Watson, Zaheer star in opening day action

MOHALI, India, (Reuters) – Australian opener Shane  Watson hit an unbeaten century but Indian pacer Zaheer Khan  struck in the final session to halt the visitors’ progress on a  see-saw opening day of the first test yesterday.

Watson thrived on the sloppy Indian fielders’ largesse to  remain unbeaten on 101, having starred in a 141-run second  wicket stand with skipper Ricky Ponting (71) — the cornerstone  of Australia’s opening day score of 224 for five.

Zaheer, who drew first blood in the morning, trapping Simon  Katich (6), returned in the post-tea session to remove Mike  Hussey (17) and Marcus North (0) in successive overs, reversing  some of Australia’s dominance earlier in the day.
Tim Paine (1) was with Watson at stumps.

“I knew the first few hours would be crucial,” Watson said  after the match.

“For me, it was easier to score off the new ball than the  reverse-swinging or the turning one. Hopefully I can continue  … tomorrow.”

“The Indian bowlers bowled beautifully with the softer ball  and the spinners did not give much to hit.”

On a placid track at the Punjab Cricket Association stadium  offering no real bounce, Watson and Ponting compiled a big  second-wicket partnership to dominate the morning session.

Both scored freely even after lunch until Suresh Raina ran  out Ponting with a direct throw from mid-wicket.

The dismissal was followed by an apparent verbal clash  between Zaheer and the departing Ponting who turned back to exchange words before heading to the pavilion.

The Australian captain, who hit 10 boundaries in his fluent innings, was soon joined in the pavilion by Michael Clarke, who  was caught by Rahul Dravid for 14 off the bowling of spinner  Harbhajan Singh shortly before tea.

Watson, however, reached his second test century courtesy of  some solid hitting and India’s poor fielding.

Virender Sehwag dropped a scoreless Watson in the first over  off Zaheer and the aggressive opener got another reprieve on 37  when he edged a Pragyan Ojha delivery that popped out of Indian  captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s gloves behind the stumps.