India had a forgettable outing with the bat on Sunday as
they were bundled out for 234 in the chase of 444 against Australia in the
World Test Championship final.
India had a forgettable outing with the bat on Sunday as
they were bundled out for 234 in the chase of 444 against Australia in the
World Test Championship final. India needed 280 on Day 5 with seven wickets in
hand but got bowled out even before the first session was completed. Nathan
Lyon and Scott Boland were the pick among the bowlers as they
took four and three wickets respectively. Australia became the first team to
clinch all four ICC titles while India lost another opportunity to clinch their
first ICC trophy since 2013.
After the match, India opening batter Shubman Gill took to Twitter and posted a heartfelt message. He posted a picture of Team India and wrote, "Not finished."
Earlier on Day 4,
Gill was caught in the slips by Cameron Green off Scott Boland's
bowling but replays showed that the ball touched the ground when the fielder
made impact. The on-field umpires were not sure about the incident but the
third umpire decided to give him out resulting in a massive controversy.
The young batter
took to his Twitter and posted a picture of the catch along with a cryptic
caption that included the 'facepalm' emoji. Even the likes of Virender
Sehwag, Ravi Shastri, and many fans questioned the verdict of the TV
umpire.
Coming to the
match, this was India's second defeat in successive WTC finals after losing to
New Zealand in 2021 in the inaugural edition.
Scott Boland
sparked a dramatic collapse as Australia hammered India by 209 runs to win the
World Test Championship final at The Oval on Sunday. India, set a record 444 to
win, resumed on 164-3.
But they collapsed
to 234 all out, losing seven wickets for 70 runs inside 24 overs before lunch
on the fifth day. Boland did the initial damage with two wickets in an over,
including the prize scalp of Virat Kohli, on his way to figures of 3-46 in
16 overs. Off-spinner Nathan Lyon (4-41) then polished off the tail.