Australia win final ODI but lose series to India
David Warner and Mitchell Marsh show some glove-love after giving Australia a rollicking start•BCCI
David Warner and Mitchell Marsh show some glove-love after giving Australia a rollicking start•BCCI

ESPNCRICINFO) – Attacking fifties from the top four, backed up by Glenn Maxwell’s frugal four-for on return helped Australia avoid a clean sweep, as they got the better of India by 66 runs in the third and final ODI in Rajkot. India still took the series 2-1, having won the opening two games convincingly.
Both sides made a host of changes, Australia five and India six, from the second ODI. Batting first on what looked like a placid Rajkot surface, Mitchell Marsh, Marnus Labuschagne, Steven Smith, and David Warner all scored fifties to propel Australia to 352 for 7.

In reply, Rohit Sharma bashed a 57-ball 81, while Virat Kohli scored a more sedate fifty, but the lower middle-order failed to get going, as India were bowled out for 286 in 49.4 overs.
Australia, playing a near full-strength side, took charged up from the get-go. They raced to 90 for 1, with India conceding 11 fours and five sixes in the first ten overs. And it was Jasprit Bumrah they targetted, who had a game of two halves. He conceded 0 for 51 off his first five overs, and 3 for 30 off his last five, but seemed off the boil with his lengths, overall.
Marsh creamed the first ball he received from the fast bowler through covers, before pummeling him for two fours and six in his second over. Warner took 16 runs off Mohammed Siraj’s second over, before thumping Prasidh Krishna was for 19 off his first as Australia galloped to 50 in 6.1 overs.

Warner soon notched up a half-century of his own, his third of the series, off 32 balls, but failed to carry on. Trying to be a bit too adventurous, Warner premeditated a scoop to a Prasidh length ball on the stumps, but could only get a bit of a glove and a top edge through to the wicketkeeper.
Smith, coming on the back of a duck, was in his element right away. He started off with a typical across-the-line wristy clip, before dishing out a stunning cover-drive against Prasidh.
Spin was introduced in the tenth over, but did not make much of a difference, with both Marsh and Smith collecting boundaries at regular intervals. Marsh brought up his fifty off 45 balls, before the heat started to take its toll, even as Australia breached the 150-mark in the 22nd over.

Bumrah’s second spell also proved expensive, with Marsh laying into him. He hoicked the quick over deep backward square-leg before crashing him for three successive fours. Smith and Marsh added 137 off 119 balls for the second wicket, and when Australia screamed past 200 in 26.2 overs, 400 was on the cards.

But India managed to pull things back well. Marsh, absolutely knackered by the heat, patted a Kuldeep wrong’un to cover to fall for 96. Soon after, Siraj pinned Smith right in front with a length ball that skidded through and missed his attempted flick. Bumrah returned to deceive Alex Carey with a slower off-cutter, and then rattled Maxwell’s off pole with a pinpoint yorker. And, when Cameron Green holed out to long-on, Australia had lost four wickets for 57 in 11 overs, between the 32nd and 43rd.

Labuschagne, however, kept his composure to keep Australia going. He smashed 72 off 58 balls with nine fours, as Australia crossed 350 in the final over. Despite the tall score, India did manage to pull things back in the last part, conceding 122 runs in the last 20 overs, and just 66 off the last ten.
Rohit had a new opening partner in Washington Sundar, and India’s chase got off to a flying start, largely due to Rohit. The duo added 74 for the opening wicket in 65 balls, with Rohit’s contribution being 55 off 35.

The pull worked the magic for the India captain on the day with the shot earning him 35 runs off just ten balls. Starc, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood were all dispatched to various locations over the on-side boundaries, while the extra-cover fence was also peppered more than once.
Rohit raced to his fifty off 31 balls with the help of three fours and five sixes. Ironically, it was a mistimed pull that got him to the landmark. Green purchased some extra bounce outside off, with Rohit managing a top edge on a pull that ballooned straight up. But Starc, running back from short third, failed to latch on to a tough catch.

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