AUSTRALIA’S Steve Smith takes a catch to dismiss Indian batter Shubman Gill off the bowling of off-spinner Nathan Lyon during the fifth Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Friday.—AFP
AUSTRALIA’S Steve Smith takes a catch to dismiss Indian batter Shubman Gill off the bowling of off-spinner Nathan Lyon during the fifth Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Friday.—AFP

SYDNEY: A relentless Scott Boland and Mitchell Starc sliced through an Indian batting line-up missing Rohit Sharma to put Australia in a commanding position after day one of the fifth and final Test here at the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) on Friday.

The tourists were all out for 185 after Jasprit Bumrah — captaining the side with Rohit “rested” — sent his team in at a sold-out SCG.

Boland was the chief destroyer with 4-31 while Starc took 3-49.

In reply, Australia lost Usman Khawaja for two on the last ball before stumps with Bumrah doing the damage, leaving them at 9-1 with Sam Konstas on seven.

There was drama at the end when Bumrah and the 19-year-old Konstas were involved in a spat, setting the scene for a fiery day two.

Australia will regain the Border-Gavaskar trophy for the first time since 2014-15 if they win or draw.

“It was disappointing losing a wicket on the last ball of the day but it’s a pretty good position after they won the toss,” said Boland, whose side leads the series 2-1.

“Hopefully the sun’s out and we can bat all day [on Saturday]. There’s still a nice covering of grass on the wicket and hopefully another good day for us tomorrow.”

None of the Indian batsmen fired, with kingpin Virat Kohli again falling cheaply while Nitish Kumar Reddy, who made a brilliant century in the previous Test at Melbourne, was out for a golden duck.

Kohli had a huge let-off on his first ball and finally departed for 17, following KL Rahul (4), Yashasvi Jaiswal (10) and Shubman Gill (20).

Rishabh Pant made a battling 40 but that was as good as it got for India.

Regular captain and opener Rohit was rested, India said, after failing to get past 10 runs in any of his five innings during the series.

It was a significant move and could spell the end of the 37-year-old’s 67-match Test career.

Fellow veteran Kohli, 36, has similarly been under pressure since an unbeaten 100 in the first Test at Perth, with his inability to again build a big score set to attract scrutiny.

Rahul reverted to opener alongside Jaiswal, with Gill returning at three.

But the ploy backfired with Rahul out softly when Starc tempted him to clip a full delivery to Konstas at cover.

There were concerns ahead of the Test over star seamer Starc’s fitness but he showed no discomfort and routinely troubled the batsmen.

Boland came on after an opening barrage from Pat Cummins and took the big wicket of in-form Jaiswal in his first over, collected smartly at slip by debutant Beau Webster, in the side for the axed Mitchell Marsh.

The hosts were convinced Boland had Kohli out next ball.

The Indian star edged to Steve Smith at second slip, who dived low to his right and got his hand under the ball to scoop it up for Marnus Labuschagne to complete the catch.

But in a big call, third umpire Joel Wilson ruled that part of the ball feathered the ground and Kohli survived.

India seemed destined to reach lunch without further loss but Nathan Lyon drew an outside edge from Gill and Smith took the catch.

Australia tightened the screws when they returned with Kohli adding just five more before Boland struck again with a ball that nipped away, taking an edge to Webster at slip.

The ebullient Pant was criticised for throwing his wicket away in the fourth Test in Melbourne, which Australia won, and he was far more conservative this time.

Peppered with bouncers that repeatedly hit his body, he worked hard before Boland again weaved his magic.

Pant miscued a short ball with Cummins holding the catch at mid-on, then Boland sent Reddy packing on his next delivery to send the crowd wild.

Ravindra Jadeja was dropped twice on his way to 26 before Starc trapped him lbw, with the tail briefly wagging before the end came.

SCOREBOARD

INDIA (1st Innings):

Y. Jaiswal c Webster b Boland 10

K. L. Rahul c Konstas b Starc 4

S. Gill c Smith b Lyon 20

V. Kohli c Webster b Boland 17

R. Pant c Cummins b Boland 40

R. Jadeja lbw Starc 26

N. K. Reddy c Smith b Boland 0

W. Sundar c Carey b Cummins 14

P. Krishna c Konstas b Starc 3

J. Bumrah c Starc b Cummins 22

M. Siraj not out 3

EXTRAS (B-11, LB-9, NB-6) 26

TOTAL (all out, 72.2 overs) 185

FALL OF WICKETS: 1-11 (Rahul), 2-17 (Jaiswal), 3-57 (Gill), 4-72 (Kohli), 5-120 (Pant), 6-120 (Reddy), 7-134 (Jadeja), 8-148 (Sundar), 9-168 (Krishna)

BOWLING: Starc 18-5-49-3 (2nb), Cummins 15.2-4-37-2 (1nb), Boland 20-8-31-4 (1nb), Webster 13-4-29-0 (2nb), Lyon 6-2-19-1

AUSTRALIA (1st Innings):

S. Konstas not out 7

U. Khawaja c Rahul b Bumrah 2

EXTRAS 0

TOTAL (for one wicket, three overs) 9

FALL OF WICKETS: 1-9 (Khawaja)

STILL TO BAT: M. Labuschagne, S. Smith, T. Head, B. Webster, A. Carey, P. Cummins, M. Starc, N. Lyon, S. Boland

BOWLING: Bumrah 2-0-7-1, Siraj 1-0-2-0

UMPIRES: Micheal Gough (England) and Sharfuddola (Bangladesh)

TV UMPIRE: Joel Wilson (West Indies)

MATCH REFEREE: Andy Pycroft (Zimbabwe)

Published in Dawn, January 4th, 2025

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