Australia vs India 4th Test highlights: Day 4 live scores, blog

By Suneer Chowdhary / Roar Guru

India were bolstered by another Virat Kohli century after KL Rahul hammered a maiden ton of his own on a pitch that continued to offer nothing to the bowlers but Australia did well to at least stifle the visitors’ scoring on the third day.

You ​can ​follow the live scores of the fourth day of the fourth Test from the SCG starting at ​10:30am (AEDT).​

Australia bowled on and around the off-stump and rarely lost their length through the first session on day three. The pent-up frustration from rarely scoring runs led to Rohit Sharma pre-meditate a sweep that saw his end to Nathan Lyon.

LIVE SCORES OF DAY FIVE BETWEEN AUSTRALIA AND INDA

At that stage, Lyon was getting some rip from outside the off-stump but once Kohli joined Rahul and forged a partnership, things steadily began to turn for Lyon. Kohli wasn’t his ebullient self when he began batting but it was just his way of respecting the conditions which were evidently not in favour of run-scoring.

The bowlers would still struggle to get the batsmen out on a track that offered no movement or pace but that very lack of speed meant that the batsmen struggled to get their timing going.

Kohli got going and upped the ante towards the latter half of the day and he was helped in no small way by a batsman whose initiation to Test cricket had been rough to say the least.

Many others have had the misfortune of being dropped forever after even playing once, the sort of shot he did in both innings of his debut. Ravi Shastri and the others in the think-tank resisted that temptation and the result was a well-made century as India’s new opener.

Of course he had some luck on his way to getting there. And then he made some of his own too.

Steven Smith dropped him after Shane Watson had frustrated Rahul enough to force him to play out of his comfort zone. The Aussie skipper immediately blamed the overhead Spidercam wire for his discomfiture and that has led the broadcaster and the board to issue a joint statement regarding the same.

There had earlier been a missed run-out chance that led to Smith gesticulate in frustration at his deputy and the fielder at short fine-leg and even before that, the umpire had missed an inside edge on to the short-leg fielder – which, in all fairness to the umpire, hadn’t even been spotted by the fielder himself, or by the ‘keeper.

Australia came back into the game in the final session when Rahul finally perished to the pull yet again, and Ajinkya Rahane and comeback-man Suresh Raina fell within the space of two deliveries to Watson.

Kohli is still at the crease and giving him company in their 50-run stand is Wriddhiman Saha.

Saha had played as a stand-in for MS Dhoni in the first Test and then gone on to play a stroke very unbecoming of the situation on the final day of the game. The 50 balls he played on day three showed his usual side, a workman-like, doughty Test batsman who can bat for longer periods if necessary and if India need to bail themselves out of a potentially sticky situation, he will need to carry on doing the same.

The Indian lower-order has been bolstered by the presence of R Ashwin and Bhuveshwar Kumar, but they will have to eschew the free-flowing stroke-play they are used to in order to survive on this track.

Kohli will know as a captain what he needs to do, and just as he showed on the third day, a cautious approach might just be the prudent way to go.

India’s mandate can be simply put. Bat on and on and on.

At the very least, they need to survive till the lunch break, but if they are looking to reduce their stint at the crease in the final innings, it will make sense for them to go on longer than that.

Australia will hope for some reverse, and for Lyon to take more control of the spin department but can be expected to dry up the runs the way they did in the first session on day three. Can they frustrate the Indian lower-order enough though on this benign pitch?

You can follow the live score of the fourth day of this fourth Australia v India Test from ​10:30 am local time on Friday and post your comments ​in the section ​below.

The Crowd Says:

2015-01-09T13:08:45+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


The Aust bowlers have been in the field for 2 days with barely a session's rest.

2015-01-09T11:33:55+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


I would declare overnight for sure. If Australia let India make 349 on day 5 on this pitch they deserve to lose. It's offering variations in pace and bounce and taking a lot of turn. Chasing down 300 in a day would be a sensational effort let alone 349 which requires them to score at close to 4rpo. By declaring overnight Australia will get 10 overs with the second new ball at the end of the day and that could be worth 3-4 wickets.

2015-01-09T10:35:21+00:00

SCC

Guest


Ok, Burns was great with the bat. Let's not forget though that his work would not have been nearly as necessary if he had held those catches...

2015-01-09T10:07:37+00:00

marc

Guest


could say the same about us then.

2015-01-09T10:06:29+00:00

Maggie

Guest


Excellent, get your son to start practising under a helmet at short leg right now. Then he might be better than Burns when he gets his test call-up!

2015-01-09T10:03:51+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


We did thanks. I've said a little thank you to the Gods that Watto didn't score a 60 ball ton though.

2015-01-09T09:43:59+00:00

Craig Watson

Guest


Smithy and Joe Burns have put us in a strong position at stumps with some entertaining, quick fire late runs. It is now up to Lyon to do something similar to Adelaide on the last day. I also expect Smithy to play a part with the ball. Looked dangerous at times in the first innings.

2015-01-09T09:38:22+00:00

Craig Watson

Guest


India were woeful in the first two thirds of the day just dawdling along at snail's pace. What was the purpose They had already batted for almost two days and were still 100 runs behind our total. Had they already put up the white flag? Puzzling indeed.

2015-01-09T09:34:44+00:00

Craig Watson

Guest


Perhaps Virat Kohli should make hay while the sun shines. He and the other top order Indians are thriving on the docile decks we have prepared for this series. But how will he go when he tours South Africa and New Zealand. Kohli could barely buy a run in English condition when India toured there last year. As we know English decks offer both swing and seam. The new Indian skipper might be having a golden summer on similar decks to back home but he will be brought down to earth when India encounter swinging and seaming conditions in NZ plus bouncy decks in South Africa.

2015-01-09T09:10:37+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


Was there any discussion about Ashwin's spell? I can't imagine anyone else has conceded 97 runs in the opening spell of an innings very often.

2015-01-09T09:10:10+00:00

ajay

Guest


aussies are massive fav. with rohit ,raina,saha,..................... in the side once top 3 departs 10-15 overs and it will be all over for india

2015-01-09T09:09:19+00:00

Nudge

Guest


I'd agree with those odds Ronan. Sports bet aren't that far from agreeing with you either. If we were to get Kohli out for less than 40 I'd change your odds to Australia 65% win,34% draw, India 1%win. Hopefully the people who were saying this match can be nothing but a draw 2 days ago will learn, but it happens every time on this site,as soon as the team batting first get a huge tally on a road.

2015-01-09T08:56:35+00:00

Nudge

Guest


Haha. Awesome. Bet you had a great day.

2015-01-09T08:55:20+00:00

Nudge

Guest


If we bat it will be for 2 overs max, but I very much doubt it

2015-01-09T08:43:33+00:00

Pom in Oz

Roar Guru


Awww...

2015-01-09T08:31:49+00:00

jamesb

Guest


But can Lyon take advantage of that? He was disappointing in the first dig.

2015-01-09T08:24:58+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


Just got back from the match having taken my 10 year old son for his first full day of Test cricket. He wants to grow up to be Joe Burns!

2015-01-09T08:24:20+00:00

JGK

Roar Guru


Bat for 30 mins tomorrow morning...

2015-01-09T08:21:31+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


No Clark if Aus declare overnight the RRR for India would actually be 3.88rpo, which would be extremely difficult to maintain over 90 overs on a pitch that is starting to play tricks.

2015-01-09T07:31:25+00:00

Shaw

Roar Rookie


Ps: I'd like to think he walked into the dressing room, rubbed his hands together and said "excellent Smithers "

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