me a decent connection. And here we are. Thank him for the embedded tweets and timeliness of updates.

This is the approach to the JSCA stadium with our awesome driver, Moin. #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/kdvLRv6JwW

101st over: India 311-4 (Pujara 110, Nair 16). Lyon gets one to turn back through the gate! Misses everything; Nair’s bat, pads, Wade’s gloves. Four byes gets India away for the session. Oh, and the Indian no. 6 follows it with a reverse sweep! The pluck! The over settles into a more familiar Lyon-shaped groove thereafter before Nair takes one out to the sweeper at midwicket to finish the set and keep the strike. On the last over’s appeal, technology confirms the decision on the field was right to both turn it down and not to review.

100th over: India 303-4 (Pujara 109, Nair 13). You will notice a subtle shift between Geoff and myself. He chooses to drop a line down between score and commentary. Let’s call that the Australian method. I was told by UK OBO doyen James Dart to do it this way. In case you were wondering. I know you probably weren’t. Cricket? It’s on now. Hazlewood vs Pujara is the match up in the first instance. The Aussie quick does what he does, immediately in his special area just short of a length. Che has been out there so long now that he doesn’t find it hard. But a shout last ball? Down the legside. An edge? Hazlewood likes it. Umpire Gaffney says no. ABC’s Dirk Nannes on the radio reckons the bat was a long way from the pad when the ball went past. Anyway, no review. It’s futile. It’s the over. It’s a maiden. Welcome back.

Meanwhile in the Sheffield Shield. This is really nice. Played, Adam. One of the legit good guys.

Guard of honour from the blue baggers as Voges walking out for bat.... #ThanksVogesy

Thank you, Geoffrey. Excellent as always. I don’t quite share your pessimism from an Australian perspective. From where I’m sitting at the southern end of the ground at Ranchi, I reckon the tourists would be quite content with how that played out. Only the two wickets in the session, but both the captain Kohli and his deputy Rahane now back in the sheds. India remain 148 behind Australia’s first innings 451. Let’s just shake the cliché jar and say it is delicately poised.

Of course, Pat Cummins was integral to all that. He encouraged a drive from Kohli that wasn’t there moments after taking the second new ball. When swung around to the other end he immediately prompted Rahane attempt a high-risk parry a bouncer over the ‘keeper. Neither ended well for hosts. The Aussie quick looks every bit the Test attack leader in his first start for nearly six years. Great story.

The home team’s efforts to hunt down the Australian total continue apace. Australia’s bowlers are tiring, and it could be in India’s power to really apply the grind here. Or, it’s going to take a couple of bits of bowling brilliance to bring the visitors back into the match. Your narrator for that next chapter will be Adam Collins, love him as I have loved you.

99th over: India 303-4 (Pujara 109, Nair 13)

Last over before tea, and there’s very little chance that Pujara will do a Vijay and get stumped just before a break. Both batsmen work Lyon around for a couple of singles, it’s all pretty comfortable stuff. The 300 comes up.

98th over: India 299-4 (Pujara 107, Nair 11)

Maxwell burns through another over of spin, another couple of singles from the first two balls. He’s bowling around the wicket though, and Pujara is content to kick the rest away. Maxwell varying his pace a lot this over, using his limited-overs tricks in Test cricket. It’s worked for Patrick Cummins.

97th over: India 297-4 (Pujara 106, Nair 10)

Junk time, leading up to tea. O’Keefe keeps Karun Nair quiet for five balls, but the one that drops short is crashed through point for four.

96th over: India 293-4 (Pujara 106, Nair 6)

The clamour of the people has been heard. At last, at long last, the people’s man will rise. Off breaks, around the wicket. It’s not a bad over, lands a couple, just a couple of singles.

95th over: India 291-4 (Pujara 105, Nair 5)

Nearly caught! Karun Nair is averaging 10.75 in innings where he doesn’t made a triple-hundred, and that nearly comes down as he plays a lazy drive through cover. It splits the shot catcher and the wide mid off. Gets a single, then Pujara drives a full ball straight down the ground for another four. O’Keefe of late taking a battering.

94th over: India 281-4 (Pujara 100, Nair 0)

Cummins first ball is a misshapen wide cutter, but his second is gorgeously driven through the covers by Pujara for four. That’s the first century for an Indian batsman this series, and his 11th in 47 Tests. It’s been an admirable knock, plenty of resilience, was so patient yesterday then gradually expanded his range today, and has now batted for more than a full day of play. Salutes, then blocks out the rest of the over in true Pooj style.

93rd over: India 277-4 (Pujara 96, Nair 0)

O’Keefe just has Pujara in the gun, firing them down. Takes him five balls to get off strike, then a final dot to Nair.

92nd over: India 276-4 (Pujara 95, Nair 0)

A wicket maiden, as Karun Nair comes to the crease. The future of Indian cricket, said the British press after his triple hundred. Currently has five Test innings, 346 runs, with 303 of those in that unbeaten knock against the Three Lions.

Cummins to get ya! The comeback boy gets his third, and it is a bizarre dismissal. Cummins bangs in a wild bouncer, way over Rahane’s head. Rahane reaches up, trying to get an uppercut on the ball. He loses control of the shot completely, ending up with one leg up in the air behind his back, as though his springtime love has just embraced him in a meadow. I call that pose the Hello Sailor. Done to perfection. Gets a feather on the ball, no more, and Wade takes the most important interception of the last few overs. 3 for 45 for Cummins from 18 overs.

91st over: India 276-3 (Pujara 95, Rahane 14)

I’m sad to announce the demise of Australian cricket. Things are falling apart out here. First, a full toss from O’Keefe that Pujara walks at with great deliberation, a la the original Terminator lurching out of that truck fire, and clubs down the ground. Then, a dart fired way down leg and Wade misses it again, four more byes.

90th over: India 268-3 (Pujara 91, Rahane 14)

Here’s my theory then. It’s keeping low with pace. Cummins has produced a few shooters, and here’s another, keeps low, but the line is well down leg. Wade jumps but can’t clean it up, gloves it away for four byes through fine leg. Cummins is still trying the short stuff. The batsmen are able to work it for singles. Pull, glide. A defensive shot and a leave to finish the over.

89th over: India 262-3 (Pujara 90, Rahane 13)

A quiet Lyon over for a couple of singles. Pujara hits the 90s.

88th over: India 260-3 (Pujara 89, Rahane 12)

Now Cummins is back? You might be able to make these bowling changes rhyme, but it’s hard to find any reason. He sends down one that keeps low, still the odd variable in this pitch. It will presumably become more pronounced as we go along. The batsmen work a couple of runs, then Rahane is nearly bowled off the bottom edge, trying to force Cummins square with a flinching defensive shot. Pace doing him that time. But the ball bounces over the stumps, as Cummins half raises an arm in celebration, then has to retract the statement.

87th over: India 256-3 (Pujara 86, Rahane 11)

A couple of runs from the Lyon over, as he works away relentlessly on the pads. Patience is the only way through on this wicket.

86th over: India 254-3 (Pujara 85, Rahane 10)

As soon as I say it, Josh Hazlewood sends down a bit of a loose over. An easy ball for Pujara to knock away for a couple through midwicket, then a few singles. Then Rahane gets a short one and hooks. It’s off the top edge, but he knows he has a lot of room out behind square leg. There’s no one there for the shot. So it sails safely away for another four runs. India starting to cash in.

85th over: India 245-3 (Pujara 81, Rahane 5)

The new Pujara continues. Newjara? The new Australian spearhead does not. Cummins off after two overs with the new ball, including a wicket, after having bowled three overs in the first session. Weeeeeiiird. But Lyon’s back, and Che slashes off the thick edge for four to third man. Then Rahane comes down the wicket and creams the wider ball through cover. India rolling along, nearly past the follow-on, Pooj eyeing a hundred, and that is the state at drinks.

84th over: India 237-3 (Pujara 75, Rahane 1)

A quieter over from Hazlewood, just the single from it as he works around the off stump. Reliability, thy name is...

83rd over: India 236-3 (Pujara 76, Rahane 1)

The Pujara transformation continues. First, Cummins fires one down leg side, and the batsman gets a fine touch on it. Matthew Wade flies, but can’t get glove to it. Would have been a blinder. Did you know he has more stumpings in India than any Australian wicketkeeper? Interesting. Can’t stop the boundary though, not with normal human arms. Then Pujara cracks another through point, and no one is stopping that.

82nd over: India 226-3 (Pujara 66, Rahane 1)

Hazlewood follows up with a beauty. Beats the edge, takes the edge, takes the pad, sends a snorting bouncer down. Rahane survives it all, but this is top-class new-ball bowling.

81st over: India 226-3 (C Pujara 66, Rahane 1)

Physical comedy time. What an eventful over. New ball. First Cummins serves up a rank full bunger on the pads, and Pujara creams four through midwicket. Then, Pujara hits a smooth three behind square. But it’s only three runs as Maxwell puts in an incredible dive, saves a single, scoops the ball back just inside the rope, and flies over it to land int a forward roll. he comes up holding his shoulder, wincing, before breaking into laughter. Mimicking Virat Kohli. It seems just for fun, not in bad sportsmanship, but perhaps it distracts Kohli nonetheless, and more importantly it gets him on strike. Cummins gets him next ball, then Rahane ticks a single square.

Huge moment! The new ball, and Cummins strikes. Kohli’s horror run against the Australians continues. Pure pace, it was really a half volley outside the off stump, but the speed did for Kohli. Couldn’t resist the length, had a big drive, and that ball very nearly drilled through Steve Smith and hit the fence with his sternum still wrapped around it. Smith was knocked over backwards with the force of the ball, but managed to cling on in the fall. Exhilarating stuff, and there in a moment is the rationale for the Cummins selection.

80th over: India 218-2 (Pujara 59, Kohli 6)

The Lyon over the last before the new ball, and it’s another boundary for Pujara. Down the wicket again, and again classily along the ground straight. His eighth.

79th over: India 211-2 (Pujara 54, Kohli 5)

Some negative stuff now from the Australians, field spread, O’Keefe landing outside leg stump and Pujara kicking away. Comes back around the wicket partway through the over. keep them guessing? It’s working for me. Who has a good read on these tactics. It’s a maiden, O’Keefe’s sixth.

78th over: India 211-2 (Pujara 54, Kohli 5)

Doublespin attack, another couple of singles as Kohli continues to accumulate without trouble.

77th over: India 210-2 (Pujara 53, Kohli 4)

O’Keefe breaks the speed of sound getting through an over for a Kohli single through square.

76th over: India 209-2 (Pujara 53, Kohli 3)

Kohli playing the classic wristy slap-drive against Lyon for a single. If he’s doing that comfortably, then he’ll be ok for the innings. He doubles down on that shot after Pujara hands him back the strike.

75th over: India 206-2 (Pujara 52, Kohli 1)

Four! Pujara sees an O’Keefe delivery he likes the look of, whips across his pads and hits it cleanly through a vacant square leg. Then again! Who is this masked man, and what has he done with Cheteshwar Pujara? This time the monk charges the bowler, drives through cover. Are there any monks out ther renowned for drinking, brawling, sacking cities, doing amazing martial arts? Must be. Let me know. Exquisite shot, and the 200 is up, along with Pujara’s minor milestone.

74th over: India 198-2 (C Pujara 44, Kohli 1)

Kohli is moving pretty freely against Hazlewood. Faces out a maiden, but he’s positive in defence, moving well to the ball, driving it without issue.

73rd over: India 198-2 (C Pujara 44, Kohli 1)

Kohli looks comfortable enough as he works a single. Pujara blots out the rest of the O’Keefe over.

72nd over: India 197-2 (C Pujara 44, Kohli 0)

Hazlewood to Pujara, who clips the first ball beautifully for four. He’s looking good. Reverts to his monkish defence mode for the next five balls, broken only by a decidedly unmonkish break when he loses a contact lens.

71st over: India 193-2 (C Pujara 40, Kohli 0)

It is Kohli. O’Keefe finishes the over from before lunch, with a couple of defensive strokes the result.

The big question is whether Kohli will bat as listed at No4. Rahane was padded up last night to come in if required, but Kohli has had an extra night to recover now, and has apparently been comfortable enough in the nets.

Thank you again Russell, as ever rolling out the red carpet to yours truly to enter the fabled land of the OBO. How huge that last wicket is. Every time you think you know how a Test is going, something can turn in just a second. Please do drop me a line as the next session goes on, via the email on the left or via the idiot machine using @GeoffLemonSport.

What a mad ending to the session. That’ll be it for me today, but Geoff Lemon will be stopping by shortly to take you through the post-lunch arrival of Virat Kohli. The situation: Australia have no reviews left and will have to wait nine overs to have them restored, so the stage is perfectly set for some kind of controversy. Kohli has already been involved today – sarcastically clapping Australia’s burnt review. What would you rather be doing with your Saturday than absorbing this brilliant cricket? India bossed that session, but Murali Vijay threw it all away on the stroke of lunch. I for one can’t wait to see what happens next.

A miracle! Steve O’Keefe gets Vijay! Well I must say, that is one nobody saw coming. Vijay skips down the track to the spinner – who’d been labouring a little late in the session – but misses the ball by a country mile in his attempt to blaze one over cow corner. He’s stranded miles out of his crease and Wade makes no mistake with the stumping. Holy moly. What was Vijay thinking?

70th over: India 192-1 (M Vijay 82, C Pujara 39)

Hazlewood has two shortish mid-wickets in place for Pujara but with a lack of movement in with a full one, he’s pasted for another straight boundary as the batsman cashes in. Much drama follows: Hazlewood digs in a short one and the Aussies think Pujara has gloved it to short mid-wicket, but it’s clearly come off his arm guard. There is also half a run-out chance, and a spirited LBW shout against Pujara, but amid much commotion India carry on their merry way and the 100-run partnership comes up. The tourists wouldn’t beat Pujara in a game of Connect 4 right now. Hazlewood has thrown the kitchen sink at him in this over and got nothing to show for it.

69th over: India 185-1 (M Vijay 82, C Pujara 33)

Is Matthew Hayden calling Sunil Gavaskar “Sunny Boy” in an attempt to incite him to violence? As you ponder that, ponder the reasons why Steve O’Keefe has just been brought back into the attack for more of the same treatment from Murali Vijay. Again the latter gets down on one knee and belts a slog sweep over the top for four. I could have told you that would happen, Smudge.

68th over: India 180-1 (M Vijay 78, C Pujara 33)

Tighter stuff here from Josh Hazlewood, but there is something inevitable about Murali Vijay’s impending century. I don’t say this a lot, but I think I’m with Michael Clarke in this instance:

2x overs from @Gmaxi_32 before lunch? He is a wicket taker!

67th over: India 178-1 (M Vijay 77, C Pujara 32)

Party time now for Vijay. He dances down the wicket to Lyon and slams the spinner over the head of the man at mid-off to pick up four more. Even his edges are bringing him runs. Lyon doesn’t drop his bundle, and keeps plugging away, but all the momentum is with the batsmen at present.

66th over: India 173-1 (M Vijay 72, C Pujara 32)

Not surprisingly, Steve Smith now tells O’Keefe to cool his jets for a while and brings Josh Hazlewood back into the attack for one more spell before the break. Pujara cuts him late with expert placement to pick up two, and he does even better a few balls later when he batters a superb on-drive to the fence. That fizzed off the bat. Lunch can’t come quick enough now for the tourists. Hazlewood mightn’t want to come back out if there is more treatment like that on the way.

65th over: India 167-1 (M Vijay 72, C Pujara 26)

Lyon is swept in a more conventional sense now by Vijay, who moves into the 70s at the same time as his partnership with Pujara does. The batsman is expertly ratcheting up the tempo as this first session wears on and clubs two more out to deep square leg with another sweep. Steve Smith has some thinking to do here.

64th over: India 161-1 (M Vijay 66, C Pujara 26)

We’ll have half an hour more before lunch on day three, but the Indian batsmen are starting to assert themselves on this after that period of inactivity. Now Vijay gets down on one knee and thumps an authoritative slog-sweep over the top for a boundary. Time for a bit more Josh Hazlewood? Or more importantly, some Glenn Maxwell off-spin? You know it makes sense.

63rd over: India 154-1 (M Vijay 60, C Pujara 25)

“I wonder how Virat Kohli is feeling up in the dressing room,” asks Brett Lee, though his employers refuse to replay the Indian captain’s outburst of a few overs ago, when he sarcastically clapped Australia’s failed review after bursting through the dressing room door to stand the balcony. “He’s such a class player,” purrs Lee. He’s right, but he’s also a master provocateur. I almost wish Australia and India would play a Test series every year the way this one is panning out. Maiden for Lyon, and finally a replay of Kohli’s clap. He’s cricket’s greatest villain at the moment. Brilliant stuff.

62nd over: India 154-1 (M Vijay 60, C Pujara 25)

You can say what you like about Steve O’Keefe’s bowling, but what is indisputable is that he’s able to tie up an end at the very minimum, and it’s making me wonder whether Nathan Lyon wouldn’t actually mind taking these pitches and his bowling partner all around the world with him. It’s very good “partnership bowling” from the Australian spinners, and today they’ve been backed up by the miserly pacemen.

61st over: India 153-1 (M Vijay 60, C Pujara 24)

Another big appeal by Lyon to start this over, when Pujara skips forward and pads one to short leg. His bat was nowhere near it though and Ian Gould knew it. Still, there is action aplenty as Handscomb and leg slip David Warner firmly believe they’re only moments away from snaring a catch. Nathan Lyon’s angular spin is certainly posing problems for both batsmen but at the same time they’re finding runs a bit easier to come by. Apparently Australian Twitter is going mad about that Pujara LBW review, suggesting it was out. If so, I need my glasses checked.

60th over: India 151-1 (M Vijay 59, C Pujara 23)

I dunno about you, but I think it’s a little bit brilliant that Australia will now go 20 overs without a review in their pocket, because Virat Kohli might stride to the crease in that time. Scenes. Back in the middle, O’Keefe sends one through a little quicker to Vijay and he turns it dangerously off his pad to pick up one around the corner. If he’d missed that one he would have been salmon trout.

59th over: India 149-1 (M Vijay 58, C Pujara 22)

Well, well, this game is really heating up now. In the wake of Virat Kohli’s bizarre appearance from the change rooms, Australia have a big appeal against Vijay for a bat-pad catch but when it’s turned down they can’t refer it. They’re out of reviews! This match is well and truly awake now.

58th over: India 149-1 (M Vijay 58, C Pujara 22)

O’Keefe also has slip, short leg and leg slip encircling Pujara, with Matthew Wade behind the stumps. Three men and a b... Anyway. This is much better from India. They milk singles off each of the first three deliveries, and Pujara shuts up shop. There is drama from the final delivery when AUSTRALIA CALL FOR A REVIEW, but it was so obviously an inside-edge into the pad from Pujara I’m surprised they bothered. Not out. Australia have burned a review and VIRAT KOHLI APPEARS ON THE BALCONY TO LOUDLY CLAP! Holy moly, the Indian captain is a bit rich here; he hasn’t been out there since mid-way through day one, now he’s trying to get involved from the stands.

57th over: India 146-1 (M Vijay 56, C Pujara 21)

Pujara almost cracks one past the man at wide mid-on to start the second half of the first session, but a fine stop by the fieldman there keeps it to one. With Pujara back on strike Lyon has a slip, a short leg and a leg slip, so the batsman basically knows what to be alert for and defends stoutly. Pujara just strengthens and strengthens with every delivery he faces.

56th over: India 144-1 (M Vijay 55, C Pujara 20)

O’Keefe has a slip and a very short mid-off for Vijay, but promptly angles a dart down the leg side to be turned for one and then bowls too far towards leg so that Pujara gets another single to mid-on. Otherwise the left-armer is asking questions, but Pujara blocks it out until drinks.

