Tendulkar misses ton, Johnson takes five

MOHALI, India, (Reuters) – Mitchell Johnson hastened  an abrupt India collapse yesterday with his sixth test  five-wicket haul to give Australia a 23-run first innings lead  in the first test. Replying to Australia’s first innings total of 428, India  were cruising merrily at 354 for four before losing six wickets  in the final session of the third day to fold for 405.

India dominated the early proceedings with four batsmen  registering half-centuries. Sachin Tendulkar (98) narrowly  missed his 49th test hundred.

Resuming on 110 for two, India lost nightwatchman Ishant  Sharma (18) in the morning session. However, Tendulkar and Rahul  Dravid (77), who share more than 25,000 test runs between them,  steadied the innings with a 79-run stand.

Dravid played with characteristic caution until he became  Doug Bollinger’s second victim of the match after a sedate knock  containing 12 boundaries.

“I would have liked to carry on and get a big hundred,”  Dravid told Neo Cricket channel.

“I felt nice, the way I was batting. My feet were moving  well, my balance, head position, bat face. It would have been  nice to make that partnership with Sachin a match-defining one.”

Tendulkar and Suresh Raina (86) then stitched together a  124-run fifth wicket partnership, the highest in the Indian  innings, to consolidate their position before Australia hit back  in the post-tea season.

Marcus North trapped Tendulkar to send a groan across the  Punjab Cricket Association Stadium and Johnson dismissed  Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Harbhajan Singh off successive  deliveries. Tendulkar hit 13 boundaries during his 189-ball  knock.

Middle order batsman Vangipurappu Laxman, nursing a bad  back, came out to bat after India had lost their eighth wicket.

“We missed Laxman in the middle order, that was a bit of a  disappointment. Sometimes you need one big partnership to crack  open a game, unfortunately we didn’t have one today,” Dravid  said.

Raina took India past the 400-run mark but a second test  century eluded the left-hander who eventually became Johnson’s  fifth victim after a mature knock.