17 February,2017 06:43 PM IST | | PTI
India A bowlers were largely ineffective, allowing Steve Smith and senior batsman Shaun Marsh to strike comfortable hundreds as Australia started their Test tour in impressive fashion in the three-day warm-up game in Mumbai today
Steve Smith, Shaun Marsh hit tons to put India 'A' attack to the sword
India A bowlers were largely ineffective, allowing Steve Smith and senior batsman Shaun Marsh to strike comfortable hundreds as Australia started their Test tour in impressive fashion in the three-day warm-up in Mumbai today.
Riding on the two batsmen's centuries before both were retired out, Australia made 327 for five wickets by stumps on day one of the match against a largely unimpressive India A attack at the Brabourne Stadium.
At close, Mitchell Marsh (16) and Matthew Wade (7) were the unbeaten batsmen.
Smith and Marsh came together after the visitors had lost openers David Warner (25) and Matt Renshaw (11) when the score
was 55 for two. They were largely untroubled by the home team's attack before both retired to the pavilion after notching up hundreds and putting on 156 runs for the third wicket.
Medium pacer Navdeep Saini dismissed Warner and Renshaw in his six-over first spell by coming on as first-change before lunch and then finished with 2 for 27 at the end of the day. Captain Hardik Pandya picked up the wicket of Peter Handscomb late in the day with the second new ball.
Smith, who is expected to be a big thorn in the Indian bowlers' flesh in the four-Test series commencing at Pune on February 23, played fluently against both pace and spin. The right-handed batsman made 107, his 30th hundred that includes 15 in Test cricket in his 100th first-class game, in 161 balls before he decided not to resume his innings after tea, when Australia were 211 for 2.
Smith played a chance-less knock and impressed with the way he dealt with left-arm spinner Shahbaz Nadeem. He also
smacked him over long on for a six by dancing down the pitch besides timing the ball superbly to hit 12 fours too.
The left-handed Marsh, preferred over Usman Khawaja, repaid the faith by making an assured 104 in 173 balls and in 213 minutes. He too retired after reaching his century after tea to leave Peter Handscomb (45) and his brother Mitchell Marsh (16) to carry on when the total read 288 for two in 75 overs.
Shaun, who struck 10 fours and one six, could have been out on 88 when he pulled part-time spinner Akhil Herwadkar but was put down by Saini at short mid-wicket.
The home team's bowling suffered a setback when off-spinner Krishnappa Gowtham hurt his hamstring while fielding after lunch and limped off the field.
Saini, who took 2 for 13 in his pre-lunch spell of six overs, too limped off after bowling four balls in the first over after lunch but returned to the field and also bowled a couple of overs late in the day.
Warner and Renshaw were both dismissed by first change home team medium pacer Saini before the visitors recovered poise through the 156-run stand between right-handed Smith and left-handed Marsh in 40.5 overs.
Smith, who arrived at the crease at the fall of his deputy Warner in the 9th over of the innings, batted fluently and was hardly troubled by the bowling barring once when he edged left-arm spinner Shahbaz Nadeem short of the slip fielder when on 55.
He, otherwise, played the slow bowler with lot of confidence by using his feet well and also smacked him for an on-driven six soon after lunch. He completed his century in 154 balls with the help of 11 fours and a six in 186 minutes.
Marsh too took cue from his captain and began to play with increasing confidence to complete his half century in 86 balls and 131 minutes.
The third-wicket duo completed the century stand in 41.1 overs and in 140 minutes and looked well in control against a none-too-impressive bowling attack on a pitch that had eased out considerably in the afternoon session. Earlier, Australia lost both the left-handed openers, vice-captain Warner and the tall England-born Renshaw in the pre-lunch session after they were put in to bat by India A captain Hardik Pandya.
For the home team, Delhi's Saini was the most impressive bowler in a fine first spell of 6-2-13-2 while the other two medium pacers ,- captain Pandya and Ashok Dinda -- could not extract as much help from the green-tinged pitch offering good bounce.
Shahbaz was given a long spell by skipper Pandya without making much of an impression after bowling 17 overs in which he gave away 71 runs without any wicket to his name.
Australia began cautiously in the morning period. Both the openers edged the bowlers on one occasion each through the slip cordon but Warner, as is his wont, also dispatched the loose balls to the fence.
Dinda gave way to Saini after a four-over first spell and the Delhi medium pacer struck a blow in his very first over by packing off pocket dynamo Warner with a short ball that the left-hander tried to pull and got a top-edge to be caught behind by Ishan Kishan.
Warner's 25 came off 43 balls and he hit the ball to the fence on four occasions in his 40-minute essay.
After the first drinks break, Smith started driving the ball fluently on the up and looked in no trouble against the medium pacers and drove them for well-timed fours, mainly in the "V".
But Saini struck again in the fifth over after the drinks break by dismissing the stone-walling Renshaw with a ball that moved away a shade as the batsman poked at it and took the bat's edge for Kishan to grab the second catch of the morning. Renshaw had occupied the crease for 84 minutes and struck a lone four in his 41-ball knock and at his dismissal the visitors were 55 for two.
Smith and Marsh, who was not able to time the ball as well as his captain initially, took the visitors to lunch without any further loss.