55th over: India 142-1 (M Vijay 54, C Pujara 19)

It’s a tad surprising that Pat Cummins’ spell has ended at three maiden overs, but Steve Smith tosses Nathan Lyon the ball now so we’ll have spin from both ends for the first time today. Lyon is really turning it and getting some bounce in his first over, too. The other highlight: Michael Clarke’s pronunciation of Murali. I don’t think I can do it justice with a phonetic translation. Mew-rah-leee? He gets a single but nothing else.

54th over: India 141-1 (M Vijay 53, C Pujara 19)

Vijay finally gets going again, working O’Keefe off his legs for a couple of runs, then getting off strike with a quite loose drive. O’Keefe is liking what he sees here; after a period of becoming bogged down, Vijay is now a contender to do something silly.

53rd over: India 138-1 (M Vijay 50, C Pujara 19)

Mindful of his partner’s stodgy approach, Pujara is attempting to disrupt Cummins’ line a little by getting forward a bit further to drive, but Cummins has more dots than a Dalmatian today. He’s not swinging it, and he’s rarely looked like producing an out-and-out wicket ball, but he’s produced three maidens on the trot. Pressure continues to accrue.

52nd over: India 138-1 (M Vijay 50, C Pujara 19)

“India are getting themselves bogged down here,” says Michael Clarke, and his exasperation works a treat; Pujara immediately sends a lovely, wristy flick through mid-wicket for a boundary. The only person who didn’t enjoy it was Peter Handscomb, who almost copped it on the chin at short leg. Pujara runs through for a bye too. He’s going mad. It’s T20 stuff now.

51st over: India 133-1 (M Vijay 50, C Pujara 15)

“This is like watching mud dry,” says reader Ken Robson, and I can sort of grant him that point. These sorts of dour periods are part and parcel of Test cricket in India, of course, but it’s certainly not inspiring stuff. Nathan Lyon is so bored he’s started bantering away with umpire Ian Gould. Maiden for Cummins, and I think I’ve got the song for the moment.

50th over: India 133-1 (M Vijay 50, C Pujara 15)

Finally Vijay gets his milestone out of the way, working a single to bring up his half-century from 121 deliveries. Pujara continues to pay respect to O’Keefe’s wares, but by the end of the over India have scored only 13 runs from the first 10 overs of the day; six of them came off one lofted drive from Vijay. They’re in this for the long haul, but they really need to start working more ones and twos.

49th over: India 132-1 (M Vijay 49, C Pujara 15)

Hazlewood does indeed take a rest now, and taps Pat Cummins into the fray as he does. Like his team-mate, Cummins is looking to tail them in late to the right-handers or keep one low. Or both. Vijay has a look at him first up but there are not many scoring opportunities on offer, so it’s another maiden. Australia continue to tighten the screws and Vijay has been stuck on 49 for a while now. He really needs to start turning the strike.

48th over: India 132-1 (M Vijay 49, C Pujara 15)

The most compelling sight early in this O’Keefe over is that of Peter Handscomb diving forward from short leg almost before the ball has left Che Pujara’s bat. The fourth delivery is a beauty, and spins prodigiously past the batsman’s outside edge, beating him all end’s up. Pujara glances to fine leg to keep the strike. O’Keefe is in a nice little rhythm here.

47th over: India 131-1 (M Vijay 49, C Pujara 14)

Hazlewood gets one more over, or at least I assume it will be his last. He’s covering the whole ball on his approach to disguise the reverse swing, but Pujara stands there like the cat in a second-hand book store, staring down everything that approaches him and expending minimal energy until he turns one to fine leg for a single. Hazlewood uses the final delivery to thump one into Murali Vijay’s back as the batsman takes evasive action. That might bruise.

46th over: India 130-1 (M Vijay 49, C Pujara 13)

At the start of this over Steve O’Keefe is scuffing his foot on his landing spot with a vigour that suggests he’s drilling down for oil, but there is no gold for him at the other end of the pitch. Vijay isn’t exactly relaxing – and he’s caught by surprise by one off-break that lifts and hits the splice of his bat – but he plays out a maiden without too many troubles. At least Australia are drying up the runs here. That is pressure of sorts.

45th over: India 130-1 (M Vijay 49, C Pujara 13)

Hazlewood continues and manages to tail one in a little to Vijay, who flicks towards mid-wicket but not without risk. He’s off strike with a dab towards gully and the Haze tries a bumper to Pujara, but the ball only rises like Muggsy Bogues attempting a slam dunk. Pujara’s hip is in more danger than his head.

44th over: India 129-1 (M Vijay 48, C Pujara 13)

That bloke in the full body paint waving the Indian flag is the most active individual in the arena in this Steve O’Keefe over, in which Pujara deferentially defends and never looks likely to come out of his shell. His powers of concentration and patience are his great asset.

43rd over: India 129-1 (M Vijay 48, C Pujara 13)

The start of the Hazlewood over is delayed by our 8,000th sight screen disturbance of the series, and I’m with Sanjay Manjrekar on this; batsmen need to toughen up a bit in instances where the movement is coming from beside the screen. They’re bloomin’ huge. Get over it, guys. Sunil Gavaskar sides with the batsmen, of course. Hazlewood is neat and tidy to Pujara, who is ever-alert to that low shooter. Four balls in we have another sight screen disturbance. This is utterly absurd, and Hazlewood is within his rights to give the batsman a bit of stick when he gets off strike by fending a bouncer to leg. I’m sure some cricket will break out soon.

42nd over: India 128-1 (M Vijay 48, C Pujara 12)

In fact we get spin straight away, as Steve O’Keefe steps up to the plate and gets turned down to fine leg for a Pujara single. Of note: Hazlewood kept one a lot lower than I’d realised with the last ball of the previous over, which is in stark contrast to the huge, lofted drive Vijay spanks over the fence at long-on now. It looks as though he’s going to try and hit O’Keefe out of the attack. I’m surprised India hasn’t done a bit more of that in this series.

41st over: India 121-1 (M Vijay 42, C Pujara 11)

OK, we’re off and away on day three. Hazlewood chugs in to Pujara and draws the Indian No3 forward with a typically nagging line and length. He’s got two slips but no gully in place, which seems about right. We’ll probably see a few overs of the pacemen and then a quick introduction of spinners Nathan Lyon and Steve O’Keefe. Pujara gets moving with a single, and second slip moves to about 3.5 for Murali Vijay.

We’re a few minutes from play now.“60-40 to Australia,” says Ravi Shastri of the match status, though his segment was recorded for the purposes of Australian TV viewers and might not have mirrored exactly what he said on the Indian feed. He reckons Australia need quick wickets today. I reckon most of us would love to have his job.

Meanwhile, at Allan Border Field...

Queensland recovered from here, relatively speaking. They’re just been bowled out for 61, falling to an innings loss in Chris Hartley’s final game for the Bulls. Somewhat fittingly, the champion keeper (unluckiest man not to play for Australia in the last 15 years? Probably) top-scored with 18. Tailender Cameron Gannon was the only other Queenslander to reach double figures and James Pattinson ended up with 5-7 from six overs. Remarkable. Victoria will now host the Sheffield Shield final. Sort of. Alice Springs it is.

To recap so far today....#QLDvVICpic.twitter.com/ILJfKzCqAm

The pitch

“That is where you will find a little bit of a problem for the batsman,” says Sunny Gavaskar, pointing at the rough outside the leg stump of the right-handers. Still, he’s not too perturbed by what he’s seeing, and seems as though he might quite like throwing the pads on himself today. “It’s still a pretty good pitch to bat on,” he says, “other than the odd ball that will keep low.” The strip is certainly still in decent nick. I think there will be a few journalists holding off on pitch appraisals in the lead-up to the fourth Test.

Day three #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/Ohha0cujo4

The man with the golden arm?

Maybe not, but I still want to see it.

Steve Smith rolling the arm over this morning. A few leggies could be handy with the foot marks outside the right hander's leg stump. pic.twitter.com/XWoYthXr7G

Preamble

Hello all and welcome to day three of the third Test at Ranchi, which has so far confounded pessimistic expectations of the pitch. In actual fact, batsmen have had the best of it, and India will resume today at 120-1 in reply to Australia’s first innings of 451. The stories of the day yesterday were Glenn Maxwell’s maiden Test century, the continuation of Steve Smith’s otherworldly form, and the return to Test bowling ranks of Pat Cummins – now almost six years on from his last appearance in the baggy green.

Russell will be here shortly. In the meantime, check out Barney Ronay’s ode to Shakin’ Steve Smith.

Related: Numbers still stack up for fidgety Australia captain Shakin’ Steven | Barney Ronay

Continue reading...

Australia on ropes as India take control of third Test on day four – as it happened

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  • Australia 451 & 23-2; India 603-9 dec
  • Australia lose two wickets before close of play

And here’s your match report:

Related: Australia under pressure after India dominate day four of third Test

STUMPS DAY FOUR: Australia 23-2 (Renshaw 7)

Stumps here on day four - a day where India made monumental strides toward victory in Ranchi. Pujara and Saha picked up where they left off with a display of precision and concentration that didn’t relent throughout the day. Both brought up well-deserved milestones of 200 and 100 respectively, before falling in pursuit of quick runs that ultimately rendered Australia survivors and no longer challengers. While both were superb, Pujara’s knock deserves special mention. To underscore how gargantuan his innings was, in compiling his 202 he broke the record for India’s longest individual innings - no mean feat given the competitors in that field.

8th over: Australia 23-2 (Renshaw 7)

Bowled him! Lyon plays for a straight one but Jadeja gets it to grip. It hits the top of off and Australia are in tatters. After an innocuous first over Jadeja really found his pace and accuracy and he’s left a gaping wound in Australia now. That was a great delivery. That ends the day now. It was India’s in every way. Some thoughts shortly to wrap up.

7th over: Australia 23-1 (Lyon 2, Renshaw 7)

It’s Renshaw v Ashwin now, and ball two sees Renshaw work a shortish one that Pujara can’t reel in. He’s lucky, Renshaw, because three would have seen Lyon on strike and him risking a meeting with Jadeja next over. A much better match up from an Australian point of view. He’s forward, bat well out in front of pad to minimise the bat pad opportunity, and he sees out the over. Jadeja at the other end looms as the main danger.

6th over: Australia 19-1 (Lyon 2, Renshaw 3)

So Jadeja accounts for a hapless Warner, and the brains trust send Lyon to the crease. It’s not a bad tactic if only because Lyon is right handed. Jadeja is around the wicket straight away and his second ball elicits a shout for LBW! They don’t review, it was going down leg. Slightly less indecision for the right hander with Jadeja bowling from this angle - the rough is everything. Still, it’s dangerous! Despite men all around his bat, Lyon survives.

Bowled him! Wonderful delivery from Jadeja. He’s going to be unbelievably difficult to handle here. He hits the rough and it jags back furiously, through Warner’s gate and straight into the stumps. Really, really ominous signs here. Every ball a grenade. Honestly think a right hander would be better suited here. And it’s Lyon!

5th over: Australia 17-0 (Warner 14, Renshaw 3)

Warner, playing his natural game, gets down the wicket to Ashwin and scampers a single wide of mid off. He brings Renshaw on strike and he looks a little better against Ashwin’s right arm offspin. There’s also less men around him, perhaps helping his cause. Renshaw wisely sees off Ashwin, leaving him at the other end as Jadeja prepares himself to spear it into that nasty rough.

4th over: Australia 16-0 (Warner 13, Renshaw 3)

Renshaw’s struggling here. He French cuts himself in defence to Jadeja’s first ball, and there are three men waiting for him on the leg side as the left arm orthodox is aiming into the rough. He nearly finds them in the next two balls. The next couple go straight and beat his outside edge. Renshaw will want to be at the other end. The pitch is alive now, obviously.

3rd over: Australia 16-0 (Warner 13, Renshaw 3)

Fewer men around Warner’s bat to face Ashwin, but he’s nearly finding bat pad as one just goes past the man under the lid. Warner then lofts Ashwin over mid off streakily! It was not convincing by any stretch. Why, David. Why? Because it’s natural, that’s why. Ashwin then beats Warner on the inside and there’s a shout! The umpire says no, India agree. It was going down leg. A couple of dots and that one’s done.

2nd over: Australia 12-0 (Warner 9, Renshaw 3)

It’s Jadeja from the other end. He’s over the crease to Renshaw and delivering from a particularly wide position. They’ve got a leg slip in there too, and Renshaw is prodding at the second ball nervously. He manages to get one down to deep backward square and is off strike, thankfully for him. As if to bring Renshaw back on strike, Jadeja pitches short and Warner is through for one. But it’s a carbon copy, because Renshaw finds two through the same area. He’s not on the money yet Jadeja, the deliveries are coming in at slow-medium pace, and the new ball is rendering any revolutions redundant. That’s the over, probably didn’t offer the examination Kohli would have liked.

1st over: Australia 8-0 (Warner 8, Renshaw 0)

Kohli’s on the field, there’s men around the bat, the crowd all of a sudden a little deafening. It’s Ashwin to begin. Brett Lee already suggests Warner needs to ‘play his natural game’. I find that an extraordinary comment. Is there no concession to the game status? Must everything be natural? We’ll see. Ashwin’s first ball is flat and goes on straight. ‘Ooh’s and ahh’s’ result. So does a slow motion replay of Kohli’s mouth. Let’s accept that. Silly mid-off, short leg, slip. A half-shout for one that Warner inside edges onto his pad. A second slip comes in. Ashwin then pitches short and Warner punches him through point for four. It was a poor delivery. ‘Boom’, says Brett Lee. Same again to finish the over, two boundaries from it. Not that it matters.

With 90+ overs in a day and still eight to bowl here, it will take a gargantuan, famous effort for Australia to survive here. There have been some encouraging signs in relation to their batting, but this surely serves as their sternest test yet. Is there a twist to come?

210th over: India 603-9d (Jadeja 54, Sharma 0)

Jadeja caps his fifty with a boundary through extra cover, and finishes India’s innings with a tuck off the hips for four. Kohli then calls in his charges and it will be a searching eight overs for Australia to try and survive before the close of play. I’ll wrap up the Indian innings at the end of the day, for now we brace ourselves for a period that may well come to define the series. Can India find gremlins in the wicket? Do Australia have the wherewithal to get through this? We’ve endured some grind to get to this point, but there’s some captivating stuff ahead. Would love to hear your thoughts as we get underway in a matter of minutes.

@sjjperry Interestingly poised match now. Tired Aus put in to bat for 40 minutes, performance may determine the outcome of the match.

A killer knock from Jadeja, who has skilfully cashed in on tiring Australian bowlers. Some brilliant shots over the top for six interspersed with others crashed through the off side.

209th over: India 595-9 (Jadeja 46, Sharma 0)

Yadav’s wicket brings Sharma to the crease. He gets comical cheers from his home crowd for his exaggerated forward defence. Men surround the bat, and occasionally O’Keefe beats it, but he survives.

Steve O'Keefe is rapidly racing up this list. Now equal 22nd on most deliveries ever bowled in an innings: https://t.co/0W1E04E2OZ#INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/TqKvUF0TUV

Yadav is down the deck to O’Keefe and he tries to heave him over Warner at mid-off. He doesn’t connect with any purity at all, instead slicing the ball to Australia’s opener. A good knock all told. There’s no declaration, Sharma is heading to the crease.

208th over: India 595-8 (Jadeja 46, Yadav 16)

Cummins is back. He’ll want (and deserves) five, but he has a few problems in the meantime. Yadav back cuts him for four through third man (is there any more annoying place to concede a boundary), and gets another through there via the front foot now. The partnership passes fifty, Cummins throws his head back and grimaces wildly. He no-look-hooks Cummins to finish the over, and you can hear Michael Clarke say ‘shot!’ through someone else’s microphone. All India here. With 12 overs remaining today a declaration must be imminent.

207th over: India 586-8 (Jadeja 46, Yadav 7)

Jadeja comes at O’Keefe then retreats - Wade has the bails off and the umpire wants to have a look. Jadeja is well safe. He always follows these events with a slog, and gets himself two via thick inside edge. Two more dots precede another six straight over the bowler’s head. It’s good looking stuff from the left hander, he plays with real silk.

206th over: India 578-8 (Jadeja 38, Yadav 7)

Another innocuous start to the over before a big appeal for LBW is turned down. Australia, of course, have no reviews remaining. Making matters worse/better, Jadeja then creams Lyon straight back over his head for six. One can only imagine the sound of the thud of the ball on that white parachute material near the sightscreen. Lyon buries his head in his hands, a wry smile in accompaniment. There’s a single to finish, he’ll retain the strike.

205th over: India 570-8 (Jadeja 31, Yadav 6)

More singles to the batsmen from O’Keefe. The game is kind of ambling now. India perhaps timing themselves for 10-15 overs at the Australians, and no more. It condemns Australia to mere defence, so it makes sense. Any other views out there? Are India timing this perfectly or just very well?

.@pmnevill caught reverse sweeping. Courageous effort by @CricketNSWBlues getting within 7 runs of a #SheffieldShield final needing 403.

204th over: India 568-8 (Jadeja 30, Yadav 5)

We return from drinks to see the Indian side almost all in whites, awaiting a declaration. Then again, Kohli is calmly stirring his tea. The tension. Meanwhile Jadeja and Yadav exchange singles from Lyon’s bowling, while Australia awaits another last innings examination. Some real pressure on the horizon.

203rd over: India 565-8 (Jadeja 28, Yadav 4)

They’ve just settled down a little now, India. Gone are the extravagant swishes of ten overs ago, in are nifty little dabs and hastily scrambled singles. All of it drives the nail deeper and deeper into Australia’s cause, and attention now turns to their ability to survive. It’s got collapse written all over it, doesn’t it? O’Keefe, meanwhile, has bowled 74 overs.

202nd over: India 562-8 (Jadeja 26, Yadav 3)

Jadeja finds two through third man after some really sharp running. Hazlewood, as has been his approach to conceding runs, directs the next past Jadeja’s hip and avoids conceding more. Later on Yadav dabs one through vacant mid on for a single, and Jadeja gets another to third man. Hard to see a way out for Australia now, presuming the pitch will (seem to) misbehave once Australia starts batting*

@sjjperry Per Hayden on TV Hazlewood has been bowling "unrelentlessly." I think the Australian George Bush is misunderstimating the bowler.

201st over: India 557-8 (Jadeja 22, Yadav 2)

Only one from O’Keefe’s over. Jadeja grabs a single and Yadav spends the rest keeping him out.

200th over: India 556-8 (Jadeja 21, Yadav 2)

A little more circumspect from India here. There was talk a message had been conveyed to bat a little more frugally, and Jadeja is watchful here. Nevertheless he manages to run one through the vacant third man for four before aggressively pulling another for one.

@dizzy259 in fact Pujara has equalled the record set by Fleming (NZ) for most number of Test double hundreds by a batsman called Steve (3)

199th over: India 551-8 (Jadeja 16, Yadav 2)

O’Keefe’s back over the wicket now and the trajectory is flatter than a Melbourne beach. He abandons that angle to come around, but he’s met by stern Yadav defence. A new tactic? That approach remains for the over, meaning Jadeja will face Hazlewood from the other end.

198th over: India 550-8 (Jadeja 15, Yadav 2)

It’s Hazlewood now, and he had Yadav swinging and missing early in the over. He then pitches short and Yadav is late on it in an attempt to pull the ball. It catches the splice and carries to O’Keefe who dives to his left and drops the one-handed attempt. It would have been an excellent catch, particularly for a bloke who’s bowled 71 overs. Jadeja then attempts a suicidal run but survives after Handscomb can’t effect the underarm from side-on.

197th over: India 547-8 (Jadeja 13, Yadav 1)

O’Keefe finds the breakthrough in his 71st(!) over, giving him two for this innings. Yadav comes in, gets off strike, allowing Jadeja to charge and loft O’Keefe wide of long on for another boundary. He’s striking at over 100 here, and Australia will be hoping there’s not more to come.

