Watson and Haddin slug Aussies to easy victory

BANGALORE, (Reuters) – Australia’s openers put on  an emphatic display to follow the performance of their bowlers  as they crushed Canada by seven wickets in their World Cup Group  A match today.
It took Australia’s unbeaten run in the World Cup to 34  matches stretching back to 1999. They go top of the group.

Brad Haddin
Brad Haddin

Having already booked a place in the quarter-finals,  Australia first ripped out Canada for 211 after some initial  resistance, and then openers, Shane Watson (94) and Brad Haddin  (88) chased down the majority of those runs.
Watson and Haddin saw out the initial overs and took the  score to 94 in 21 overs and then cut loose after taking the  batting powerplay.
Watson, dropped in the second over by Rizwan Cheema, was the  more aggressive after the powerplay, hammering nine fours and  four huge sixes in his 90-ball knock.
Haddin rode his luck and matched Watson shot-for-shot in his  84-ball innings until his luck finally ran out in the 29th over  when he was caught behind off the bowling of John Davison, who  retired from international cricket after this match.
Four balls later Watson was caught on the boundary off the  bowling of Harvir Baidwan trying to reach his century with  another six.
Earlier, Canada could not capitalise on opener Hiral Patel’s  whirlwind half-century as the Australian pace bowlers put on a  fearsome display of bowling to run though the North American’s  middle and late order batting.
Opting to bat after winning the toss, 19-year-old Patel  slammed a 45-ball 54, including one six each off Brett Lee,  Shaun Tait and Mitchell Johnson in his hour-long stay at the  crease.
Canada blazed 77 in 10 overs and Patel eventually fell  trying to whack the fourth of the Australian pace quartet,  Watson, for a six.
After Patel’s exit, Canada’s run rate slowed dramatically as  their captain Ashish Bagai (39) and Zubin Surkari (34) rebuilt  the innings and took the score to the 150 mark in the 29th over,  before both fell to Tait.
The Aussie speedsters then took over and Canada crumbled  from a comfortable 150-2 to 161-6 in the space of 19 deliveries  and barely crawled over the 200 mark.
Lee finished with four for 46, Tait picked up two for 34  while Johnson chipped in with one.
A low point for Australia was the failure again of captain  Ricky Ponting with the bat. He mistimed a pull and was caught  for seven off Henry Osinde.
“You could say I am due, would have been nice to be not out,  but maybe I am saving it up for the big games,” he said.
Overall he was reasonably satisfied with the performance  against a team which were not really in the same class as the  world No 1 side.
“Things went not too bad. They caught us on the hop a little  bit with the way they started. I thought their top four or five  batted really well,” he said.
“They got themselves a reasonable total but then the boys  played really well and Watson and Haddin were outstanding.
“We haven’t fully been tested yet. We know we’re going to be  tested against Pakistan in a couple of days in Colombo (Friday)  and we look forward to it.”