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Test cricket triumphs as Laxman has proved he's Australia 's nemesis: Roebuck | Noted cricket columnist Peter Roebuck has described the recently concluded Mohali Test between India and
Australia as a triumph of the longer version of the game. "Ultimately, the battle
between scrapper and stylist, gritty and graceful, artisan and artist ended in
favour of a vastly relieved home side. Regardless, it was a triumph for Test cricket.
The thrill-a-minute versions of the game were put in their place by this slow-burning
contest," he writes in a column for the Sydney Morning Herald. He says that the
thrilling manner in which the Indians secured a victory after five-days of fierce
contest "was as uplifting as defeat was heartbreaking." "Grown men could not bear
to watch and spectators and reporters alike were in a tizzy as the final pair
attempted to squeeze the last few runs from a grudging opponent. It was an unforgettable
finish to a terrific match. Emotions were pitched high," he adds. Commenting on
man of the moment - V.V.S. Laxman, Roebuck said he "was the key figure on the
final day. All things seem possible whilst he remains at the crease. Australians
and tension bring out the best in him. Romps in the park make him appear humdrum.
Here he produced an astonishing array of strokes, pulls played without footwork,
caresses through cover, flicks off his hip and all the while he kept his head."
"Laxman belongs against the giants. But the Australians already knew that. Ishant
Sharma offered him sound support in a nerveless collaboration. And so the two
wounded players with fine temperaments determined the outcome of a fascinating
match," he added. On the Australians, he said, they had every reason to be proud
of their performance. "Ponting's side is not the most formidable to wear the famed
green cap but it does not lack determination. It took a wonderful innings from
a superb batsman (Laxman) to deny them," he says. "Most of all the Australians
worked hard as a team. However, the performance was not without its flaws. The
middle-order batting remains a headache. Hauritz offered a surfeit of soft deliveries
wide of the sticks. Moreover, a few things did go the visitors' way," Roebuck
adds. He described Ponting's leadership as admirable, but some of his tactics
as surprising. "In every other respect Ponting had a fine match. Australia upheld
the spirit of the game. By and large India did the same. It's a hard game or it
is nothing. Let's not dwell on every trifle. It was a great match and that's the
end of it," he concludes.
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