And now it’s Saha on his way. O’Keefe is pitching just outside off and Saha tries to lift him over cover. He can’t though, and succeeds only in finding Maxwell at hip height. It ends an outstanding innings that’s taken the game away from Australia, and he’s commended heartily for it from the Ranchi crowd. India lead by 91.

196th over: India 541-7 (Jadeja 8, Saha 116)

Jadeja’s in on the act now, cutting Lyon behind the haplessly outstretched dive of Hazlewood. Lyon seems to be getting some venomous bounce but both seem to be using it to their advantage.

195th over: India 536-7 (Jadeja 4, Saha 116)

Hard not to laugh as the camera’s zoom in on emerging puffs of dust from O’Keefe’s deliveries. Jadeja is warned for running on the wicket, and there’s a few singles sprinkled throughout the over. There’s an in-out field, so that’s to be expected. Australia’s best hope is a couple of poorly judged shots, but there appears little sign of that with Saha in such great touch.

194th over: India 532-7 (Jadeja 2, Saha 114)

Pujara welcomes Lyon’s over with a rank, rash slog to midwicket for two. And then he’s gone! It’s described below, and it brings (Sir) Ravindra Jadeja to the crease. He’s immediately finding a single, before Saha executes a classic late cut for three. The runs will not abate, but can Australia find some wickets? They’re on the carousel here and just about at India’s mercy.

Finally, a wicket! Pujara departs after a mammoth, epic 202. We’d been discussing Australian fatigue but no doubt he was feeling similarly. Here he chips Lyon innocuously to mid wicket to Maxwell, bringing to a close a memorable, record breaking innings. He leaves India with a lead of 76, and a mountainous personal legacy.

193rd over: India 525-6 (Pujara 200, Saha 111)

Saha is almost running at O’Keefe every delivery here, but he’s beaten in flight just about every time. That forces Saha to play from his crease - waiting, waiting for his opportunity. He gets one - he clears his stumps and hits O’Keefe with the spin over cover, and the ball spins away to the boundary. Nearly in ODI mode here. Australia, having bowled nearly 200 overs, are on the ropes now. It could get a little ugly.

192nd over: India 521-6 (Pujara 200, Saha 107)

It’s Lyon to continue, and Pujara gets his double! When the history is written about this one, we’ll be reading about a feat of concentration. It’s the longest innings in Indian cricket history, and he’s been near unflappable. The ground is ecstatic, as are his team mates. He’s also managed to drive India into an imperious position here in this Test. No doubt he’ll continue on.

191st over: India 519-6 (Pujara 199, Saha 106)

Maxwell is bowling to a 3-6 field. He’s around the wicket with mass protection on the legside, but both batsman manage to pierce it early for singles. Saha is then down the deck and he just clears Renshaw at mid off. It’s clawed in to prevent a boundary but the intention is clear. Seven more runs from the over.

190th over: India 512-6 (Pujara 196, Saha 102)

Spin from both ends as O’Keefe nears Warne’s 70 overs in Cape Town in 2002. If facing 100 balls is a Cowan ton, what does bowling 70 overs net you? Lower back problems, probably. As if to show his fatigue, O’Keefe drops short and Pujara pounces immediately, pulling him violently for four over mid wicket. There’s a single and a scampered two, meaning seven from the over. India’s attack has commenced, methinks.

189th over: India 505-6 (Pujara 191, Saha 100)

Maxwell kicks things off to start the final session and Saha, on strike at 99 not out, is able to work him behind square to bring up his ton. He’s been outstanding for the whole day, and his teammates celebrate with grandiosity - all fist pumps and cheering - as do the crowd.

Just to underscore the toil of Australia’s bowlers, a good pickup here from Ric Finlay

Have to go back to Warnie at Cape Town, 2002 (70 overs) to find an Aussie who's bowled more in an inns than SOK (currently 67). #IndvAus

As grinding a session as this series has produced. Pujara and Saha carried on where they left off, and almost have India out of Australia’s sight here. They’ve not been dogged so much as measured. They withstood an early bouncer assault from Cummins and the reverse-swinging efforts of Hazlewood, and remained comfortable throughout. Nevertheless, 68 runs in 26 overs means that some attack should be forthcoming. One imagines it should come after both pass their impending milestones of 100 (Saha) and 200 (Pujara) respectively.

For Australia, there will be conjecture about whether some variety was needed in attack, but I’m happy to back Steve Smith’s approach. Once wickets seemed distant, Smith was set on limiting India’s attack by any measure. That amounted to O’Keefe bowling for the majority of the session at both batsman’s pads, and Cummins bowling bouncers. It was effective enough, but whether it will buy enough time to allow Australia to stave off defeat, we’ll find out.

188th over: India 503-6 (Pujara 190, Saha 99)

Attention turns to Wriddhiman Saha, who needs two runs for a ton heading into the last ball before tea. He gets a single but that’s where he’ll remain as Pujara can’t farm it. I’m sure he’ll be fine though. Lyon found some turn there, but we’ll have to wait until after tea to find out whether or not he can find it again. A huge session for India - it leaves them in control of this game. Though perhaps not quite as unassailable as a wicketless session might seem because it was fairly slow going. Australia should take some credit for that. Some thoughts shortly before I return for the last session of the day.

187th over: India 501-6 (Pujara 189, Saha 98)

India notch 500 now, and there’s a slight sense they’re batting with a fraction more urgency too. O’Keefe, curiously, has decided to adopt an attacking angle by coming around the wicket. He may be playing on milestone nerves by changing something, and does beat Saha at the end of the over. The batsman tries to back cut him unsuccessfully and Wade groans upon receiving it. He survives. India lead by 50.

186th over: India 499-6 (Pujara 188, Saha 97)

Some good old-fashioned action! Saha is down the wicket and hitting Lyon flat and hard over mid off for a boundary. India upping the ante now? Would stand to reason - they’re 48 ahead and probably comfortable enough to take a risk. Methodical stuff. Some milestones around the corner might be Australia’s best chance to make something happen.

185th over: India 493-6 (Pujara 187, Saha 92)

Overs thick and fast now as O’Keefe and Lyon go in tandem. It’s notable for a misfield from Lyon; evidence of tiring legs, minds, and everything else. There’s three from the over.

184th over: India 490-6 (Pujara 186, Saha 90)

So now we see Lyon, who’s apparently in excruciating pain due to some abrasion on his spinning finger. Is that a badge of honour for spinners? As an aside, I know a former first class spinner for NSW who had his wedding ring specially re-shaped to fit his spinning finger. That information should give you some clues (to his art, anyway). Lyon seems comfortable enough though, but so too do Saha and Pujara who both work him through leg for four separate runs. Saha’s into the nineties.

183rd over: India 485-6 (Pujara 185, Saha 87)

O’Keefe continues. There’s an early run to Saha, and defence for the rest. To step back a second here: India lead by 35 with five and a bit sessions to go. Of course they will fancy themselves to knock Australia over in a day, so the question is: how far ahead can they get today? It’s a question that may well explain Smith’s reluctance to turn to part-timers. If he bowls Maxwell and himself, India may capitalise. It’s park the bus time for Australia.

182nd over: India 485-6 (Pujara 185, Saha 86)

It’s Cummins and it’s bouncers. Saha simply ducks. He then goes for the sucker punch outside off stump but Saha almost bats it back. You have to hand it to Cummins, bowling at 140+ he is trying absolutely everything to find something from this wicket, but the batsmen are too good; too ‘in’. Still, this isn’t an annihilation by any stretch. The game isn’t progressing forward at any exhilarating rate, so while that’s the case, we may still have some drama ahead. But for now, it’s attritional.

Most enthralling sporting contest right now is WA v NSW Sheffield Shield.

NSW needs 93 runs in 20 odd overs to make final.

181st over: India 484-6 (Pujara 185, Saha 85)

A little more expansive from Saha v O’Keefe now. The ball remains flat, but there’s a lap sweep and a nice drive to long off. The Hawkesbury man is being used as defensive foil and you can understand it. Questions about removing him for another paceman in search of a break for light seem to have abated too. Still, it will be Cummins from the other end.

180th over: India 480-6 (Pujara 184, Saha 82)

So a little subplot emerging here, as Cummins adopts that shortened length to Saha. Is he doing that to make the fading light a factor? No doubt Australia would love to soak up time, however they can get it. He has a leg slip and a man under the lid, so his tactics are clear. Saha is ducking and swaying with aplomb; he doesn’t look overly fazed. The camera pans to Kohli and back, he looks pensive. It does look dark out there.

179th over: India 480-6 (Pujara 184, Saha 82)

I mentioned the clouds earlier, and now there appears to be a question over the light. The umpires confer and they return pretty quickly to O’Keefe’s over. Will go out on a slight limb and guess India are pretty happy to keep batting. It’s a hunch. O’Keefe is flat, over the wicket and outside leg again. These are the attritional parts of a Test match that, frankly, Australia have been poor at managing previously. Unless Australia can conjure something out of the ordinary soon, we might start to consider their path to a draw because that appears more and more to be their best option.

178th over: India 478-6 (Pujara 183, Saha 81)

Cummins returns to replace Hazlewood, and nearly grabs Saha after the keeper whips one just short of midwicket. That was uppish. He gets himself off strike, and allows Pujara to deal with the Penrith clubman. The lights are on at the ground here - there appears to be some cloud hovering. It’s not assisting with the sort of movement Australia would like though, as Pujara and Saha bring up their 150 run partnership.

177th over: India 474-6 (Pujara 182, Saha 78)

O’Keefe adopts the seventh stump line (outside leg, that is). The line is almost comically leg side before he polishes it somewhat to a more respectable ‘just outside leg’ line. No runs and he slows the game. Result gained, I suppose.

Pujara has played no shot or defended 255 balls; that is more balls than all players, other than Smith, have faced in the Test. #IndvAus

176th over: India 474-6 (Pujara 182, Saha 78)

Hazlewood, both hands on the ball, is managing to move it both ways. He’s managed to restrict Saha’s scoring for a decent period, but a short ball allows the wicketkeeper to uppercut him towards third man. He didn’t get all of it, but picks up two for his efforts. He’s then inside edging one on to his pads, underscoring Hazlewood’s movement. Still, India march on.

175th over: India 471-6 (Pujara 181, Saha 76)

A maiden from O’Keefe to start post drinks proceedings. Very hard to see a flurry of wickets for the visitors here. Many parallels with England now, where they batted deep in the first innings, only to be trounced in the second. What odds that India can elicit some misbehaviour from the wicket when they bowl? Doesn’t seem much doing here.

174th over: India 471-6 (Pujara 181, Saha 76)

Hazlewood aims to strangle Pujara down leg but the batsman is up to the task, tickling him fine past a outstretched Wade to the boundary. Later in the over he cuts Pujara in half with one that ducks in mightily. It’s an absolute ripper and Wade does well to glove it. There’s a muted appeal though all and sundry know that while there was a noise, it was solely pad. Better signs for Hazlewood there.

173rd over: India 467-6 (Pujara 177, Saha 76)

O’Keefe is spearing into the pads again. A short one afford Pujara a single, otherwise there’s little else notable to speak of.

172nd over: India 466-6 (Pujara 176, Saha 76)

Early misbehaviour from a Hazlewood delivery here, as one grubbers through under Saha’s bat through to Wade. Saha is a study in forward defence afterward though. There’s something about diminutive batsmen looking especially balanced, and that’s Saha’s lot here. Hazlewood is searching for some reverse, but anything he gains is negligible. Clamour in the TV comm box about Australia’s lack of bowling variety. I’ll address that next over, but for now enjoy this.

171st over: India 466-6 (Pujara 176, Saha 76)

Australia’s evolution to defence continues. O’Keefe is over the wicket, spearing into the pads. India take him on anyway, as Saha dances and tries to loft him over midwicket. He scuffs it (think his bat scraped the ground) and it trickles to deep midwicket. He goes again, trying to hit O’Keefe over long on this time, succeeding only in gaining a leading edge and just clearing mid off. Warner chases it down and gets it in. Was hard not to notice his spikes piercing the covers though - a big no, no in amateur cricket. This is not a diplomatic incident though.

170th over: India 460-6 (Pujara 175, Saha 71)

Seriously, where do you bowl? I’ve no doubt Australia have plans, and Hazlewood (who now replaces Cummins) is relentlessly probing, but you know that feeling when the opposition’s bat looks really big? That’s what’s happening now. We’re not quite there yet, but we’re on the verge of full India control mode. Unless Australia can strike, we’ll soon see men out and the waiting game. Hazlewood strikes Saha on the thigh pad late in the over and appeals vociferously, but it was probably going thirty centimetres over sixth stump.

169th over: India 457-6 (Pujara 174, Saha 71)

O’Keefe is flatter this over, and he’s well and truly milked. No really sure what that means, but there’s a run to deep cover from Saha, and one through midwicket for Pujara. Looking fairly easy for India now.

168th over: India 455-6 (Pujara 173, Saha 70)

Cummins is retained, and you can see why. He manages to hurry up both batsmen from an angle you could describe as very wide of the crease. The short stuff seems to trouble them more than any other trajectory, but even so, the ball floats through to Wade. Again, consecutive singles are exchanged, and the rest is spent in meditative defence. I wonder when the bowling will enter the novelty phase: Renshaw, Wade, Warner. Who would you like to see? Too soon?

167th over: India 453-6 (Pujara 172, Saha 69)

And it’s O’Keefe to rifle through an over. He’s flighting them outside off-stump and both Pujara and Saha are circumspect after the former scampers through for one mid-way through the over.

166th over: India 452-6 (Pujara 171, Saha 69)

Cummins adjusts his length to something a little shorter here, but he can’t prevent another pair of runs to Saha and Pujara, who don’t look particularly bothered by much on offer. It says something about both the the wicket (not a bad thing! I promise!) and the skill of both batsmen that Cummins’ 140+ efforts are being handled fairly easily. He’s gone all out here has Cummins, but I think we’ll see spin soon. India now lead by one.

165th over: India 450-6 (Pujara 170, Saha 68)

Conversation here about the use, or lack thereof, of Glenn Maxwell. Hard to escape the idea that this is the scenario Australia feared heading into the series. Everybody appears to agree that Maxwell should have bowled more. I think it’s been fractionally forgotten that his bowling has regressed fairly significantly in the last little while, and I think Smith knows that. Meanwhile, it’s a quieter over from Hazlewood. Smith removes a slip and goes to a one-and-a-half position, and both players find a run each behind the wicket. India trail by one.

164th over: India 448-6 (Pujara 169, Saha 67)

Three overs. Three boundaries. Saha in on the act now – India definitely gleaning advantage from the third new ball. He presents the fullest of faces to a Cummins thunderbolt, giving us a gorgeous off drive to start the over. Cummins then reverts to his favourite length and – in the words of former Australian captain Michael Clarke – “gives him a real sniff. He loves it”. Something really grim about that term, “sniff”. Whatever the case, That’s the length that works for Cummins, and he beats Saha again through there. India finish the over trailing by only three runs though, and will fancy themselves to kick on from here.

163rd over: India 444-6 (Pujara 169, Saha 63)

Smith goes with Hazlewood from the other end – understandable given the colour, shape and hardness of this new ball. He’s gives Hazlewood two slips and a standard ring field. That’s about as attacking as it gets for a visiting quick in India, I would have thought. He errs slightly late in the over and Pujara sumptuously works him through mid wicket for four. It’s the shot of a man in imperious touch. Hazlewood then overpitches again but Pujara can’t beat cover. A profitable start for the hosts here.

162nd over: India 440-6 (Pujara 165, Saha 63)

So Australia will recommence with Pat Cummins. He holds aloft a new ball, and elicits some away-shape immediately. A quick single starts proceedings, before Saha leans on a square drive that pierces point and cover for four. It was that classic boundary that comes from the new ball - it came onto the bat beautifully and Saha just used the pace. There’s a bit of a post-session feel to this – will India now streak away? I might be getting ahead of myself. Cummins shortens his length in his remaining deliveries. Saha is feeling for it outside his body, but it all feels a bit benign. Cummins finishes with one that screams past Saha’s outside edge. That was encouraging.

Afternoon, evening, and - where I am - morning all. I write to you from an eerily empty Guardian HQ, where I’m viewing this match from a high powered computer that won’t yet grant me full access to the blog. But like India at the moment, I will plough on.
Did we just witness the wresting of the series back in India’s favour? Some resolute batting followed by desperate reviews appears to have tipped the scales back in the home side’s favour. Pujara may well be mid-Magnum Opus. He’ll no doubt have his eye on batting for another session if his foil, Wriddhiman Saha, can stay with him. For now, that doesn’t seem to be a problem.

There were a few signs that the pitch may be breaking open, yet worryingly little signs (for Australia) that India might soon succumb. I foresee a home side grabbing further control of this match, followed by a searching examination of Australia’s batting towards the day’s close.

The first session of the fourth day in Perth when Australia played South Africa last November was clutch. They had four wickets to get and needed them before lunch to have a chance. The equation was the same this morning. For any realistic chance, this session had to be one for the visitors. But just as it was in Perth, instead it went wicketless.

These 31 overs delivered only 75 runs, but that mattered little for the hosts. The stand between Pujara and Saha now stands at 107, both reaching milestones along the way - the former’s 150, the latter’s half century. Pujara’s hand has now lasted 434 balls. Incredible.

161st over: India 435-6 (Pujara 164, Saha 59). They elected to wait for the third new ball. After the failed review, Smith took a long time to get back to his spot, having a chat with the bowler. In other words: doing everything he could ensure it would be just one over. He’s successful. That’s lunch. I’ll gather my thoughts. Back in a tic.

NOT OUT! He’s nowhere near it. Worse still: first over of the fresh reviews too, so they’ve doubly blown that one. Can understand them taking the punt to an extent, but it will make their lunch that much worse.

REVIEW! Wade has gloved Saha off Lyon. Given not out. No one is that excited. We’ll see?

160th over: India 431-6 (Pujara 163, Saha 56). Final over before the third new ball, with eight overs to the lunch break. Three of the easiest singles you’ll see are found into the deep. Harsha says India are safe. With 14 wickets in hand across five sessions, with Australia having to bat for a fair while of that too, I think he’s right.

Won't be easy for Australia to set a target given they will need time to score the necessary runs. With every half hour, India look safer

159th over: India 428-6 (Pujara 162, Saha 54). A single each from the legside early in the over brings up the 100 stand between the pair. Considering where this voyage began when Ashwin was dismissed not long after Nair, it has been vital with the bowlers to come who haven’t shown any resistance this series so far. This was the series that Australia expected back in Dubai. Hard, attritional, painful. How will they respond? They have 23 runs of lead left to play with.

158th over: India 426-6 (Pujara 161, Saha 53). Sokka punches through a quick maiden so I’m going to punch out a quick post. I promise, it was uneventful. Two overs to the third new ball. The worst three words in the cricket language I reckon: third new ball.

157th over: India 426-6 (Pujara 161, Saha 53). Lyon persists round the wicket. Pujara takes a quick single to begin, reinforcing the control he has over the Australian spin. Saha takes another to the other side of the vast outfield here. Pujara defends the rest. Of course he does.

Jeffrey Earp with some high-quality OBO chat here on the email. “Never Mind the Scoreboard - Here’s the Initials Count,” announces his email.

156th over: India 424-6 (Pujara 160, Saha 52). DROPPED! It’s a nightmare for Australia now. Saha has edged O’Keefe and Wade’s gloves haven’t closed at the right time, the small deviation beating him. Composed singles for both to finish the over. Wade knows, too.

