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Calculated aggression

When Steve Waugh said Australia would come hard at India, he wasn't kidding

Rahul Bhatia
12-Dec-2003
When Steve Waugh said Australia would come hard at India, he wasn't kidding. A team scoring 400 for 5 in a single day was not something the Adelaide Oval had experienced before. Australia went on a run-riot and overtook the 387 they scored against West Indies on the second day of the fourth Test of the Frank Worrell Trophy in 1968-69.
A closer look at the scoring pattern lets slip an interesting ploy.
Session
Runs
Overs
Runrate
Morning session
135
27
5
Afternoon session
106
24
4.42
Evening session
159
39
4.08
Australia played to put India on the defensive as soon as the game began, and once the pressure was on, the batsmen could step off the gas, play a relatively safer game, and still end up with a huge total on the first day.
Batsman Strike rates
Langer
80.6
Hayden
80.0
Ponting
71.5
Martyn
76.9
Waugh
56.6
Katich
68.8
Gilchrist
90.0
Ricky Ponting was unbeaten at the day's end, with a score of 176 in 246 balls with 24 boundaries. His strike rate of 71.5% suggests a poor bowling performance, but on closer inspection, it was Ponting's frame of mind and the pitch's true bounce that attributed more to his final score. Ponting had an in-control percentage of 87.4, compared to the team total of 84%. His back-foot strokeplay was authoritative, and the number of runs he scored off the front foot reveals how consistent the bounce was.
 
Front foot
Back foot
Runs scored
99
62
Balls faced
169
60
When Ponting reached his hundred, he achieved the rare distinction of scoring all 16 of his boundaries on the offside. It had a lot to do with the line the Indians bowled.
Percentage of deliveries bowled to Ponting on the offside
Bowler
% offside
Agarkar
100
Pathan
88.2
Nehra
91.8
Kumble
82.4
For a large part of the day, India bowled a good length, and just short of a good length. The arrival of Steve Waugh, unsurprisingly, brought a change in tactics. Of the nine bouncers bowled in the day, five were directed at Waugh. Ironically, it took a half-volley - just the delivery the bowlers were trying to avoid - from Ashish Nehra to dismiss him.