- Commissioner’s statement on Ventura, Marte
- Ronnie O’Sullivan: Masters champion ‘felt so vulnerable’ in final
- Arron Fletcher Wins 2017 WSOP International Circuit Marrakech Main Event ($140,224)
- Smith challenges Warner to go big in India
- Moncada No. 1 on MLB Pipeline’s Top 10 2B Prospects list
- Braves land 2 on MLB Pipeline’s Top 10 2B Prospects list
- Kingery makes MLB Pipeline’s Top 10 2B Prospects list
- New Zealand wrap up 2-0 after Bangladesh implosion
- Mathews, Pradeep, Gunathilaka to return to Sri Lanka
- Elliott hopes for rain for Poli
Kohli puts India ahead despite Henry’s burst
- Updated: October 2, 2016
Tea India 316 and 110 for 6 (Rohit 20*, Saha 4*, Henry 3-35) lead New Zealand 204 (Patel 47, Bhuvneshwar 5-48) by 222 runsLive scorecard and ball-by-ball details
India had two huge things in their favour on Sunday – a first-innings lead and a first-rate innings from Virat Kohli. While his team-mates copped good ones or were roughed up by the variable bounce in the Eden Gardens pitch, the Indian captain found a way to be at ease in the face of a fired-up New Zealand pace attack. It took a truly naughty delivery, one that was pitched short but stayed extremely low, to dismiss him five short of a fifty. By then, though, India’s lead had gone past 200.
The key to batting in tough conditions seems absurdly simple when you put it in words – moving your feet quickly and meeting the ball late. Kohli showed signs of that very early in his innings. His comfort at the crease rattled New Zealand and it wasn’t like they didn’t have good plans against him. They tried bouncing him out with short leg, leg gully and deep square leg. But Kohli shuffled across, swiveled on his back foot, rolled his wrists over the ball, and made sure it went to ground. So then New Zealand tried baiting him with full and wide deliveries. Kohli either avoided them or his front foot went right forward, meaning he could play his cover drive with his hands a lot closer to his body.
With time at the crease he displayed aspects of his game that have made him irresistible in one-day cricket. Awareness of the field: in the 17th over, with Neil Wagner bowling from around the wicket with a packed leg-side …