And now a chance goes down behind the stumps off O'Keefe's bowling. Not a great session for the Aussies... #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/n23M5BKRfI

155th over: India 421-6 (Pujara 158, Saha 51). How deflating for Smith and Lyon and everyone involved. The second time today they have felt that release of a lbw decision going their way only for it to be overturned. For the briefest moment they would have thought “great, now he’s gone, we can race through the bowlers and get this finished.” Now? Who knows how long this lasts. Lyon’s over concludes with a single to Pujara to midwicket, once again retaining the strike. Pujara now has 1000 Test runs against Australia.

NOT OUT! Missing by a long way. Turned big. Umpire Gould has had his decision overturned. Pujara remains.

PUJARA GIVEN LBW TO LYON! Is it missing though? He’s gone upstairs. We’ll find out shortly...

154th over: India 419-6 (Pujara 157, Saha 50). Saha’s turn to give the bat a bit of a wave after grabbing one to mid-off, reaching his half-century from exactly 100 balls. Evenly paced, controlled, vital. Further to my shared tweet from the previous over, what exactly does Maxwell have to do to get on? Or Smith himself for that matter? Smith has to try a few things here.

153rd over: India 417-6 (Pujara 156, Saha 49). Down the pitch with some fancy footwork goes Saha, and long over the rope for six! Ends up more or less over cow corner with a full swing of the bat. Australia’s dreams of putting on the pads before the lunch break are completely shot. With half an hour till the interval they would be happy now with a solitary breakthrough. Or just Pujara, even. When he gets his go it is business as usual before retaining the strike out to the cover region. Fair bit of hate for Wade on social media for the quarter (tenth?) chance in the previous Lyon over. Tough crowd. But that’s the way it goes when you have the gloves on. Or am I being too kind?

152nd over: India 409-6 (Pujara 155, Saha 42). Ravi Shastri on the ABC radio call says that Virat Kohli will field when India head out there at some stage later today. Meanwhile, Sok keeps on at it. Pujara defends until he has the space to whip, two through midwicket. Such a familiar pattern. Great comeback ball from O’Keefe, who beats the bat. First time that’s happened today, I reckon.

151st over: India 407-6 (Pujara 153, Saha 42). Lyon is giving it a rip, but the Indian pair are handling him without much trouble here. Both men use their feet to get down the track and take singles down the ground to begin the over. Pujara has another through the onside. The way they are going, the first innings lead will be just about secured by the lunch break.

The all-rounders picked at six this series (M.Marsh, Maxwell) have bowled just 7 out of a total 392.3 overs. #IndvAus

150th over: India 404-6 (Pujara 151, Saha 41). Cummins burst has concluded, O’Keefe swung around to the northern end. The spinner is making him answer a question each ball, landing where he needs to. But Pujara continues to be up for the challenge. Then an edge! To end the over. It goes low; Wade has no chance. He’s saved runs flinging the pad out in the end. Deeply frustrating for Smith and co all the same.

149th over: India 403-6 (Pujara 150, Saha 41). Saha bunts a single off Lyon to give Pujara the strike on 149. It takes till the final delivery, but he’s pushing behind point for the milestone, 150 runs in 391 balls. Both numbers significant, sapping the energy from this Australian attack. An innings that required him to consolidate with partner after partner. His concentration is immense.

First day of the Bangalore Test must seem a long time ago for Nathan Lyon. 0-188 since then

148th over: India 401-6 (Pujara 149, Saha 40). Cummins is back over the wicket after trying to shake things up from the other side in the previous over. The short ball still comes though, Pujara wanting none of it. Nor later in the over when he tries it on again. When full and straight, the Indian no. 3 is pushing out to deep midwicket, the single bringing up the 400. A mighty effort from Pujara, nearing 400 balls faced himself, one run from another personal milestone too. Saha less convincing when Cummins aims a bouncer at his throat, just getting the ball down. Leaning at the last ball, the outside half of his bat makes contact and it skips down to third man for one. A bit streaky, but they’re now only 50 behind.

pic.twitter.com/vdXNynDDs9

147th over: India 399-6 (Pujara 148, Saha 39). Lyon v Saha. He turns the third ball past the man at 45 for one. Pujara takes a single at the first time of asking, knocked into midwicket. A biiiig Nathan Lyon shout, down on the knee pleading. He really has the best appeal in the business at the moment. Shame it is missing leg-stump. He has had some success getting decisions from around the wicket to right-handers like that over the journey, so I get the enthusiasm.

Cummins for his second spell this morning feels a little last chancey for Australia. @CricProf has them at a 2.6% on win predictor.

146th over: India 397-6 (Pujara 147, Saha 38). Cummins straight back after two overs from Hazlewood. Didn’t expect that. But he is, after all, a young strapping lad. He is round the wicket, continuing with the approach Hazlewood deployed before the drinks break. Pujara ducks then sways. So he has used up his two bouncers right away. Oh, maybe not? Another comes later. He defends between times. Nothing doing here. Maiden.

A counterview on the VVS situation from Nimesh Nambiar. “VVS Said (in reference to maxi’s silly antic)‘Especially after what happened to Phil Hughes, everyone is concerned when someone gets injured.’ I understand it as you don’t make fun of the injured after such horrific tragedy. He uses Hughes’ accidental demise as a tragic benchmark to say where we should draw the lines when it comes to on-field antics. I can’t seem to find a shred of disrespect to the late Hughes in this totally innocuous comment.”

145th over: India 397-6 (Pujara 147, Saha 38). Lyon is on, getting one in before the drinks break is due. A decent amount of spin to begin in at Saha, who uses it to collect two into the on-side. Another comes through midwicket, but the Aussie offie looks in the game. Pujara retains the strike with one of his own to end the set. They drink, the hosts 54 behind. Eight hours Pujara has now batted for.

This is the first Test in India where No. 3 batsman from either side has faced 300+ deliveries - Smith & Pujara. #IndvAus

144th over: India 393-6 (Pujara 146, Saha 35). Hazlewood had a little word to Saha after finishing his previous over. That battle continues to begin this over. But only briefly, another taken behind point, the Indians scoring zone of preference this morning. A compact cover drive from Pujara ticks the board over for a further couple. Back to back bumpers come in response. He ducks both, the second coming after a tweak to the field to add an extra catcher on the leg-side. Another shorter one finishes the over. Hazlewood desperate to change the thread of this session before it gets out of hand.

Pete Miller is back to be in response. “I have found the amount of humble pie that has been gobbled up by Australians that got this pitch completely wrong brilliantly entertaining. Schadenfreude is a beautiful ugly thing.” Reasonable. But I challenge anyone to have arrived here two days out and not asked a few questions. It looked horrid and the players agreed. Yet here we are.

143rd over: India 390-6 (Pujara 144, Saha 34). Another chapter in the O’Keefe v Pujara test of willspower. Five of six times he’s required to use his bat, and does so with comfort. Maiden. Where’s Lyon, though?

142nd over: India 390-6 (Pujara 144, Saha 34). Hazlewood to Pujara. Again he is able to score on the off-side past point. In complete control. Saha clips a couple more through midwicket. A first innings lead looking more likely by the over for the hosts. Hazlewood goes upstairs to try and provoke something ill-considered from Saha, akin to the false stroke from Pujara last time around, but he doesn’t succeed.

Chief cricket writer at The Oz, Peter Lalor, has joined the ABC radio commentary and is off the long run on the VVS Laxman comments from yesterday. He’s not happy. “I’m sorry VVS, you don’t drag Phillip Hughes’ name into something trivial about this,” Lalor said. “Some of them out there were with him when he took his last breath.” A bit of perspective there on why the Australians were so dismayed.

141st over: India 387-6 (Pujara 143, Saha 32). Long time since we’ve seen Nath Lyon. Just thought that’s worth noting, as O’Keefe begins a new over. Saha looks at ease driving early in the over, albeit to fielders in the off-side ring. He then beats mid-off for one. Pujara responds by tucking one into midwicket. SOK finds his range with the last ball though, biting and bouncing into Saha’s splice after finally moving round the wicket. But no man catching in there now.

140th over: India 385-6 (Pujara 142, Saha 31). The lights are on at the JSCA Stadium. Didn’t expect that before opening the curtains this morning. The haze remains, it’s very dark. Oh, that reminds me - did everyone see the iPhone/light reader malarkey at Wellington the other day? It’s very, very good. Have a look. Back to Hazlewood, Pujara again scores to third man. A couple this time, square of the sweeper out there. Plenty of runs in that direction this morning, both batsmen happy to open the face at will. Back on the front foot, he defends comfortably. So Hazlewood fulfils his obligation to follow with a bouncer. It works, encouraging the hook with no contact. Had he hit it, it could have gone anywhere; didn’t look in control. A small victory to the bowler, but no damage done.

139th over: India 383-6 (Pujara 140, Saha 31). Pujara kicks O’Keefe. Until he gets some room, then he turns him into the deep. Easy batting. Saha is a proppy when one slides back towards him, but when he gets the same delivery later in the over it is short enough to take out to midwicket for a couple. A penny for Steve Smith’s thoughts, and all that.

This has been the first time this tour when O'Keefe has struggled with lengths. He's bowled some too full, but a lot too short.

138th over: India 380-6 (Pujara 139, Saha 29). Right, so it’s only a three over stint for Cummins. Understandable given how much work he’ll need to do if they are to win this Test. Hazlewood replaces him and does what he does. He won Saha’s inside edge when bringing the first ball back, but he’s more solid in defence thereafter. The batsmen trade singles behind point to end the over. Good cricket from them, closing in on the Australian total slowly but consistently.

137th over: India 378-6 (Pujara 138, Saha 28). Sok to Saha. He gets back and turns to fine leg early in the over for one. That’s the 50 stand between these two. Excellent batting at a vital time. Came together after losing a couple of relatively quick wickets, and Saha has proved the perfect support to Pujara. The latter is defending and kicking, returning to the groove of yesterday’s afternoon session.

Gentle man Petey Miller (don’t let his twitter account deceive you) has corresponded with me via email. This might be a first for us. Given how quiet it is on the twitter, I’m grateful for it.

136th over: India 377-6 (Pujara 138, Saha 27). Cummins continues from the northern or pavilion end. He sprays the first ball, a bouncer, high and wide over Pujara’s shoulder. Probably should have been signalled a wide, but isn’t. A carve behind point gets him one. Saha repeats that stroke later int he later. The board is ticking over, both batsmen look relatively set and Cummins is now three overs into what could only be a maximum four or five over spell. Australia may be turning to Plan B rather soon. It’s quiet and they need it to be loud.

135th over: India 375-6 (Pujara 137, Saha 26). Short, wide, four. Pujara may be very content in defence, but doesn’t miss out when O’Keefe gives him free runs. A rare bad ball from the left-armer, who has bowled with considerable discipline. He then cuts for one to get down the other end. Saha defends out the over.

134th over: India 370-6 (Pujara 132, Saha 26). Is that a dropped catch? Cummins thinks so, off the inside edge, beating Saha after chopping him in half. The replay says it fell short and maybe didn’t hit the edge. In any case, he’s dangerous again. Later in the over he was tickled to fine leg, giving Pujara one Cummins delivery to look at. He steers it with class to third man. No concerns whatsoever for him, now into his third day at the crease.

Pujara vs Cummins

50 balls, 35 runs, 5 boundaries, 36 dots #INDvAUS

133rd over: India 368-6 (Pujara 131, Saha 25). The Sok v Che contest continues. Was boring yet riveting stuff late on day three. Sure enough, it is a maiden here as the two feel each other out. Full and flighted the early plan from the spinner.

I have an explanation for the below. Once it becomes apparent that you’re dining with IPL journeyman Dirk Nannes, it’s selfies by extension. Or maybe the deeply suspect tour beard.

Adam Collins wasn't to be left behind either.Did it have to do with that great hairstyle?@collinsadam@abcgrandstandpic.twitter.com/gkFxMoBFrC

132nd over: India 368-6 (Pujara 131, Saha 25). So close to a fifth wicket, Cummins next ball to Saha, after being so close to having him, is driven through the covers for four. That’ll frustrate ya. A bouncer follows. Out the way he gets. The over ends with a couple more for Saha, who started the set the worst possible way and ends it six runs for the better.

An early email in from Nuggehalli Nigam. Thank you for it. “Can we take a moment to acknowledge, amidst the blame, counter blame, sledging and (alleged) cheating, the contribution that these two teams have made to test cricket? The delicate desperate brilliance of Cummins and the Buddha like patience of Che have shown why test cricket can’t be bested. Two teams battling each other in a test of skill and character that will, even if not apparent now, only serve to elevate both the teams.”

NOT OUT! Missing down the leg-side. The decision will be overturned by TV Umpire Llong and Saha survives. Blimey. What a start from Cummins; fast and full. But he’ll have to go again.

CUMMINS HAS SAHA FIRST BALL LBW! But he is reviewing! STAND BY!

131st over: India 362-6 (Pujara 131, Saha 19). Nearly a run out first ball of the day! O’Keefe is operating from the southern end, barely visible through the deep haze. Maybe that influences the batsmen, who decide to set off on a quick single to mid-off. Warner takes a ping, but misses. He was just safe in any case, so fair play to him. After a hurried over, they consider going again to finish the over. Sketchy start.

I realised last night that I’m going to boarding a nine hour night bus from Delhi to Dharamsala for the final Test. Not quite the same mode of transport, but this has been in my head ever since. Let it be our pre-play song as we wait for the players.

Pat Cummins has had a chat.

To the ABC, before play. The guts of it:

Good morning and welcome to Guardian Australia’s live over-by-over coverage from Ranchi on day four of the third Border-Gavaskar Test. It’s Adam Collins here, coming to you from the Southern End of the JSCA Stadium, ready to take you through the first couple of hours. And I can’t bloody wait.

Looking out, it is very hazy with the sun a long way from burning through. No suggestion of rain; it doesn’t do that here. Once we kick off, Australia will need to make their move. We have six sessions to go in this Test and to convert their first innings of 451 into victory, a first innings lead is essential. Anything less will sting. Thankfully the tourists have Pat Cummins. What a guy.

Adam will be with you shortly. In the meantime, recap all of yesterday’s extraordinary action in Ranchi.

Related: Pujara century defies Cummins and Australia on third day in Ranchi

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Australia keep Border-Gavaskar series alive in Ranchi - as it happened

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  • Australia (240-6) bat out entire final day to secure third Test draw
  • Peter Handscomb and Shaun Marsh keep Border-Gavaskar series alive

And one final thing: here’s the match report from Adam Collins in Ranchi.

Related: Handscomb and Marsh guide Australia to draw and keep India series alive

It all started for Australia on day one with Matthew Renshaw and David Warner. Another 50 partnership. Then Steve Smith, batting forever and ever. Then Glenn Maxwell, the good news story, grinding out an atypical ton and reaching that milestone for the first time in Tests. The second Australian to do it in all three international formats. Smith’s 19th ton, 361 balls, unbeaten.

Then India. Runs from everywhere, bar their captain. Doing it without him, unworried. Grinding Australia into the dirt. Rahul and Vijay opening with fifties, then Pujara’s long-haul double hundred, and Saha’s down-the-order century addition. O’Keefe bowled 77 goddamn overs in the one innings. Maxwell bowled four. You do the maths.

What a performance from Australia. No touring side has batted out a fifth day draw in India since 2010/11, I’m reliably informed, but this sometimes fragile batting team has done it here. At four wickets down before lunch, with Smith and Renshaw done within four balls of one another, surely that must have been game over? But no. The erratic Shaun Marsh and the new boy Peter Handscomb batted through 62.1 overs to run down the clock, soak up the balls, and push Australia into the lead. Not a big one, but enough that India wouldn’t be able to chase it down. And even when Marsh fell, and Maxwell went quickly, there was not enough time left for India to force the result.

100th over: Australia 204-6 (Handscomb 72, Wade 9)

Wide by Jadeja, and Handscomb punches another four. Takes his score into the 70s. They face out the over, then finally Kohli signals for the draw. The batsmen accept, and Australia have escaped.

99th over: Australia 200-6 (Handscomb 68, Wade 9)

Smith lurks on the balcony. I don’t know why. Kohli is concentrating on the field. Ashwin is bowling. Wade is driving him through cover for four. The 200 is up. Starting to grasp the significance of this Australian performance, from where it began before lunch on this final day.

98th over: Australia 196-6 (Handscomb 68, Wade 5)

Handscomb is remaining oh-so-sensible and mature in the circumstances. No silly shots. Just another defensive over. Another Jadeja maiden. Apparently if Australia declared now India would need 44 from 2 overs. Or something.

97th over: Australia 196-6 (Handscomb 68, Wade 5)

Kohli has given up. I speculate. Watching him out there, his shoulders have finally slumped. Ashwin bowls on the pads and Wade punches four through midwicket. The lead is 44. Meaning that even if India ran through four more wickets in an over, they’d only have a couple of overs left to chase those runs.

96th over: Australia 192-6 (Handscomb 68, Wade 1)

Jadeja working away. Two singles, no real danger. “Let’s hope some of the England players are watching Handscomb and Marsh bat, eh?” emails Kevin Wilson. That seems like a turning of the tables, looking to Australians for tips on batting out a draw.

95th over: Australia 190-6 (Handscomb 67, Wade 0)

Wade in to weigh in. Defends two. Wicket maiden for Ashwin. His first from 28 overs.

Not that comfortable, ok then. Ashwin fires one in, Maxwell si trying to defend but goes with hard hands, gets an inside edge into his pad, it skips up to Vijay in close on the off side. Australia 38 in front with seven overs to play.

94th over: Australia 190-5 (Handscomb 67, Maxwell 2)

Jadeja. Handscomb edges into his pad. Then puches a single. Maxwell works another, he’s comfortable enough so far.

93rd over: Australia 188-5 (Handscomb 66, Maxwell 1)

Anotherappeal as Ashwin bowls, but Maxwell has been hit outside the line. Sees out the over competently enough, using his feet. He’s in the baggy green now, classic stuff.

92nd over: Australia 188-5 (Handscomb 66, Maxwell 1)

Maxwellball. It’s that time. An appeal against Maxwell first ball as the contact may have been pad first. India’s players think about it but don’t review. Tension. He flicks a single to end the over.

Finally, India break a 124-run partnership that has saved a match for Australia. Floated down, Marsh plays yet another forward defence, edges to short leg and Vijay snaps it up. Australia 35 ahead with five in hand and 10 overs after this.

91st over: Australia 187-4 (Marsh 53, Handscomb 66)

That’s more like it! Spanked through square leg by Handscomb, as Sharma drops short and the in-touch batsman gets every bit of it, airborne but safe. Clunked.

90th over: Australia 183-4 (Marsh 53, Handscomb 62)

Another quick over from Jadeja, just the single from a Handscomb straight drive. That’s not going to get you to a hundred, feller.

89th over: Australia 182-4 (Marsh 53, Handscomb 61)

Finally, some pace. With an eight-over-old ball. Ishant Sharma hasn’t bowled for so long that he trips over his front leg and commando-rolls down the pitch in his follow-through. The Australians know this style of bowling better though. A Marsh glide to third man, a Handscomb flick to turn a dangerous full ball on the pads into a single to fine leg. With 13 overs left, should Handscomb hit out and go for a ton? Australia only 30 ahead. Risk-reward.

88th over: Australia 180-4 (Marsh 52, Handscomb 60)

Jadeja keeps wheeling away. Left-arm round the wicket to the right-handed Handscomb. Defending, then driving hard through cover. but there’s a man back there, no run. Nearly nicks the final ball as it spins away. But this isn’t India’s day. It ends up as another maiden. I’ll revise my 11 overs, this is actually the first of the last 15 overs required in the last hour. Should Australia declare and set India 60 from four overs? It would be pointless but fun. Like most limited-overs cricket.

