Ranji Trophy final: Unadkat, Sakariya help Saurashtra wrest early advantage | Cricket - Hindustan Times
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Ranji Trophy final: Unadkat, Sakariya help Saurashtra wrestle early advantage against Bengal

By, Kolkata
Feb 16, 2023 11:32 PM IST

Pacers share three wickets apiece, skittling hosts for 174 before ending Day 1 on 81/2

Jaydev Unadkat and Chetan Sakariya took three wickets apiece as Saurashtra skittled out Bengal for 174 on a lively Eden Gardens pitch on the first day of their Ranji Trophy final here on Thursday. Saurashtra ended the day on 81/2, trailing Bengal by 93 runs, and with an early upper hand in a final that looked set for an outright finish. With the ball still 17 overs old, the morning session of Day 2 is going to be crucial for Bengal if they want to stay in the game but the batters need to come good too. Saurashtra, on the other hand, will look to get as big a first innings as possible considering they have fairly long batting—comprising Arpit Vasavada, Sheldon Jackson, Chirag Jani and Prerak Mankad—to come.

Jaydev Unadkat appeals for a wicket during the Ranji Trophy final.(PTI)
Jaydev Unadkat appeals for a wicket during the Ranji Trophy final.(PTI)

“Obviously, the day didn't belong to us, but we are hoping to make a strong comeback on Day 2,” said Bengal captain Manoj Tiwary after the end of play. Losing the toss played a big role in Bengal’s capitulation but equally thoughtless was the shot selection. Despite taking two wickets, Bengal’s bowling was largely wayward and indisciplined—Akash Deep conceded four no-balls—as Saurashtra scored at almost five runs per over. Tiwary is still hopeful of mounting a comeback. “It's about eight wicket-taking balls and we must ensure we don't leak runs tomorrow. There's a long way to go in this match and anything can be possible.”

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Eight balls was all Saurashtra needed to remove Bengal’s openers. Unadkat, released from India’s Test squad to play the final, dismissed Abhimanyu Easwaran with a beautiful inswinger that popped to short-leg after taking a bat-pad. Sumanta Gupta—handed a debut—was opened up next over by Sakariya; the ball taking an edge and flying to the slip cordon. Two balls later, No. 3 Sudip Kumar Gharami planted his front foot on off-stump and shouldered arms to Sakariya, only to see the ball swing back in and take his off-stump. Unadkat then came round the wicket and teased Tiwary into fishing a fifth stump ball to gully. Anustup Majumdar, Bengal’s crisis man, was next removed caught behind before Akash Ghatak miscued a pull. At 65/6, it looked like they would struggle to even reach 100.

But then came the turnaround—a 101-run partnership between allrounder Shahbaz Ahmed and wicketkeeper-batter Abishek Porel for the seventh wicket as they batted out more than a session after a catastrophic 90 minutes. Ahmed took on the role of aggressor, clipping Unadkat through square-leg for a four off the first ball he faced. Abhishek was slower off the blocks but he was the anchor Bengal needed as Ahmed started threading the gaps. It wasn’t a chanceless passage of play though as balls took edges, landed just in front of slip or flew perilously close to the stumps. Saurashtra lost the plot a bit as well, wasting two reviews and then deciding not to challenge a leg-before decision against Ahmed when he was on 38. Replays later showed the ball was hitting stumps.

Both batters rode their luck and capitalised on the errors to find more boundaries, grafting a 101-run stand before Ahmed was caught at short leg off a Dharmendrasinh Jadeja delivery. Tea was called at the fall of that wicket, and with Bengal having reached 166/7, 200 didn’t seem impossible. But Saurashtra quickly snuffed out that hope as they took the last three wickets—including that of Abhishek who fell just after scoring his fifty—in the space of 12 balls.

With almost 90 minutes still to go for the end of day's play, Bengal’s seamers almost wasted the new ball. Akash kept overstepping, forcing Tiwary to change ends while Mukesh Kumar was trying to take the ball away when inswing is his strength. Harvik Desai's charge helped Saurashtra race away to 38 before Jay Gohil played Akash on to his stumps. But Bengal failed to build on that pressure, conceding too many boundary balls till No 3 Vishwaraj Jadeja edged Mukesh to the wicketkeeper in the penultimate over, prompting Saurashtra to send Sakariya as the nightwatchman.

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  • ABOUT THE AUTHOR
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    Somshuvra Laha is a sports journalist with over 11 years' experience writing on cricket, football and other sports. He has covered the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup, the 2016 ICC World Twenty20, cricket tours of South Africa, West Indies and Bangladesh and the 2010 Commonwealth Games for Hindustan Times.

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