BRISBANE: A pair of unlikely third-day batting heroes Sunday gave India a fighting chance of securing the draw they need in the fourth Test against Australia to retain the Border-Gavaskar Trophy.
Washington Sundar and Shardul Thakur, in just his second Test, put on 123 runs for the seventh wicket - a record for India at the Gabba - taking their team from a precarious 186 for seven to 309 before Thakur was bowled by Pat Cummins for an entertaining 67.
All-rounder Sundar, on debut, batted well with the tail until he guided a Mitchell Starc short ball to Cameron Green in the gully to fall for 62.
By the time Mohammad Siraj was bowled by Josh Hazlewood, giving him figures of 5-57, India had reached 336, only 33 runs behind Australia's first innings total of 369.
Australian openers Marcus Harris and David Warner survived six testing overs as Australia finished the third day on 21 without loss, a lead of 54 runs with all 10 second innings wickets intact.
Without Sundar and Thakur, India would have been in far greater trouble against an Australia side who must win the match to regain the Border-Gavaskar Trophy with the four-match series locked at 1-1. The two smashed the previous seventh-wicket record for India at the Gabba of 58, set by Kapil Dev and Manoj Prabhakar in 1991.
Thakur said he used some words coach Ravi Shastri said to him before he played a match in the ODI series as inspiration.
"He said if you perform in this one today you will be rewarded and people will love you for your performance - that one thing was on my mind," he said.
"That was my biggest positive and keeping those things in my mind, I just kept playing."
Thakur said he and Sundar worked well with each other to make sure they kept their concentration.
"If someone was losing focus or playing a loose shot we would immediately come together and say let's get back to normal and play the basics," he said.
By contrast, India's top-order batsmen all squandered chances to score heavily, with all but Shubman Gill getting starts but all except Cheteshwar Pujara falling to rash shots.
Scoreboard
Australia 1st innings 369 (M. Labuschagne 108, T. Paine 50; T. Natarajan 3-78, W. Sundar 3-89)
======================================India 1st innings (overnight 62-2)======================================R. Sharma c Starc b Lyon 44S. Gill c Smith b Cummins 7C. Pujara c Paine b Hazlewood 25A. Rahane c Wade b Starc 37M. Agarwal c Smith b Hazlewood 38R. Pant c Green b Hazlewood 23W. Sundar c Green b Starc 62S. Thakur b Cummins 67N. Saini c Smith b Hazlewood 5M. Siraj b Hazlewood 13T. Natarajan not out 1======================================Extras: (b5, lb7, nb2) 14======================================Total: (all out, 111.4 overs) 336======================================
Fall of wickets: 1-11 (Gill), 2-60 (Sharma), 3-105 (Pujara), 4-144 (Rahane), 5-161 (Agarwal), 6-186 (Pant), 7-309 (Thakur), 8-320 (Saini), 9-328 (Sundar), 10-336 (Siraj)
Bowling: Starc 23-3-88-2, Hazlewood 24.4-6-57-5 (2nb), Cummins 27-5-94-2, Green 8-1-20-0, Lyon 28-9-65-1, Labuschagne 1-1-0-0
======================================Australia 2nd innings======================================M. Harris not out 1D. Warner not out 20======================================Total: (for 0 wkts, 6 overs) 21======================================
To bat: M. Labuschagne, S. Smith, M. Wade, C. Green, T. Paine. P.Cummins, M. Starc, N. Lyon, J. Hazlewood
Bowling: Siraj 2-1-12-0, Natarajan 3-0-6-0, Sundar 1-0-3-0
Toss: Australia
Umpires: Bruce Oxenford (AUS), Paul Wilson (AUS)
TV umpire: Paul Reiffel (AUS)
Match referee: David Boon (AUS).-AFP