87th over: Australia 180-4 (Marsh 52, Handscomb 60)

That warms the heart. Shaun Marsh gets a round of applause from Virat Kohli. Gets an equally unexpected round from various members of the Australian public. He’s done a job this series, first in Bengaluru and again here. Another long and determined innings. Raises the fifty with a straight drive after skipping down at Ashwin, finally choosing his preferred ball after seeing so many of them. 11 overs left at drinks, the last hour called by Gaffer Gaffaney, and Australia 28 runs to the good.

86th over: Australia 175-4 (Marsh 48, Handscomb 59)

Jadeja, another maiden. Gets one to bounce and rip and beat the outside edge of Marsh’s bat. But that’s it. For the last two sessions India’s bowlers have been all threat, no execution. Which is how you want your relationship with the Mafia to be.

85th over: Australia 174-4 (Marsh 48, Handscomb 58)

Another one-run over from Ashwin. 13 remaining. No sign of India’s quicks.

84th over: Australia 173-4 (Marsh 48, Handscomb 57)

“Gidday Geoff,” writes Roman from Thailand. “Following your posts on the Guardian website. Sounds like gripping & thrilling Test match cricket from two of cricket’s most combative & proud cricketing nations. Great to see! Should be an enthralling end to this Test.”

83rd over: Australia 172-4 (Marsh 48, Handscomb 56)

Ashwin round the wicket, bowling flat and full at the left-handed Marsh. Gets through him, strikes him on the pad. India go for another wasted review. They love this stuff. Clearly that was going down leg. Gould the umpire again. Somehow, HawkEye is claiming that was clipping leg stump, when it looked like it would go six inches wide. But clipping is not enough to overturn the umpire’s correct call. Another maiden, but that’s just fine for Australia. Their lead is only 20, but they have only 15 overs to survive.

82nd over: Australia 172-4 (Marsh 48, Handscomb 56)

Marsh drives a single first ball, Jadeja into the covers. Handscomb isn’t exactly defending the rest, he nails one on the off side and one on the leg, but straight to the field.

81st over: Australia 171-4 (Marsh 47, Handscomb 56)

Except it won’t be India’s quicks with the new ball. It will be Ashwin at first. Inside edge from Marsh immediately. A couple of defensive strokes. Drives a quick single wide of mid on. Handscomb is struck from the last ball, almost in the stomach as he lunged forward in a crouching defensive position. Umpire Gould isn’t interested. Handscomb eschews the helmet at the end of the over for the baggy cap.

80th over: Australia 170-4 (Marsh 46, Handscomb 56)

Jadeja bowls the 80th. A maiden to Handscomb. A new ball will be available now, if India’s quicks want to use it. That might just help the Australians score more quickly though. The lead is up to 18. More importantly perhaps, the 80th over sees India get their reviews back. Get ready to burn, baby, burn.

79th over: Australia 170-4 (Marsh 46, Handscomb 56)

Ashwin. Marsh. Maiden.

78th over: Australia 170-4 (Marsh 46, Handscomb 56)

Handscomb finally living up to his billing as a good player of spin. He’s looked very comfortable out here today, and never more so than against a rare short ball from Jadeja. Crash. Cut shot. Four.

77th over: Australia 166-4 (Marsh 46, Handscomb 52)

Outlive. Outlast. Outmarsh. That is the Marsh motto, and he soaks up a Ravi Ashwin over like a washcloth on a kitchen spill.

76th over: Australia 166-4 (Marsh 46, Handscomb 52)

Marsh versus Jadeja. Defends, defends, defends. Gets a run when one ball keeps low and is edged on the bounce behind point. Fielded in the deep. Handscomb comes on strike, and gets a ball a bit like the Smith one. Except that Handscomb gets enough pad in the way. Jadeja appeals madly. But he’s bowling over the wicket, so he’s appealing madly for a ball that has pitched well outside leg. As he’s been appealing madly all day. It’s... kind of embarrassing. I don’t necessarily agree with the lbw law the way it’s written, but there’s no value in ignoring it completely.

75th over: Australia 165-4 (Marsh 45, Handscomb 52)

Yadav continues. There’s that scent of desperation just starting to creep in. It’s like burning hair, distinctive and cuts through everything else. You never have to ask if it is what you think it is. He’s hammering the stumps, bowling yorkers to Handscomb, but the batsman is playing these ripping deliveries well, and when Yadav slips a bit too far towards leg stump, Handscomb works him through fine leg for four for the milestone. Handscomb has had a brief sojourn from making half-centuries, but now he’s back.

74th over: Australia 159-4 (Marsh 45, Handscomb 46)

Marsh is finding his way off strike easily enough now, working Jadeja to leg again. Handscomb immediately swaps back with a push to cover. Two runs from the over make it an expensive one by Jadeja’s standards.

73rd over: Australia 157-4 (Marsh 44, Handscomb 45)

Four! And Australia surge ahead. Yadav bowls straight, Marsh flicks behind square. That’s one of his best strokes, and he’s been very good today. Times it well enough to beat a weary Ashwin running around from a finer fine leg position. Marsh flicks a single towards Ashwin, straighter.

72nd over: Australia 151-4 (Marsh 39, Handscomb 45)

Jadeja will just attack the stumps all day. He has 3 for 34 from 29 overs. Marsh scrambles a leg bye after one hits him on the thigh, Handscomb was sharp to the chance for a run, and scores are level. Whatever Australia scores now, India has to knock off. That’s the only score, so its’ another maiden for the bowler. His 15th from what is now 30 overs. Absurd.

71st over: Australia 151-4 (Marsh 39, Handscomb 45)

Yadav to Handscomb and that is out. Except it isn’t. Isn’t given, that is. A fast fullish ball that cuts in off the pitch, beats the inside edge of the defensive stroke, and nails Handscomb on the back pad in front of middle. That is out, live, every single minute of every day. But Umpire Gould doesn’t give it. Thinks that the height may have spared Handscomb. Hit just above the knee roll, but he was way back on his stumps and it was his back leg. Kohli reviews, as you should, and misses out by about a millimetre. DRS shows it as umpire’s call, even though most of the ball is hitting most of the top of middle stump. Bad call for mine. A couple of balls later, Yadav gets one to keep low, and Handscomb jams down for a single. How close these margins. Marsh works a single from the last. The 150 is up.

70th over: Australia 149-4 (Marsh 38, Handscomb 44)

Ashwin to start things off. Nearly has Marsh stumped second ball, but the batsman just shoves the toe back behind the line before Saha gets the bails off. Just a leaning defensive stroke that dragged the batsman forward. Marsh faces out a maiden. The pitch is beginning to puff up.

Let’s have a look at the options. Australia could bat India out of the match. Australia could lose 6 for 11 again and India could knock off a few token runs. Australia could be bowled out after an hour at 60 or 70 ahead and leave India a tricky chase. Australia could be bowled out after an hour and a half at 60 ahead and leave India to make a crash-bash attempt to win. Australia could send Maxwell out to make a hundred from nine overs and then run through 10 Indian wickets in the last 20. Some of these things are more likely than others. But everything is on the table. Some things more on the table than others.

Hello friends, hello foes, hello family. Hello fingers, hello toes, hello ramblings. What a tasty scenario ahead of us. Thanks Russell, Geoff here, let’s do some cricketing. Drop me a line via the email on the left of screen, or the top if you’re on a phone, or twitter at me via @GeoffLemonSport.

69th over: Australia 149-4 (Marsh 38, Handscomb 44)

And that is tea on day five. Australia’s Shaun Marsh and Peter Handscomb have survived the entire second session on a day-five pitch in India, which is a feat worthy of applause. The final over featured a flick to leg by Marsh, who trotted through for one, and Handscomb handled the rest with characteristic excellence, turning two runs to deep square leg and defending stoutly otherwise.

68th over: Australia 146-4 (Marsh 37, Handscomb 42)

Some minor drama here as Handscomb skips down the track and misses an attempted flick to leg. It hit him in line but would have spun past leg stump, and the home side knew it. There is plenty of noise and puffs of dust in the Ashwin over, but no breakthrough. A positive for India: he got through it quick enough for Jadeja to bowl one more.

67th over: Australia 145-4 (Marsh 36, Handscomb 42)

If Jadeja and Ashwin play their cards right here this could be the first of three overs before tea, though it’s a moot point anyway with the Australian pair handling things so well. My worry, for Australia: a break in the momentum they’ve built in this session favours India and India alone. Another maiden for Jadeja. He’s collected those at will today.

66th over: Australia 145-4 (Marsh 36, Handscomb 42)

With no offence to his dear Mum, Robert Lewis drops by now with a craptacular Ranchi anecdote in keeping with India’s bowling efforts in this session. “Just thought I’d drop by at this tense moment to tell you – apropos of nothing at all – that my Mum was born in Ranchi in 1923,” he writes. “She’s still going strong at 93. I visited the city in 1975, on my way back from Australia. I can remember almost nothing about it. Pretty dull place, really. Good bung lassi though.”

65th over: Australia 144-4 (Marsh 36, Handscomb 41)

Vis a vis Michael Clarke’s soft ball insights of earlier, India now request a harder one. Ian Gould tells them to turn it up, and well he might. He also says no to a Ravindra Jadeja LBW appeal against Marsh, which wouldn’t have hit Wriddhiman Saha in his protective box if he was doing a star jump. India are getting a bit desperate now. Australia trail by just eight runs.

64th over: Australia 143-4 (Marsh 36, Handscomb 40)

Ashwin continues, and the Australians have 15 minutes to see off the pre-Tea threat. So often in this series a wicket has fallen with the end of a session in sight. Both batsmen will be desperate to avoid that fate. Another thing: I can’t help but feel as though denying Ashwin any wickets today could be a symbolic blow for the likes of Handscomb when he and his younger cohorts return for other Indian trips. Right now they’re blunting India’s spin spearhead on his own decks. Australia don’t have a history of doing that.

63rd over: Australia 141-4 (Marsh 35, Handscomb 39)

Scrap everything I said before: Jadeja has merely changed ends, so Ashwin might have been a fill-in. Or he’ll keep bowling and Ishant is gone from the attack. Kohli might as well throw Wriddhiman Saha the ball, to be frank. Handscomb is defending with aplomb and ever-alert to runs. Jadeja was jumping around like John Lydon earlier, and bowling with venom. Now he’s just another trundler.

62nd over: Australia 139-4 (Marsh 35, Handscomb 37)

Interesting. Ashwin didn’t set the world on fire earlier but now he replaces Jadeja – India’s biggest threat. KL Rahul is the man in Virat Kohli’s crosshairs in this over. He fields a ball at deep mid-wicket and sends in a woeful through to Wriddhiman Saha. It sails straight over the keeper’s head and runs away for four overthrows. Not great.

61st over: Australia 134-4 (Marsh 35, Handscomb 32)

Like a faithful basset hound, Ishant’s long and longing face tell the tale of a bowler not being rewarded for his wholehearted efforts. He removed Matt Renshaw earlier in the day with a low skidder, but Handscomb does his Handscomb thing here and gets a single from the second delivery of the over. That forces the bowler to adjust for the left-handed Marsh. The Australian batsmen are settled, but the bowler is not. One thing Ishant does have going for him is reverse swing, and he bowls a gem of an in-swinger to Marsh, who is nevertheless solid in defending it. With 25 minutes left in this second session, Australia trail by 18 runs and the Marsh-Handscomb partnership is worth 71 from 31.5 overs.

60th over: Australia 133-4 (Marsh 35, Handscomb 31)

There is a little bit of a pattern developing here, and it works perfectly for Australia: Handscomb gets a single early in the over and Shaun Marsh absorbs the rest. He has two slightly hairy moments in this over, moving back and across to defend Jadeja and then getting a leading edge to a forward defence. Neither goes close to doing him in though, so wotevs, as the kids probably don’t even say anymore.

59th over: Australia 132-4 (Marsh 35, Handscomb 30)

Ashwin’s nightmare over a few minutes ago comes with repercussions; he’s banished from the attack and Ishant returns with some pace. With Marsh on strike the big quick has two slips and a short mid-wicket, and soon a short leg moves in too. None troubles Marsh too much, because he’s moving through this final day in determined silence, like Alain Delon’s ice-cold hitman Jef Costello in Le Samourai.

58th over: Australia 131-4 (Marsh 35, Handscomb 29)

There is a layer of comedy underlying this Australian effort, it has to be said. Remember a week ago when the travelling press was claiming skullduggery at their first sight of this pitch? How surreal it would be if Australia confidently bats out a final day spin onslaught in India. Maiden for Jadeja, though it’s not as pregnant with possibilities as his pre-lunch efforts.

57th over: Australia 131-4 (Marsh 35, Handscomb 29)

Ashwin errs too, offering up a full toss for Handscomb as the batsman advances down the wicket and batters the ball through mid-wicket for four. A few balls later Handscomb shuffles back and cuts hard through cover to get four more, then makes it three boundaries in the over with an imperious on-drive. Ashwin is bowling like a drain. Australia trail by only 21 now; only 40 minutes from tea they’re look increasingly capable of forcing a draw to keep themselves in the series. Let’s be honest: a winner-takes-all fourth Test is a dream scenario for all concerned.

56th over: Australia 117-4 (Marsh 34, Handscomb 16)

Marsh puts his foot down now, latching onto a rare bit of flight from Jadeja and driving square on the half-volley to claim a boundary from the spinner; they’ve been as rare as hen’s teeth today. I tell you what else is rare: Australians actually making things. A friend has just sent me a rather depressing video from inside the old R.M. Crockett cricket equipment factory in Melbourne’s west. It’s been converted into “warehouse-style” apartments. Of course it has.

55th over: Australia 113-4 (Marsh 30, Handscomb 16)

Marsh has an opportunity to hammer an Ashwin full toss into the heavens here but he’s set on defence, so merely pats it along the ground for a single to mid-on. A few more singles are handy runs, pushing Australia along to trail by just 39 runs. With that the partnership between Handscomb and Marsh is worth 50 from 156 deliveries.

54th over: Australia 109-4 (Marsh 28, Handscomb 14)

Jadeja welcomes Handscomb back from the drinks break with a straight and not entirely penetrating over, and the batsman punches a back-foot drive out to deep points to finish the over and retain the strike.

53rd over: Australia 108-4 (Marsh 28, Handscomb 13)

Ashwin has a slip, a leg slip and a short leg for Shaun Marsh, who continues with his reverse-Gooch pad work. I wouldn’t say he’s making batting look easy, but for Australia’s sake there is certainly a comforting level of security in his defence. Another maiden, and that is drinks.

52nd over: Australia 108-4 (Marsh 28, Handscomb 13)

It’s been an enigmatic series for Handscomb so far; he’s never looked significantly troubled by the bowling but he just keeps getting himself out once he’s in. On that note, he’s now in the danger period – 13 from 67 deliveries as Jadeja spins one past his outside edge. No nick. Maiden. Eleven maidens for Jadeja. The outfielders could have a stretch while he’s bowling.

51st over: Australia 108-4 (Marsh 28, Handscomb 13)

I spend a fair bit of time laying into Brett Lee and Matthew Hayden, so it is only fair to point out that Michael Clarke is growing into a quite shrewd analyst early in his TV career, because he offers insights beyond the bleeding obvious. In this over he’s talking about the softening of the ball, which is a step up from pizza toppings. It’s a maiden for Ashwin and continues a period of intense pressure, though Jadeja remains the real threat.

50th over: Australia 108-4 (Marsh 28, Handscomb 13)

With the pace threat gone, Peter Handscomb calls for his baggy green cap. At the risk of labouring the point, this manoeuvre hasn’t always come up trumps for his team-mates in this series. Jadeja has a slip, a silly point and a short leg, but no luck drawing a rash stroke from the Victorian. Maiden. Jadeja now has 10 of those in his 3-22 from 20 overs.

49th over: Australia 108-4 (Marsh 28, Handscomb 13)

Michael Clarke’s mooted Umesh-Ashwin switcheroo finally happens, and the batsmen have about ten minutes to get through before they stop for a drink, which is among many mini-milestones they’ll hope to tick off. Handscomb advances to the off-spinner and turns a single through mid-wicket, and there was one earlier in the over for Marsh.

48th over: Australia 106-4 (Marsh 27, Handscomb 12)

First delivery of this over from the returning Ravindra Jadeja draws an unhinged celebr-appeal from the bowler when Handscomb bends his front leg forward to pad up. It was a very hopeful shout, but Jadeja carries on as though he’s watching Shane Warne’s Gatting ball for the first time. If he actually takes a wicket he might combust. We’re half an hour and ten minutes from tea now, and Australia are set to face spin from both ends for the first time today.

47th over: Australia 106-4 (Marsh 27, Handscomb 12)

So yes, it was more Umesh in this over, and more of the same from him. The partnership is now worth 43 runs from 108 deliveries, which is putting Australia in a far better position to secure a draw than many of us expected two hours ago. In Marsh we trust? Australia trail by 46 runs, and India desperately need a wicket.

Not only was it hitting him outside the line of off stump, but it also pitched outside leg stump. Kohli chuckles and raises an apologetic hand to his bowler, who wasn’t entirely committed himself. A terrible review, really.

But he shrugs those infamous shoulders as his as he calls for it, which doesn’t fill India with hope. This is a speculative review at best. Marsh shouldered arms but it appeared to hit him outside the line of off stump.

46th over: Australia 105-4 (Marsh 27, Handscomb 11)

Ashwin continues with a maiden at the same end, so Michael Clarke will not get his wish just yet. As that is happening Ruth Purdue arrives with a question, which is so wide in its scope I have trouble offering much in the way of a coherent response. “Is Brett Lee the antithesis of Matthew Hayden?” she writes. They’re both the antithesis of informative commentators, I know that.

45th over: Australia 105-4 (Marsh 27, Handscomb 11)

The law of diminishing Yadavs continue to be proven here, with Umesh groaning his way through an unimposing over. Michael Clarke reckons Ashwin should be bowling from Umesh’s end, and Jadeja from Ashwin’s. Virat Kohli had a word to Ashwin at the end of the last over, so that may well happen. Australia trail by 47 runs now, so Kohli has some thinking to do. A 60-run chase in the third session is far from ideal for India.

44th over: Australia 101-4 (Marsh 27, Handscomb 8)

Wonderful stuff here by the newly-confident Marsh, who takes half a little shimmy-step down the track to Ashwin and then cracks a quite sublime on drive to the rope to take Australia past 100. You don’t say this often, but I reckon it’s time to give Ashwin a rest. Ravindra Jadeja is the man for the occasion here.

43rd over: Australia 97-4 (Marsh 23, Handscomb 8)

Umesh continues to Marsh, who I’ve been describing in slightly unflattering terms of late. In actual fact, he’s starting to look a bit more comfortable against the paceman now, mainly I think because Umesh is angling it too far across him towards the slips. “He’s a very, very nice fella, Shaun Marsh,” says Brett Lee with typically searing insight. Marsh gets a very, very nice single, and that’s about it for the over.

42nd over: Australia 96-4 (Marsh 22, Handscomb 8)

Holy moly. Handscomb advances down the pitch to a full toss but he almost cracks it straight into the hands of the man at short mid-wicket, and the Indians around the bat are really whooping it up at the prospect of a wicket. Still, had he timed it, Handscomb would have just as easily smoked that for a boundary.

41st over: Australia 96-4 (Marsh 22, Handscomb 8)

Much like Steve Smith earlier, Handscomb leads India to believe he’s an LBW candidate with that shuffle across in front of his stumps. He almost refuses to use his front foot to the quicks, so Umesh is looking to send a low shooter into his stumps and almost succeeds but for an inside edge. To fuller balls outside off stump, Marsh is swishing his way through that lovely Trescothickesque leave of his. It’s a stylish leave, though not as stylish as the straight drives he cannons past Umesh when the paceman over-pitches. That’s four bits. Australia now trail by 56. Maybe they can make India bat again.

