Glenn Maxwell recreated his World Cup
knock against Afghanistan as he single-handedly guided Australia to a five-wicket
victory in the third T20I at the Barsapara Cricket Stadium on Tuesday.
Maxwell’s destructive mood spoiled the
party for the Indian team in his 100th T20I game and made it even more special
with an unbeaten 104 off 48 balls. He became the joint fastest Australian
player to complete a century in the history of T20Is joining Aaron Finch and
Josh Inglis.
While chasing 223, Travis Head continued
to ride high on confidence picking boundaries for fun after making his return
to the field of cricket since Australia’s World Cup triumph.
While opening along with Aaron Hardie,
the left-handed batter played the first 12 consecutive balls and struck 25
runs. Hardie struck two boundaries in leg-break spinner Ravi Bishnoi’s over.
Australia steamrolled in the first four
overs amassing 46 runs. Left-arm pacer Arshdeep Singh provided the breakthrough
with a swinging delivery sending Hardie back with a score of 16(12).
Avesh Khan who came in to replace Mukesh
Kumar scalped his first wicket of the night dismissing the dangerous-looking
Head for a score of 35(18).
Bishnoi completely bamboozled Josh
Inglis with a quick googly which zipped through the gap and clipped the bails
off the stumps. Glenn Maxwell arrived at the crease and smashed Prasih Krishna
all over the field to keep Australia on course of the mammoth chase.
Australia ended the first 10 overs with
a score of 105/3.
Ravi Bishnoi’s spin continued to cause
trouble to Australia’s batters as he sent Tim David back to the pavilion for a
golden duck. But from that point, Maxwell channelled his inner self that guided
Australia to victory against Afghanistan in the World Cup and silenced the
Indian bowling line-up with his brute strength.
Back-to-back maximums in Arshdeep’s over
was the beginning of the chaos that was about to unfold in the death overs.
During the calm before the storm, Suryakumar Yadav dropped Matthew Wade’s
catch.
The final two overs saw Prasidh Krishna and
Axar Patel combining to concede 45 runs. Prasidh had 21 runs to defend in the
final over but Maxwell with his raw hitting power left the speedster with no
answers. Australia clinched the victory by five wickets.
Earlier in the innings, Ruturaj Gaikwat went
unbeaten, showcasing why he is touted as the next big thing in Indian cricket.
After operating at a strike rate below 100 initially, the right-hander opened
out in the latter half of the Indian innings, going at a strike rate of over
215.
He struck 123* off 57 balls powering
India to a mammoth total of 222/3.
The final two overs saw Prasidh Krishna
and Axar Patel combining to concede 45 runs. Prasidh had 21 runs to defend in
the final over but Maxwell with his raw hitting power left the speedster with no
answers. Australia clinched the victory by five wickets.
Earlier in the innings, Ruturaj Gaikwat
went unbeaten, showcasing why he is touted as the next big thing in Indian
cricket. After operating at a strike rate below 100 initially, the right-hander
opened out in the latter half of the Indian innings, going at a strike rate of
over 215.
Australian left-arm seamer Jason
Behrendorff bowled a mean spell at the start of the Indian innings, sending
back opener Yashasvi Jaiswal, who slammed a quickfire fifty in the previous
match, for six.
Behrendorff produced an exceptional
opening burst, picking up one wicket at the expense of just five runs. After
the fall of Surya’s wicket, Ruturaj put his foot on the pedal and scored at a
strike rate of over 185, racing to the nineties in no time.
He struck 123* off 57 balls powering
India to a mammoth total of 222/3.
Brief Scores: India 222/3 (Rutuaj
Gaikwad 123(57)*, Suryakumar Yadav 39; Kane Richardson 1-34) vs Australia 225/5
(Glenn Maxwell 104*, Travis Head 35; Ravi Bishno 2-32).
ANI