Clarke’s triple century leaves India toiling

SYDNEY, (Reuters) – Michael Clarke hit a majestic  unbeaten 329 before declaring Australia’s first innings at 659  for four with a lead of 468 on the third day of the second test  against India at the Sydney Cricket Ground yesterday.
India, despite a fine spell from paceman Ben Hilfenhaus,  were 114-2 at the close of play with opener Gautam Gambhir (68)  and Sachin Tendulkar, who had made eight from 42 balls, set to  resume on day four.
The Australia captain’s triple century was just the 25th in  test cricket, the fourth highest test score by an Australian,  14th highest by any batsman and highest in 100 tests over more  than a century at the SCG.
More importantly for Australia, with support from Ricky  Ponting (134) and Mike Hussey (150 not out), Clarke’s innings  rescued the hosts from 37-3 and put them in an excellent  position to take a 2-0 lead in the four-match series.
Clarke brought up the 300 shortly after lunch, flicking the  ball through midwicket off the bowling of Ishant Sharma for the  37th four of his innings, becoming the 21st cricketer to reach  the milestone.
The 30-year-old righthander whipped off his helmet to  acknowledge a standing ovation from the 31,000 crowd at his home  ground and pointed his bat towards his team mates in the  dressing room.
Selflessly passing up the chance to break any more records,  Clarke called time on his best test innings a ball after Hussey  had reached his 150 to leave his bowlers two-and-a-half days to  bowl the tourists out.
Clarke had faced 478 balls, batted for 10 hours and 17  minutes and scored 40 boundaries when he left the pitch to  another huge ovation from a crowd largely dressed in pink in  honour of former paceman’s Glenn McGrath’s breast cancer  charity.

EARLY BREAKTHROUGH
Hussey and his captain had put on 334 for the fifth wicket,  eclipsing the previous highest partnership for Australia against  India of 288, which Clarke set with Ricky Ponting on Wednesday.
Australia’s pace attack, which dismissed India for 191 in  their first innings, made an early breakthrough when Hilfenhaus  removed opener Virender Sehwag for four courtesy of an athletic  catch from David Warner with just 18 runs on the board.
The big paceman returned to bowl Rahul Dravid through the  gate for 29 with a beautiful delivery and he and James Pattinson  ensured Gambhir and Tendulkar had anything but a comfortable  passage to stumps.
Clarke started the day on 251 and, understandably tired  after batting through Wednesday, took time to find his rhythm  even if he never looked troubled as Hussey kept the scoreboard  ticking over at the other end.
A cover drive for four off Ishant Sharma 10 minutes before  lunch allowed him to pass Englishman RE Foster’s high score of  287 at the SCG but he was forced to wait until after the break  to reach the 300.
Hussey had started the day on 55 and played superbly to  reach his 16th test century, vindication for a player in his  mid-thirties with his place in the side under pressure after a  poor run of form.
India’s batsmen face a Herculean task to rescue the test and  keep alive their hopes of winning a first series in Australia.  They lost the opener in Melbourne by 122 runs last week.