40th over: Australia 91-4 (Marsh 18, Handscomb 7)

A drop! It was a tough but very gettable chance for Karun Nair at short leg. Handscomb was forward and flicking it towards the man under the lid. Nair keeps low enough, and shifts his hands to the right quickly enough, but the ball doesn’t stick in either mitt. Ashwin is a little cheesed but he knows it was no fait accompli. A single to Handscomb to finish the over relieves Marsh of his ongoing ordeal at the hands of Umesh Yadav.

39th over: Australia 90-4 (Marsh 18, Handscomb 6)

Umesh is coming around the wicket to Marsh and first up this over he tails one away from the left-hander’s outside edge. The other arresting sight early in the over is the neat queue of three helmets strategically placed behind wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha. They act as a warning for what’s to come in the next over. But to matters present: Umesh is bowling a treat in this over, and Marsh is doing nothing more positive than squirming his way through a thorough examination from the paceman. You wouldn’t be surprised if Umesh walked down the pitch and asked him to cough. Marsh survives the over without having to claim his Medicare rebate.

38th over: Australia 90-4 (Marsh 18, Handscomb 6)

Ashwin appears now for his second over, which means Ravindra Jadeja is taking his first break of the day after that sublime spell in the first session. Handscomb squirts one down the leg side and Rahane almost cleans up his mess at leg gully, diving athletically to his left but narrowly missing purchase on the ball. Marsh turns three through mid-wicket to finish the over, and looks far less jittery against the spinner.

37th over: Australia 86-4 (Marsh 15, Handscomb 5)

OK, we’re off and away in the session which may or may not seal Australia’s fate in this Border-Gavaskar Trophy series. Umesh Yadav is the bowler and Peter Handscomb the Australian batsman on strike. He neatly deposits one down to third man to pick up one, and Yadav soon has Marsh hopping in the air like he’s defending a corner. Two leg byes around the corner finish an over of odds and ends.

Signs of life? “Is it cowardly to pray for a monsoon?” asks reader Gervase Greene. No Gervase, no it’s not.

Here is #WinViz at the start of the afternoon session in Ranchi. Can Australia salvage a draw? #IndvAuspic.twitter.com/aSWj840Gp7

Australia complete a third of the day having lost only a quarter of their remaining batsmen. Massively on top. #INDvAUS

What's happening in the cricket? Haven't had the chance to watch today #INDvAUS

36th over: Australia 83-4 (Marsh 15, Handscomb 4)

And that is lunch on day five in Ranchi, ending a session in which Australia lost Matt Renshaw and Steve Smith in quick succession after they’d looked good to bat out the day. The last over of the session was not Jadeja’s best and Handcomb sent a compact drive through cover to finish it with three runs, but the Indian spinner has bowled his side into a commanding position here. His 3-22 from 18 overs has featured nine maidens and he might well bowl India to victory after lunch.

35th over: Australia 79-4 (Marsh 14, Handscomb 1)

Ravichandran Ashwin finally gets his first bowl of the morning, which is perhaps a bit harsh on India’s most prolific bowler of the decade. He has a throaty LBW shout against Marsh, but Ian Gould deems it to be hitting the batsman’s pad slightly outside the line of off stump. Marsh knows the danger here; Ashwin has nipped him out four times in Test, but he survives. We’ll have one more over from Jadeja.

34th over: Australia 78-4 (Marsh 13, Handscomb 1)

BREAKING: RAVINDRA JADEJA BOWLS BAD BALL. Incredible, I know. It’s short, straight, and Shaun Marsh recovers well enough from his surprise to whip it through mid-wicket for a boundary. That means Jadeja has 3-18 from 17 overs by the end of this one, which features a fast arm-ball that nearly does Handscomb in. He’s been a real handful for the Australians bowling unchanged throughout this session, the left-armer.

33rd over: Australia 73-4 (Marsh 8, Handscomb 1)

Kabir Sethi has a question. “Renshaw and now Smith – how much of this was because of the fracas at the start of Ishant’s last over? Did they get unsettled with all the chatter?” I think it definitely ruffled Renshaw, but then the ball that got him did keep very low, now that I see replays. Smith’s was just a minor lapse in concentration of the type we didn’t see from Pujara yesterday. Back in the moment, Ishant is now bowling a seventh over in the spell, so the best Ashwin can hope for is one speculative over before lunch. Four byes in this over are handy for Australia, because they’re still hoping to push past India’s total today and make them bat again. Right now they’re 79 runs away from that.

32nd over: Australia 65-4 (Marsh 6, Handscomb 0)

Handscomb is mindful of what happened to his skipper moments ago, so all of his forward movements to Jadeja are exaggerated, perhaps even a little too much so. His main intention, like Marsh’s, seems to be removing his bat from the path of the ball. That carries its own dangers. This is a torrid little spell to endure before lunch. Jadeja is looking a million bucks.

31st over: Australia 64-4 (Marsh 5, Handscomb 0)

Not surprisingly given the way he bowled in his last, Ishant is granted a sixth over in this spell. In truth it can only be a let-down given the theatrics of his last, and so it proves; Marsh has one eye on the clock and only plays when he really needs to, pushing a single towards gully from the final delivery but otherwise making sure ball doesn’t meet bat. With just under 20 minutes to go until lunch, survival is the name of the game.

30th over: Australia 63-4 (Marsh 4, Handscomb 0)

What a task Shaun Marsh and Peter Handscomb have ahead of them here. Handscomb is encircled by close-in fieldsmen for the final five deliveries of the Jadeja over but survives some nervy times.

Jadeja clean bowls Steve Smith! Oh my word, that is a hammer blow for Australia’s chances, and their hero has departed shouldering arms, of all things. Mindful of the huge spin Jadeja was getting in the last over, Smith moves forward to one that angles in to about a leg stump line, but it spins across in front of his pad a little less than the outrageous turner of the last over and subsequently uproots Smith’s off stump. Australia are in disarray here, and Jadeja finally gets reward for a superb spell.

29th over: Australia 63-3 (Smith 21, Marsh 4)

Shaun Marsh gets an edgy boundary from the first ball he faces, but Ishant finishes a barnstorming over by angling a nasty one into the left-hander’s hip and he’s really hopping about as it thuds into him.

Ishant strikes! What a wicket this is for India as Ishant traps Matt Renshaw in front, and Ian Gould has no hesitation raising the finger. The prelude to that one was fascinating; Renshaw pulled away from the first delivery of the over, citing some kind of distraction near the sight screen. At the time, Ishant was almost into his delivery stride, so angrily piffed the ball down the pitch and Umpire Ian Gould to come in and settle a few tempers. Virat Kohli was in the thick of it, of course, and Steve Smith too when Ishant Sharma gave the Australian skipper a mouthful. Renshaw blocked the next ball and faced plenty of hostility from the big paceman in the aftermath, but Ishant then undid him with an absolute beauty.

28th over: Australia 59-2 (Renshaw 15, Smith 21)

Jadeja has 2-12 to his name as he enters his 14th over, and he rips an absolute peach of a delivery past the outside edge of Smith. To do that he came around the wicket, imparted untold revolutions on the ball to get it drifting in towards leg, and it just came screaming its way past Smith’s blade. No wicket, no run. Another maiden.

27th over: Australia 59-2 (Renshaw 15, Smith 21)

Virat Kohli stands cleaning his sunglasses now. Perhaps the sudden glare of the sun accounts for his sizeable frown, but he’s also got a worry or two as this session enters its final 40 minutes. Ravindra Jadeja has been a constant threat this morning but neither he nor the quicks have taken a wicket. The two Australian batsmen are entrenched, and very set in their disciplined approach. They’re not going to hand this to India. Time for some Ravichandran Ashwin? I think it might be.

26th over: Australia 58-2 (Renshaw 15, Smith 20)

Renshaw is really surrounded now. There is a slip, a short leg, a leg gully and a leg slip. Neither him, them, nor Wriddhiman Saha get near a vicious turner from Jadeja; the ball rears up out of the rough and flashes past the batsman’s hip for four byes. Nightmarish.

25th over: Australia 54-2 (Renshaw 15, Smith 20)

We’re back now with more Ishant and as he steams in towards Renshaw, I’ve just realised an email has arrived from the Wisden Collectors Club (yes, I am a member of the Wisden Collectors Club, and you should be too). Good news: only 18 sleeps until the new one hits the shelves. I have a custom-built shelf for all mine. It runs the length of my office, which is only slightly less sad than the collector who apparently had one built into the foot of his bed, so his precious Wisdens were never far from reach. 50 Shades of Yellow? A no-ball from Ishant takes Australia to 50, then Smith rolls his wrists over a sublime on drive to pick up four.

24th over: Australia 48-2 (Renshaw 14, Smith 16)

Kohli offers up a more regulation field with Smith on strike, which is to say there are men actually posted on the leg side, including a shortish mid-wicket and a short leg. Jadeja still aims for the rough outside Smith’s leg stump, so the Aussie skipper is content thrusting his pad at the ball in the Graham Gooch sense, as opposed to the Shane Watson sense. It works well enough in this maiden, and we’ll stop for a moment now for drinks.

23rd over: Australia 48-2 (Renshaw 14, Smith 16)

This is an absolute masterclass from Steve Smith. Any half-decent ball outside off stump he’s leaving, but when Ishant over-pitches he has no problem cracking a cover drive for two. Maybe this will go the distance after all. Smith rifles a straight drive from Ishant’s penultimate delivery, and if not for an excellent stop from the bowler it would have raced away to the rope. Renshaw defends the final delivery and avoids being on strike to Jadeja.

22nd over: Australia 45-2 (Renshaw 14, Smith 13)

One thing Matt Renshaw is doing right against Jadeja (aside from not getting out, which is obviously the optimal result) is playing with soft hands. Doing so here he’s able to angle a couple of runs to the left of Kohli at slip, but Jadeja is a nightmare to deal with on account of the footmarks outside off stump to the left-hander. Shaun Marsh will not be liking the look of this, nor Matthew Wade.

Renshaw's faced many tests since he debuted.Doesn't get much bigger than surviving Jadeja at that end on day 5 to try save a match. #INDvAUS

21st over: Australia 43-2 (Renshaw 12, Smith 13)

Ishant trots out to his marker now and replaces Umesh. In a lovely moment, Brett Lee reads out his Test stats under the apparent expectation that he’ll be wowed, which he is until he gets to the bowling average of 36. That’ll happen when you play more than half your Tests on the subcontinent. Smith is handling the Indian paceman first up, and continues to leave everything outside off stump, which is almost everything India bowl to him. Like Umesh before, Ishant is sending them down from wide on the crease. Unlike Umesh, he goes so wide he’s called for a no-ball. Smith finally plays at one, caressing a square drive between gully and point for two.

20th over: Australia 40-2 (Renshaw 12, Smith 11)

Renshaw continues to battle with Jadeja’s devilish wares, shuffling across to cover his off stump and then lunging forward outside the line to counter the spinner. It’s another maiden, and Renshaw continues to look like a sitting duck. Kohli has three men in close, but I’d honestly be tempted to bring in one or two more and go for the kill.

19th over: Australia 40-2 (Renshaw 12, Smith 11)

In fact Yadav gets another go, and Smith runs him down towards third man by twirling the face of his bat open and picking up two. Yadav has three slips; first, second and fourth, and keeps hanging it outside off stump, but the approach has changed a little. In a reverse tactic to that employed for Renshaw, Kohli has stacked the off side field and dared Smith to blaze away. He won’t. He’d rather bat without pads than lose out to Kohli in this game.

18th over: Australia 38-2 (Renshaw 12, Smith 9)

Wowsers. Sharp turn here for Jadeja, who rips a few out of the rough to trouble the Queenslander. “Renshaw is finding a way,” says Michael Clarke, being very kind. India are expecting a breakthrough from nearly every delivery of this threatening over, but the left-hander somehow gets through a minor ordeal. Jadeja is the danger man here, and we’ve said that a few times in this series.

17th over: Australia 38-2 (Renshaw 12, Smith 9)

In what might prove the final over of his spell, Umesh comes around the wicket to left-handed Renshaw. He’s still getting decent bounce and carry, so there are two slips and a gully in place. The bowler gives Renshaw nothing to work to leg, and he’s happy to either leave the wide ones or dab defensive strokes towards the cover when the line is tighter. So far so good for Australia.

In the eight overs last night Australia missed or edged 26% of deliveries; in the eight overs today they have missed or edged 16%. #IndvAus

16th over: Australia 37-2 (Renshaw 11, Smith 9)

Jadeja has a slip, a silly point and a short mid-off for Steve Smith. The Indian spinner offers his normal impeccable control, but not a prodigious amount of spin in this over so Smith is pressing forward to play confident forward defensive strokes and it ends up an uneventful maiden.

15th over: Australia 37-2 (Renshaw 11, Smith 9)

Ishant is enthusiastically clapping Umesh as he prepares to charge in, but you sense he wouldn’t mind a trundle himself if he was honest about it. Umesh plus away outside Steve Smith’s off stump, but the Australian skipper is setting himself for the long haul, and won’t touch it unless he has to. He picks up a late single to retain the strike.

14th over: Australia 36-2 (Renshaw 11, Smith 8)

Kohli’s left cover entirely open while Jadeja is bowling to Renshaw. The latter opens the face to run a couple of runs past gully, but he’s resisting the temptation to try and flay one through the gap. Danger lurks in the form of the footmarks out side his off stump, which are giving Jadeja the kind of sharp turn which did for Warner last night. The younger opener watchfully defends for the rest of the over. He hasn’t set records on this tour, but it’s been a mighty impressive first trip to India from the 20-year-old.

I want nothing more today than for Glenn Maxwell to break the fastest Test century record in the process of saving a Test. #Maxwellball

13th over: Australia 34-2 (Renshaw 9, Smith 8)

Umesh continues to Smith, whose run-making has now attained a Pacman-style monotony. The Indian paceman changes up his approach in this over, delivering from roughly the same position in the crease as last over but sending some through straighter outside off stump, to try and coax Smith into a loose stroke. It never comes, and he’s happy to see off a maiden.

12th over: Australia 34-2 (Renshaw 9, Smith 8)

Smith’s really picking on Ravichandran Ashwin here, again clipping a single wide of mid-wicket to get the ungainly fieldsman charging out to his right for the stop. He’s a magnificent bowler and a very sturdy Test batsman, Ashwin, but if all you had to prove it was his running style, you’d have a very tough time convincing cricket agnostics he was an elite athlete.

11th over: Australia 33-2 (Renshaw 9, Smith 7)

Renshaw’s far more comfortable against the pace of Umesh, and neatly tucks a single through square leg when the paceman strays onto his hip. Umesh zooms his next one down from wide on the crease, angling it in towards Steve Smith’s middle stump, then produces a carbon copy, then errs with a sloppy short one. Smith swivels back and pulls it around the corner for one, though slightly better placement would have had it humming to the fence. Renshaw flinches out of the way of a very well-directed bouncer to finish the over. I’ve probably said it a few times, but if India win this series, Umesh Yadav will have played a central if understated role in the result.

10th over: Australia 31-2 (Renshaw 8, Smith 6)

The temptation would have been to wheel Ishant into the fray with some pace, but Kohli sticks with Jadeja. He’s got a short leg, a leg gully and a leg slip in place for the left-handed Renshaw, who has his work cut out for him in a probing over. He gets a nervy single off the fifth delivery but he’s also a little ruffled by the spinner.

9th over: Australia 30-2 (Renshaw 7, Smith 6)

Umesh Yadav has been a quite industrious manufacturer of breakthroughs this series and he’s given another run while the ball still has some shine left on it. Smith is alert to every run-making opportunity, and gets off the mark by whipping the paceman off his legs for two to deep mid-wicket. In basketball they talk of defensive player applying pressure with “active hands”. Smith does it with “active feet” – always shuffling around to open up scoring opportunities and throw the bowler off his line. A few balls later he almost beats Ashwin at mid-on, but the gangly spinner tumbles to his right; he’s about as graceful as a fridge falling down a flight of stairs, but he pulls off the save. Smith hits his mark with the final delivery, which is driven past Murali Vijay at extra cover and runs away for four.

8th over: Australia 24-2 (Renshaw 7, Smith 0)

Having removed Nathan Lyon with the second delivery of last night’s final over, Ravindra Jadeja has four more balls left to start us off today. The first is sent down to Steve Smith, who leans right forward and blocks the ball as a silly point, slip and short gully pile the pressure on him. A few balls later he tucks a leg bye around the corner, and Matt Renshaw gets an inside edge trying to drive through the covers. The ball ends up at mid-on. Not entirely convincing, that one.

We’re a few minutes from the first delivery now

“Steve Smith needs to play the innings of his life if Australia are to get out of this one,” says Ravi Shastri, which is some kind of expectation to place on one guy, even if he did last for 361 deliveries in his undefeated first innings masterclass. “We would have liked a few more runs in the first innings,” says Australian batting coach Graeme Hick, stopping by soon after. “I think the boys have got a hard day in front of them today.” He’s not pulling any punches, and says plenty of Australia’s first innings dismissals were “soft”.

The pitch: I haven’t had a close look yet, but let’s be honest, it’s all about the choice between the heavy roller and the light roller.

The light roller out before the final day at JSCA. The interrogation of Australia's batsmen resumes in 20 minutes. #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/RaYOvlKZGq

Preamble

Hello all and welcome to day five of the third Test in Ranchi, which might well be the end of Australia’s pursuit of their first Border-Gavaskar Trophy win since 2004. It’s looking gim, I’ll be honest. They resume at 23-2 after the dismissal of David Warner and nightwatchman Nathan Lyon late last night, and they’re still 129 runs short of making India bat again. Can Steve Smith fix his gaze on Virat Kohli, channel every ounce of spite in his body and deliver yet another remarkable innings? You couldn’t bet against him. But it will be a struggle.

Russell will be here shortly, giving you time to remind yourselves of how we got to this point:

Related: Australia under pressure after India dominate day four of third Test

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India v Australia: fourth Test, day one – as it happened

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  • Australia 300 all out, India 0-0 at stumps in Dharamsala
  • Another century for Smith but Kuldeep sparks collapse after lunch

Related: Yadav stars on debut to give India the momentum despite Smith century

Well, an eventful day. From the moment Warner was dropped in the cordon to the very first ball. Australia went on to dominate the morning courtesy of their captain Smith. A quarter hour into the second session the two had put on 134 and it was getting easier by the over. But then the day took a sharp twist. Kuldeep’s debut brought four wickets, three in that middle session ripping out Australia’s middle order.

With the mess around him, Smith kept on keeping on. His 20th Test ton and third for the series was the only thing that stood between his side and already being just about out of this already. 20 tons in 54 Tests. All coming in the previous 43 he has played. What a player.

India: 0-0 (KL Rahul 0, Vijay 0). Okay. One over. Six balls of the best. Lillee to Viv? The conventional three slips and a gully in place, no short leg. Hazlewood not Cummins. Plenty of carry to begin. Then full. Then again. The one that shapes away. Not forced to play though. Nor the last ball. In ordinary circumstances a decent set, but not quite where he needed to be in that situation. Maiden and stumps.

After tea. Australia probably would have taken all-out 300 from where they resumed at 6208. In saying that, a few minutes ago it was looking like a relatively excellent session. But Wade losing his off stump on 57 ensured that the Australians would have to bowl, albeit briefly, on evening one. It will be four minutes. Probably one over, maybe two if they try something on.

Smith brilliant warner/wade contributed well but batting looked vulnerable on a pitch worth 400+. Hopefully oz won't be batting last!

Finished off with the new ball. Wonderful catch at midwicket diving forward, Bhuvneshwar in the book with Australia’s tenth wicket. India to bat for four minutes, I reckon it will be. Stand by for formal word on that.

88th over: Australia 300-9 (Lyon 13, Hazlewood 2). Just when they had India losing their way a bit, too. Four overthrows earlier in the over. But it matters not now. A Hazlewood edge gets him a couple, and Australia 300. Important milestone, but would have felt a lot better had Wade been the man bringing it up. I think I’m right in saying due to changeovers and whatnot, Australia need to face seven further minutes for the day to close regardless of the time on the clock. Maybe it is in their interests to be bowled out here and have two overs at India? Probably not quite where they are at. New ball now taken by India as well.

Oh no. 20 minutes to stumps Wade has launched into a sweep shot with Jadeja angling into him from over the wicket. But he missed, the bowler hit. Off stump to be precise. Such an important innings, but had plenty left to do. An annoying TV review follows, for reasons that are entirely unclear, but he’s off all the same. Deflating for the visitors.

87th over: Australia 294-8 (Wade 53, Lyon 13). Ashwin now, Kuldeep given a breather after another long shift from the southern end. They can afford to take their time here, well ahead of the over rate. That encourages Ashwin to tweak the field, consult his captain. All of that. Only a Wade single from the set.

86th over: Australia 293-8 (Wade 52, Lyon 13). Wade off strike first ball of the Jadeja over, turned behind square. Lyon keeps up to his end of the bargain thereafter, solid in defence as the spinner first gives a couple a rip, then a couple some air. The response is the same.

David Kalucy with some grounding thoughts on the email. “It’s kind of a false hope watching the tail wag at the moment, makes you forget just how long India could potentially grind and baffle. This is the sort of worry that his holiness avoids & keeps Mr Smith up at night.”

85th over: Australia 292-8 (Wade 51, Lyon 13). What doing Umesh?! I’m going to have to dig out that when the highlight emerges. Or the low light. You’ll never see a worse misfield at this level. Lyon sweeping, of course, and through his legs on the rope. Barely moved off the straight. Lyon hits it considerably better next up, and it is another boundary. Two on the spin. Half an hour further for these two to reach stumps. We saw how crucial that was in Pune. A long time ago, and barely any similarity in the conditions, but not for nothing if they can stick about. Especially if the runs keep coming as they did there. Second new ball? Gotta be worth a crack.

84th over: Australia 283-8 (Wade 50, Lyon 5). Oh gee, just as I welcome a slower over rate Jadeja is back on. Mate, just chill out for a sec at the top of your mark. It’s not a race. This is a maiden. Metronomic.

83rd over: Australia 283-8 (Wade 50, Lyon 5). Mercifully for OBO purposes, Kuldeep bowls his overs like a normal person and not in 60-75 seconds ala Jadeja/O’Keefe/Ashwin. Welcome relief comparatively. After Lyon swept another single, Wade gets his 50 from the last ball of the over, via a whip to midwicket. 113 balls. First half-century of the series, and since returning to the Test XI in November. Couldn’t have picked a better time.

Amid everything that's happened this series, where does Virat Kohli rocking a luminous yellow bib with no shirt rank? Top 2? #IndvAus

82nd over: Australia 280-8 (Wade 48, Lyon 4). Four leg byes gets the Australian balcony excited, as they think Wade hit it and it’ll lodge his half-century. He’ll have to wait. Handy runs, of course. One to deep square gets him to 48. Lyon heads to a similar part of the ground with a sweep. Plays that shot compulsively. Hope he continues to for the rest of his career.

81st over: Australia 274-8 (Wade 47, Lyon 3). No new ball, Kuldeep continuing to Wade. He takes a single early in the over down the ground to expose Lyon. I say expose. It’s not as though he can’t bat. He’s played some extremely valuable hands. But not this series, facing only 34 balls so far for 21 runs. Two into deep midwicket will build some confidence. The last one just about went past the edge though, another excellent googly from the young spinner.

80th over: Australia 271-8 (Wade 46, Lyon 1). Another quick single ends the other. Sure. Whatever gets you going, fellas. Second new ball due. Reckon they’ll look at it. Bhuvi hasn’t had a jam roll for a while. Worth a crack to try and roll through Australia before stumps. Yeah? We’ll see in a tic.

Aust look like having to bowl tonight and given lunch score that is one of their poorest efforts of the entire series

Well, it can’t be said that this wasn’t on the cards. Twice this pair have looked shaky between the wickets. This time around, the substitute Iyer has enough time to get the throw into Saha who does the rest. A long time taken by the third umpire to arrive at the decision - determining if the glove or ball hit the stumps first - but it matters not. From short fine leg, the quick single has not been worth it. Dear oh dear.

79th over: Australia 269-7 (Wade 45, O’Keefe 8). Wade has a sound handle on Kuldeep, a clever glide behind point getting him a single. O’Keefe does the rest, content to defend. Drinks out there now. One wicket for Australia in the hour obviously one more than ideal, but they would probably have taken that at the tea break.

78th over: Australia 268-7 (Wade 44, O’Keefe 8). Yadav to O’Keefe for the bulk of this one. The no. 9 is growing in confidence, evidenced by the glorious on-drive he unfurled to end the over. Have that!

77th over: Australia 263-7 (Wade 43, O’Keefe 4). Wade at is best there, meeting Kuldeep’s first ball at the pitch and hitting through the line to the long-off rope. That’s his highest score on tour. But he’s been, to be fair, a fraction better than that sounds. A single down to the same area adds to the score later in the over. But then... nearly a run out. From nowhere, O’Keefe wants to take on the man at mid-off. He’ll be glad they didn’t go through with it.

Time for a bit of stinginess from Jadeja. Dry spell for the batsmen and force the mistake. #IndvAus

76th over: Australia 258-7 (Wade 38, O’Keefe 4). Runs! Nine of them. Wade’s steer through the cordon isn’t the most convincing stroke he’s played today, but it was with soft enough hands for it not to be a bother. Then O’Keefe plays the shot of the session! On about off-stump he stepped over to clip like Mark Waugh. Yeah, I know that’s the second time I’ve dropped his name today. Australia’s 250 is up along the way.

Ross McGillvray in with some thoughts. “I heard Ian Chappell say one time the best Tests were often when the team batting first made between 280 and 340 and didn’t take too long getting them I reckon a good first day is the team batting first bowled out half an hour before stumps for around 300 with one batsman making century and one bowler getting four or five. That might happen today. Then it’s game on.”

75th over: Australia 249-7 (Wade 33, O’Keefe 0). What would be the repercussions for a run out right now? A question we nearly learned the answer to when O’Keefe was dashing to the non-strikers end with Jadeja the man trying to throw the stumps down. Bold play, given the regularity in which he hits. But he’s safe. Wade looks good. But his job is nowhere near done.

Pete Salmon likes my stat. “You can’t tease us like that re slow strike rates! Any list that has O’Keefe followed by Rackemann is by definition not dreary. Can you give the full list, or a link? My mind is whirring at the moment, wondering who the otehr ten are. Tom Hogan? Julian Weiner? We have a right to know.”

74th over: Australia 246-7 (Wade 30, O’Keefe 0). Umesh gets another go here as well, perhaps with a view to giving the Australian lower order a work out with a bit of reverse swing at pace. Wade takes one out to point, O’Keefe now in charge. He’s beaten outside the off-stump at a delivery he should be leaving well alone.

Epic Smith notches third century of series: https://t.co/IOTh164Tmt#INDvAUS

73rd over: Australia 245-7 (Wade 29, O’Keefe 0). We know O’Keefe can defend. That much is shown again to play out the Kuldeep over. Want a fact to prove it? From when balls faced became a reliable measure in 1980, he has the slowest strike rate of any Australian batsmen for those who have played a minimum of ten innings. It’s 18, in case you were wondering. And Big Carl Rackemann is second on that dreary list. You’re welcome.

At the very moment these two looked under control, Cummins has returned the easiest of catches to the debutant, giving him a fourth wicket! Not much more to that one, the Australian coming down the track a fraction, looking to force the spinner through the air down the ground. But he didn’t get enough of it, beaten in flight perhaps, and that is that. The partnership, handy as it was, ends on 37.

72nd over: Australia 242-6 (Wade 26, Cummins 21). Good or a bad thing for Australia that batting looks easier by the over? Three times in the over Wade and Cummins are able to milk easy singles through the off-side off Ashwin.

An email in from Paul. He’s from Dublin. Morning, Paul.

71st over: Australia 239-6 (Wade 24, Cummins 20). Kuldeep’s back. From the Southern End where he did his earlier damage. And it is back to back maidens. Cummins would have seen his teammates come and go to the wrist spin after lunch, and is taking no chances to begin with.

70th over: Australia 239-6 (Wade 24, Cummins 20). After collecting nine from the previous over, Wade happy watch and defend Ashwin throughout this over. It’s a maiden. Significantly, he’s now batting in a baggy green. Like it. A lot.

69th over: Australia 239-6 (Wade 24, Cummins 20). Busy, busy. Wade knocking it around, getting Cummins down there for Jadeja’s last couple. His response? Bang, bang! He clobbers the best bowler in the world over midwicket first time around, then goes slightly straighter next time around. Not to be underestimated, this bloke.

68th over: Australia 230-6 (Wade 23, Cummins 12). They trade in singles to start Ashwin’s new over, Wade behind square then Cummins with soft hands past slip. Wade sweeps for another, before Cummins defends the remainder. Look alright here, don’t they?

Phil Withall has dropped a line on Smith and his fancy numbers. “Reading the stat about Steve Smith and his speed with scoring centuries and it dawned on me that he is still only 27 years old. Given a touch of luck with injuries he potentially has another 7-8 years in him. What do you think he could achieve?”

67th over: Australia 227-6 (Wade 21, Cummins 11). Handling Jadeja well too, is Cummins. Round to wicket is the approach, and Cummins responds by using his big old front pad, right alongside his blade. Technically perfect. When Jadeja threw it up, Cummins was up to that ask too, smashing it down the ground for his second boundary.

While all eyes have been on Kuldeep, understandably, Rahane has been spot on with captaincy: bowling changes, field placements ... #IndvAus

66th over: Australia 223-6 (Wade 21, Cummins 7). Cummins really looking the part defending Ashwin. Didn’t trouble the scorers last week, but rarely lets any side down that he plays for with that bat. Had plenty of time to practice, I guess. A single to long-on ensures the board keeps ticking as well.

65th over: Australia 222-6 (Wade 21, Cummins 6). Really nice batting from Wade. In control against Jadeja defending throughout. Then, when set, used the feet to meet the delivery at the pitch before clipping with lovely timing through midwicket for a boundary.

Let’s remember that Wade is in this XI for his batting. That’s why he replaced Nevill. Not the Nice Garry stuff. He’s made a couple of Test tons. Both excellent. He’s done it at ODI level as well. My point? He’s due. Big time. And now he has a start.

64th over: Australia 218-6 (Wade 17, Cummins 6). Cummins get off the mark with a six! Just as I was writing that, despite not having yet scored, don’t expect him to be livin’ la vida loca any time soon. Mature lad, young Cummins. To be fair, it was a perfectly safe shot to a ball that deserved to go, well overpitched.

63rd over: Australia 212-6 (Wade 17, Cummins 0). The best bowler in the world, according to the ICC, barely got a trundle in the second session. Kuldeep made sure of that from the southern end. Wade is busy in response to his first over of the spell, twice sweeping for two. He tries to make it three on the trot but doesn’t make contact. At his best when he’s busy.

Teatime 'live' #sketch Handscomb bowled; Saha keeping #IndvAus#INDvsAUS@guerillacricket@Sofa_Katie@abdulhayemehta#cricket#drawingpic.twitter.com/P9dojj98Qh

62nd over: Australia 208-6 (Wade 13, Cummins 0). The opening exchanges of the new session amounted to Ashwin coming around the wicket to Cummins, who was perfectly happy patting them back. Good plan. Stick to it.

This trophy being keenly fought for #INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/JhXcYWmfLS

Well, I did my bit.

Australia were cruising when I left you at lunch. A lot of chat about how hard it is to lose a Test from 1/131 at the first break. India were flat, their primary spin weapons somewhat blunted. Then Kuldeep Yadav (and Geoff) showed up. What a fine spell from the 22-year-old on the debut, with a bag of tricks full of big turning leg-breaks, useful topppies and sharp googlies. Where we he a month ago? Well bowled, young man.

Well and truly a session won for India. The pitch looks pretty good, the bounce looks pretty true, and still thye’ve managed to stack up five Australian wickets including the century-making captain Steve Smith. He notched his 20th, but will be angry that he didn’t go on when his team was struggling. Soft dismissals really for Marsh, Handscomb and Maxwell, and a strange one for Smith. Only Warner got a ball that really made his life difficult. Perhaps the batsmen’s eyes lit up at seeing a pitch with the truer bounce they’re more accustomed to at home. But I’m confident that India will make plenty on this surface, so if Australia can’t rally to post at least 300, they’re in real trouble.

That’s it from me, Adam Collins will be back for the last session of Day 1. Do unto him as you would have him do unto you.

61st over: Australia 208-6 (Wade 13, Cummins 0)

So close to tea, and Wade wants to get there. Blocks out Kuldeep’s over, back for one last twirl, and so ends India’s session.

60th over: Australia 208-6 (Wade 13, Cummins 0)

At least Smith’s wicket distracts from Wade’s horror shot earlier that same over. Ashwin bowled outside his off stump, wide, and somehow Wade tried to heave across the line, which looked even worse as the ball spun sharply away. Ugg boots. Then another one went off the pitch and got away for a bye. Cummins has one ball to negotiate at the end, and does so.

And the fox has been run to ground! The key wicket, Australia in real trouble now. Good batting conditions, but they’ve let the opportunity slip. It was Smith holding the innings together, but four minutes short of tea he goes. Just a simple misjudgement. Ashwin around the wicket, at the stumps, the ball straightens a touch. Smith plays a defensive push, may have just lapsed in concentration as he goes at it quite casually. Doesn’t quite read the line, and it takes a thick outside edge to slip.

59th over: Australia 207-5 (Smith 111, Wade 13)

@GeoffLemonSport no 20th Century pun?

58th over: Australia 201-5 (Smith 106, Wade 12)

Ashwin. A maiden. A Waiden? Wade faces it. Apparently Smith has reached 20 Test hundreds in by far the fewest Test by anyone, 54 to Tendulkar’s 69.

57th over: Australia 201-5 (Smith 106, Wade 12)

I was wrong. Quickly. Kuldeep off. Jadeja on. Three singles, and the 200 up.

56th over: Australia 198-5 (Smith 105, Wade 10)

As we all know by now, Steve Smith met the Dalai Lama the other day. He seems to be channelling that in his monkish occupation. He has a mantra, muttered each ball. Back, and work to leg. Back, and work to leg. Again, to Ashwin. Again, single. Wade ruins the synchrony with an enthusiastic paddle shot.

Did the Dalai Lama try to boop the snoot of Steve Smith? pic.twitter.com/tzIgwsqXLb

55th over: Australia 196-5 (Smith 104, Wade 9)

Kuldeep might just bowl all day. Has Matthew Wade defending, defending, defending. Then there’s a hefty drive, straight into the close catcher’s body on the bounce, and it ricochets off for a run. Smith, as ever, back and works to leg.

54th over: Australia 194-5 (Smith 103, Wade 8)

Here is Ashwin, as we say his name. Operating around the wicket to the right-handed Smith. Yet another leg-side flick for one. He’s batting like Younis Khan right now. Wade nicks the next ball to get off strike to third man. Smith defends.

53rd over: Australia 192-5 (Smith 102, Wade 7)

Kuldeep was the surprise pick, but he’s the main man now. Smith works a single. Wade sees it out. Kuldeep has bowled 13 overs, Ashwin 10, Jadeja 6.

52nd over: Australia 191-5 (Smith 101, Wade 7)

Matty Wade has had enough, and he’s not gonna take it any more. He resists the first few short balls from Yadav, but finallyone is in his slot and he pulls it for six over fine leg.

51st over: Australia 185-5 (Smith 101, Wade 1)

A couple of singles, then Kuldeep bowls leg side, Smith flicks fine, and there is his 20th Test century. What a momentous achievement. No visiting captain has ever made three in a series in India. Well, one has now. All the people who spoke of roads when Smith was making them against India at home, well, now he’s done it away. Seven hundreds in his last eight Tests against India. What? An average of 93 against India. What? An average of 70 in India. This is absurd. It is ridiculous. It really is.

50th over: Australia 179-5 (Smith 96, Wade 0)

Another day, another dollar. If by dollar you mean single. And by day you mean over. Smith has all the single dollars. Wade has to survive the next five balls from Umesh Yadav, who’s back in. One of them very nearly takes his off stump after cutting back in.

49th over: Australia 178-5 (Smith 95)

I don’t even know what that is. It’s not a brilliant delivery but Maxwell makes a meal of it. He goes back on his stumps to defend, the ball doesn’t spin as much as expected, and it slides past the outside edge into his off stump. He is looking to defend on middle and leg. It’s Kuldeep over the wicket again, so that slight angle across the batsman has done him in. That came two balls after Maxwell had blasted a lofted four out to deep midwicket, so perhaps he was trying to be conservative when really he could have just pulled that ball away for runs.

48th over: Australia 172-4 (Smith 94, Maxwell 3)

This is interesting. Bhuvi going after Maxwell is attacking the batsman: short balls, into the pads. Maxwell drives a single. Then to Smith, he’s bowling way outside off. Trying to tempt a big drive. Nothing doing.

47th over: Australia 171-4 (Smith 94, Maxwell 2)

Smith just keeps finding the singles. Another one from Kuldeep worked into the on side. He’ll do this all day. He has. Maxwell gets his second run off the outside half of the bat.

46th over: Australia 169-4 (Smith 93, Maxwell 1)

Thomas Meehan on the email, “I haven’t been there, but I’m putting forward Dharamsala as the most beautiful Test ground on Earth. Previously it was the SCG.”

45th over: Australia 169-4 (Smith 93, Maxwell 1)

Maxwellball. He’s met the Dalai Lama. He’s taken his box out of the freezer, dropped it into his strides. He’s calm and ready. One ball to come, and he drives it through the covers in measured fashion for a single. Strike rate 100. Classic Maxwell.

What a delivery! That’s the stuff of dreams for a left-arm wrist spinner. Floated the ball up there, giving it a real rip. It was coming from left-arm over the wicket to the right-handed Handscomb. Angled across him. Handscomb saw the width and said yes please. Aimed a big cover drive at it. Back the ball ripped, from well outside off stump, right through the gate, and knocked over the stumps. Brilliance.

44th over: Australia 167-3 (Smith 92, Handscomb 8)

Bhuvneshwar is cranking it up. He’s over the 140 kmh mark, when he has a reputation for hanging around 125. Is that a new-found skill? Swinging it too. Smith escapes strike from the first ball, but Handscomb survives the rest of the examination. This is high-class stuff.

43rd over: Australia 166-3 (Smith 91, Handscomb 8)

Smith into the 90s, and doing it with ease in singles. Again to midwicket. Handscomb edges a run, Smith flicks one. Then the tempo lifts. Down the wicket again, here comes Peter Dancecomb. Kuldeep is his reluctant partner. Meets the ball on the full again, but this time times his drive and slams it through wide mid on for four. Class.

42nd over: Australia 159-3 (Smith 89, Handscomb 3)

Now it’s Bhuvi. He’s swinging the ball. Wonder if he should have been back for a look earlier. Handscomb square-drives a run, Smith flicks one to leg. From there Bhuvneshwar nails Handscomb to the off stump with the next four balls.

41st over: Australia 157-3 (Smith 88, Handscomb 2)

Kuldeep is providing something here. Some doubt. Smith drives a single sqaure of the wicket, but Handscomb gets a wrong ‘un that keeps very low. Almost overspin on that delivery, and it spat through off a full length. That forces Handscomb to come down to the next ball, advancing to take it on the full but slamming it straight to midwicket. He reads the next googly and drives that square for a run.

40th over: Australia 155-3 (Smith 87, Handscomb 1)

Nearly a bowling change for Bhuvneshwar, but Rahane elects for the double Yadav to continue. If only Jayant was in this side as well. It could rival Australia’s all-Mitchell attacks. Handscomb square drives a run. Smith blocks a couple, leaves one bouncer, then plays the next. Just a single. Blow me down, Smith could make another hundred here. He’s been going so smoothly that I hadn’t even noticed.

39th over: Australia 153-3 (Smith 86, Handscomb 0)

Double Yadav attack. Kuldeep finally, of the Indian bowlers, hits a spot six times. Smith defends five, plays straight to the field for the other.

38th over: Australia 153-3 (Smith 86, Handscomb 0)

So it’s Peter Handscomb’s turn. The other Hero of Ranchi. I won’t give him the same level of intro. Umesh has 2/45 after 9.

That is peculiar. Umesh has bowled plenty of good balls today and got nothing. Then he bowls a pie down leg side, Marsh tries to glance, and nudges it off the glove through to the keeper. I said 2 runs. He’s doubled that.

37th over: Australia 152-2 (Smith 85, Marsh 4)

As of that run, Smith's average is now only behind Bradman for those who have played 20 Test innings: https://t.co/uzIFYfwIr7#INDvAUSpic.twitter.com/BlxLg7TB39

36th over: Australia 150-2 (Smith 84, Marsh 3)

Marsh blocks, leaves, then gets one too straight and works a single. Runs still coming too easily, Umesh doesn’t have much to work with at the moment. Smith matches Marsh. Marsh matches Smith. The 150 comes up.

35th over: Australia 147-2 (Smith 83, Marsh 1)

Here he comes. The Hero of Bengaluru. The Man of La Ranchi. Shaun Edward Marsh. Australia’s new favourite son. All sins forgiven. Unless he’s out for 2 today. Gets halfway there by flicking a single. Smith gets two leg byes from the last ball. Kuldeep finishes a successful over.

Finally the breakthrough! Warner broke through first for a fifty, after being dropped first ball today, then Kuldeep gets him. That ball bounces quite high, Warner is trying to defend, it pops up to the stand-in captain at slip. Simple, and Kuldeep gets his first Test wicket.

34th over: Australia 144-1 (Warner 56, Smith 83)

What an over. Yadav zips past the outside edge. Then Smith flicks four through midwicket. Yadav responds by taking the edge next ball, bouncing just in front of Rahane at slip. Then Smith goes back to pound another boundary through square.

33rd over: Australia 136-1 (Warner 56, Smith 75)

Kuldeep from the other end. Watching left-arm wrist-spinners is always a lot of fun. Such a strange art. I like the visual so far. he’s giving it plenty of air. Smith flicks a straight ball for one, Warner blocks out the next four. Not getting huge turn here but landing them accurately.

32nd over: Australia 135-1 (Warner 56, Smith 74)

Yadav to start after lunch. One of the features of this first session was how easily the Australians found ways to score. No jamming up the innings here. And it proves much the same here, as the batsmen work four singles from the opening over. That’s just too easy.

My my. What a start for the Australians. Adam has got out of the blocks and is off to a flyer. Hello, Geoff here. You can send me an email via the address on the left of screen, or the top of your phone. Or I could just write it for you. Fine. I will. It’s geoff.lemon@theguardian.com. Happy now? Don’t say I never do anything nice. The Twitter machine is @GeoffLemonSport. Let’s play OBO.

Some superb, authoritative batting by Australia’s leadership team put them comfortably ahead in this final Test after one session. But it could have been so much different. To go back to the opening ball of the day, Bhuvneshwar won Warner’s edge only to be put down at third slip by Nair. It’s cliche to suggest that’ll cost India the match, but until they remove him it will play on all their minds.

It still didn’t prevent Smith from having to make an early trip to the middle, Renshaw losing his off-stump when loosely driving at an Umesh beauty in the second over. The captain was jittery for about ten minutes before getting in the best way he knows how: playing his shots. He thrashed at anything remotely off target, peppering the rope between cover and point when the seamers operated. And looked so good in doing it.

31st over: Australia 131-1 (Warner 54, Smith 72). You do not need to move when you hit drives as sweetly as that, Smith leaning into Kuldeep with a belated ‘welcome to Test cricket, champ’. Glorious cover drive. Knocking the last ball on the head, that’s lunch. What a ride that was. I’ll collect my thoughts on it all. Back in a moment.

30th over: Australia 125-1 (Warner 54, Smith 68). Ashwin’s last one before the break. Warner handles it comfortably in defence before pushing a single into the on-side. Smith repeats that formula, retaining the strike with one down to long-on from the last ball of the set. Ashwin threatened Warner early, but not so much at the moment.

The good teams try and take the game away as quickly as possible. Australia are doing that on a fine track in Dharmasala

29th over: Australia 125-1 (Warner 53, Smith 67). Kuldeep called upon for his first bowl in international cricket! An exciting moment for any player. Warner welcomes him with aggression, cutting off the edge for four! Watching the replay, that really could have been a wicket with his second ball. Instead, it is Warner’s 50, from 72 balls. He’s more watchful of the conventional looking leg breaks thereafter. Australia’s incumbent duo now have two more overs to see out for a samosa and a sit down.

The moment Kuldeep was presented with his cap before play. Nice.

Huge moment this for young @imkuldeep18 as he receives his Test cap #INDvAUS#TeamIndiapic.twitter.com/GvRQVUAfj8

28th over: Australia 120-1 (Warner 48, Smith 67). Warner picks his moment before going at Ashwin again. Three boundaries in three overs for him now, the off-breaker dropping way short and Warner making no mistake picking the boundary at cover. Another single in that direction keeps him the strike. Had to reset a couple of times in this innings, but he’s still there and now really motoring.

The time has come to get @imVkohli on the field as substitute fielder. Can someone please oblige with a fall or a slip? #INDvsAUS

27th over: Australia 115-1 (Warner 43, Smith 67). With another carve to point by Smith it is the 100 partnership between these two. And would you believe, the first time they’ve had a three-digit stand in Test cricket? Harder to achieve than not to given their prolific careers. Also the highest second-wicket union for either side in the series. Warner, growing in confidence, does a great job of getting back into the crease early before cutting Jadeja hard to the boundary. Into the 40s he moves.

26th over: Australia 109-1 (Warner 38, Smith 66). What did I say about Warner putting it away through to lunch? Nah. Instead, armed with the protective shield of the baggy green, he gets on the front foot to Ashwin and hits him over the rope at long-off for the first six of the match. He’s hit it beautifully.

25th over: Australia 102-1 (Warner 32, Smith 65). Jadeja get a go at Warner and wins another big edge! But it is safe after evading a diving Rahane at slip. Four added, bringing up Australia’s 100. A more conservative approach greets the rest of the over. Rightly so. Inexcusable to throw it away from something daft now.

24th over: Australia 98-1 (Warner 28, Smith 65). Smudger Smith has nowhere near the issues with Ashwin that his deputy does. We have a new shot of the morning, when he met the offie on the advance and lofted him over mid-on, a couple of bounces into the rope. Beautiful batting. Then when pushed back, he carved with perfect timing out to point for four more. The definition of hitting a bowler off his length.

23rd over: Australia 90-1 (Warner 28, Smith 57). Jadeja, confident that he has the Australian captain’s measure, throws it up repeatedly at him to encourage something lavish. But just as Warner held firm in the previous over, Smith did here. Good batting. So important they now get to lunch to bank these early gains.

22nd over: Australia 89-1 (Warner 28, Smith 56). A maiden from Ashwin to Warner. The former varied his pace and angle, but the latter didn’t give into his desires. Straight bats all the way. For now.

21st over: Australia 89-1 (Warner 28, Smith 56). Jadeja again beats Smith with one that really goes. To an extent this early turn looks to validate Smith’s decision to hold firm and play two spinners. Lyon especially should enjoy plenty of bounce out there. Then driving, Smith gets a fat edge and it is four. Not convincing. So we have two pretty good battles going on here. Warner v Ashwin from the Himalayas End, Smith v Jadeja from the not-Himalayas End.

20th over: Australia 83-1 (Warner 28, Smith 50). For the second time in consecutive Ashwin overs he’s nearly through Warner with one that doesn’t turn from round the wicket. This time it is into Warner’s front pad, but missing. Ominous for the left-hander. He’s better on the back foot, pulling hard for one and getting away from his nemesis for a moment. Smith ends the set with a single through midwicket himself, collecting his 21st Test Match half-century in the process. 67 balls to the mark. He’s given everything remotely off target the treatment this morning after coming in part way through the second over. He’s also now beyond 400 runs in the series, leading all comers.

19th over: Australia 81-1 (Warner 27, Smith 49). Smith has all the time he needs when Jadeja misfires to get deep and flick a couple behind square. Sure enough, Jadeja responds with a rip, spinning it past Smith’s bat. A legit play and miss there.

18th over: Australia 79-1 (Warner 27, Smith 47). Ashwin lets Smith take the first ball to deep square leg. He won’t mind that, getting another look at Warner, who is now batting in the baggy green. He’s nearly through him from around the wicket. That didn’t spin, Warner didn’t pick it, and if not for an inside edge he was gone. A bit of confusion between the batsmen ends the over. Yes, no, yes, no. No wins out. Different gravy with these two spinners on, no matter what the state of play.

17th over: Australia 78-1 (Warner 27, Smith 46). Twins in spin for the first time in this match, Jadeja into the act having picked up both of these batsmen the previous time they met. He’s immediately on his mark, leaving Smith no other option but defence. Oh, scrap that, Smith is down the track and trying to clip. It doesn’t look that great through the air, but well short of the man at mid-on.

16th over: Australia 77-1 (Warner 27, Smith 45). Ashwin has Smith to probe to begin. But he’s driving for one. Warner back, which will please him. But he lets him get away with a short ball the left-hander can knock into the deep for one. Smith is happy defending, before turning the final delivery away for one. Productive times for the baggy greens.

"Can you walk on water, Virat?"
"I'm pretty awesome, Anil, but I wouldn't go that far."
"No, I mean, can you take the drinks out, please?" pic.twitter.com/pGVP4YYkT4

15th over: Australia 74-1 (Warner 26, Smith 43). I thought you were meant to chill out after sharing an Eskimo Kiss with the Dalai Lama?Smith has an approach, it is working, he isn’t changing it. Bhuvi short of a length outside off-stump, a delivery that would conventionally be left on an opening morning. Stuff that, says the captain, throwing his hands at it as hard as he can, little footwork to speak off. Nails it, of course. Four scored to start the over. He cuts in that direction two further times in the over, albeit to the sweeper they have been forced to put in place given the frequency that Smith is popping it out there, and how hard it is travelling.

14th over: Australia 67-1 (Warner 26, Smith 36). Ashwin v Warner. It’s a heavyweight battle. Into his defensive posture, the first isn’t convincing, but the second is. A strong push to mid-off gets him off strike. Advantage Warner. Smith puts him back down the business end with one behind square. But he keeps it out from the crease. India like that behind the wicket. Proper Test cricket.

13th over: Australia 65-1 (Warner 25, Smith 35). First ball, Smith without footwork trying to thrash Bhuvneshwar down the ground. It’s a high risk game the captain is playing at the moment compared to how he went about it on day one at Ranchi, but it is paying off for the time being. The 50 run stand comes up later in the over, Smith pushing behind point when given a fraction more width. Only the 65 balls required to get to that mark. Smith has another go at the limited-footwork shove. Why not? It’s on the up and edgey and altogether risky. But it’s also his fifth boundary. Cricket in fast forward.

Stunning view from the South Stand. Very close to the action and the Himalayas in the background. #AUSvINDpic.twitter.com/HzSwagoWPi

12th over: Australia 59-1 (Warner 24, Smith 30). There’s a change, Umesh replaced by Ashwin. The man who has Warner more than any other in Test cricket, so it makes sense. Initially, the opener does what he is meant to. Defending, coming down the track. Then? Dancing and top edging! There’s a deep point rather than a conventional one, so it is safe. But it’s not pretty. Hard to know where that came from or why; he’s looked really good since that first ball faux pas. And that’s drinks. Phew. Get a raspberry cordial. It’d be in keeping with the theme of that first hour.

Second time in an hour that umpires looking at the ball shape. Probably cos Australia are smacking it at 5/over right now. #IndvAus

11th over: Australia 57-1 (Warner 23, Smith 29). How’s the tempo of this first hour? Another single to point from Warner gives the main man Smith another crack. He’s on the advance, but unable to beat the field with some pushes. Not the case when Bhuvneshwar is a fraction wider, the Australian captain throwing the proverbial kitchen sink at a cut shot. It’s to the boundary at point in no time at all.

10th over: Australia 52-1 (Warner 22, Smith 25). Warner past point for one early in the over. Scoring well through that part of the ground. It’s when you know he’s in decent nick. Smith then plays the shot of the morning to bring up the Australian 50. Barely off-target, the captain clips Umesh with the timing of Mark Waugh or VVS Laxman or David Gower. It’s real pretty running into the mid-on rope. The replay shows it wasn’t even straight, basically outside off-stump. Freak. In ODI terms, the power play is over. And that’s how it has felt the last few overs.

Kohli the biggest name drinks waiter since? pic.twitter.com/5WAmjoU8kX

9th over: Australia 45-1 (Warner 21, Smith 19). Better from Bhuvi. Early in the over he’s far closer to the off-stump than Umesh was in the previous set, Smith watching cautiously. When using his bat, Smith defends off the edge. Twice. He’s back to leaving and defending to see the over through. Good contest emerging between the pair. The first maiden of the day.

8th over: Australia 45-1 (Warner 21, Smith 19). Righto, Smith is in. A lovely, compact drive past point runs away to the boundary to begin the Umesh over. Next up, he misses waaaay outside the off-stump and Smith doesn’t hesitate helping it on its way to the cover boundary. Through the air bit no real danger. Consecutive fours. Two more with another drive in a similar direction. Umesh goes upstairs to end the over, and Smith has a crack at that as well, hooking to fine leg for one. 11 from it. As you do 40 minutes into a Test Match. After battling badly to begin, he’s now 19 from 21 balls. That’s why he’s the top-ranked bat in the world.

Enjoy some imagery from TV commentary. So much imagery.

RS: now that is a serious tracer bullet, it’s hit the fence at a rate of knots, not a muscle moved.
MH: Pick the bones out of this.

7th over: Australia 34-1 (Warner 21, Smith 8). Bhuvneshwar misses the mark first ball, but only just. Enough of Warner’s pad makes contact to secure four leg-byes. He’s defending the next three deliveries. I don’t think he’s left one yet come to think of it? Oh, now a snorter! That’s come racing back at Warner who didn’t want to play, but it was all too late. It went over the cordon and down to the rope. He survives. Superb bowling, giving him nothing here.

Phil Withall has dropped a line on twitter. “With Virat running drinks we can expect a lot of stoppages. Captaining when not captaining?”

6th over: Australia 26-1 (Warner 17, Smith 8). One of those impromptu drinks breaks, after 30 minutes, when the ball goes bung. The fourth official is out there with umpires Erasmus and Gould to try and find a new one. Pretty hard work finding a ball 5.4 overs old, I would have thought? But they’ve done it. It came after the Australians turned the strike over to three consecutive deliveries, albeit with strokes that were well away from the middle of their bats. After the changed ball it’s better for Warner, who pushes out to point to retain the strike.

Disco Bob is battling his way to enjoying this Test. He’s written in to tell us all about it.

5th over: Australia 21-1 (Warner 15, Smith 5). Smith just working his way in here. We’ve seen it many times from the Aussie captain, looking vulnerable before facing 300 balls. He grabs a couple with a flick to midwicket after Bhuvi overpitches. Then two more to the same region after Smith shuffles across with confidence. A tense moment follows, defending off the inside edge and nearly rolling back onto his stumps! But he’s back in the groove right away with a lovely off-drive to end the set. Shame, for him, there is a fielder there.

Thilo Fobes has his say on the tweet. “Aus said before series they’d go horses for courses, but looks like it should have been bird for ... eh (CA) shirt.”

4th over: Australia 17-1 (Warner 15, Smith 1). Classic Warner version 2.0 to end the over, standing high in the crease and pushing with perfect timing to the point boundary. That’s pretty much exactly how he lodged a century in a session at Sydney a couple of months back. Until that point, singles were taken by each, in turn Smith off the mark with a push to mid-on.

Not many in at the ground at this stage. The pattern of the series is that they’ve piled in after lunch. Let’s hope they do. Hard to think of a better spot to watch our sport. What do you reckon? Get excited sitting on the fort at Galle? Fancy the horseshoe set up at Adelaide? Basin Reserve gives it a nudge, for mine. But this is something else.

3rd over: Australia 11-1 (Warner 10, Smith 0). Warner far more cautious now, watching Bhuvi who had it going both ways in his first set. He gets off strike when inside-edging an inducker. The Indian quick right on his game. Smith had three balls to look at, and each of those were defended awkwardly, none hitting the middle of the bat. Proper graft required from both.

Here’s that shot from before the game I mentioned. What a place.

Australia getting a taste of English conditions in beautiful Dharamsala. #AUSvINDpic.twitter.com/seojlbe2bu

2nd over: Australia 10-1 (Warner 9, Smith 0). Smith is tempted before leaving a shorter ball to end the over. It’s quick, with plenty of swing after passing the batsman. The Australian leadership team both at the crease now. Warner, having given that chance first up, has a huge job. Hasn’t fired a meaningful shot this series, and he knows it. As for Smith, he was blessed by the Dalai Lama yesterday. Not that he needs any added edge to score heavily in this series.

No reason for third slip to be so close. Potentially, a costly positional error above all else with that Warner drop. #INDvAUS

The youngster beaten pace and movement, slipping past the inside edge when driving, then crashing into his off-stump! Brushed the pad on the way through, it would have been leg before had it not gone onto the stumps. Spot on from Umesh, who has been brilliant throughout this series. The hosts are up and about, Kohli leaping from his chair on the sidelines. The Australian captain Smith on his way.

1st over: Australia 10-0 (Warner 9, Renshaw 1). WARNER DROPPED FIRST BALL! Bloody hell! That would have been an utter disaster for Australia. Warner flayed at Bhuvneshwar. It’s moved significantly away from the left-hander, full enough to entice. Oh, it’s a bad drop too before going to the rope. Nair went to his left with a dive at third slip, but probably didn’t need to go with the one hand. He’s moving it both ways, Bhuvi, after getting the first over exactly for this. Singles are exchanged, Renshaw with a tidy clip. It will hurt watching Warner drive the last ball beautifully to the cover rope. Wow. Take a breath? 10 from it.

They’re out for the anthems. The highlight, an extraordinary shot the cameraman nabbed of the Australians arm in arm with the snow-covered mountains in the backdrop. No body contact from the Indians, belt and braces hands behind the back, looking straight ahead.

Some early correspondence from Michael Spears gets the OBO off the mark. “Given the madness in sports since last year - Cleveland Cavaliers, Chicago Cubs, Superbowl comeback and extra time, Cronulla Sharks, Western Bulldogs,” he says. Before listing about six more. “My theory is that the end is nigh and sports is going out with a bang, with droughts broken, comebacks and underdogs winning. Consequently, I’m expecting a cracker!”

Some potpourri.

Not quite Thriller in Manila, but I’m going with it. Adam Collins coming to you here from the Himalayan End of the wondrous HPCA Stadium in Dharamsala. For what, I think we can agree, is the most anticipated Border-Gavaskar Test since at least 2004. Winner takes all.

We’ll come to the broader context in a tic. For now, I have news. To begin, Steve Smith has won the toss and Australia will bat! Huge for the visitors. No hesitation from the captain.

Adam will be here shortly. In the meantime, check out Andy Bull’s latest on the Cricket All Stars scheme.

Related: Cricket's All Stars scheme is fine but kids must see the game as well as play it | Andy Bull

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