Australia won by 10 wkts
PLAYER OF THE MATCH : David Warner
Batter
Bowler
That's a wrap to our coverage of the series opener. Considering the India-Australia rivalry that has heated up over the last decade or so, this was a disappointing start to the series. A one-sided duel, with India never really in the game. Make no mistake, this defeat will not just sting the Indians, it will deflate them. There isn't much time for recovery either, with the next ODI on 17th at Rajkot. It's do-or-die zone and India's character will be tested. Australia won't want to leave it to the third game to pocket the series. Hopefully, we get a more competitive game next time around. On that note, this is Hari Sadanandan signing off on behalf of Vineet Anantharaman, Kumar Abhisekh Das, Nikhil Jadhav and Naga. Cheers and good night!
Harsha Bhogle: Australia have been magnificent. With bat, and especially with ball. For India, a game to forget.
Warner, Man of the Match: (If anything changed after the one-year ban) I think I have always had the hunger to score runs and put the team off to a good start. Was a great effort from our bowlers in the afternoon. To put India down to just 254 on their home soil was incredible and to then close the game down like we did was brilliant. Finchy started really well, allowed me to take my time. For us, it was about rotating strike during the middle overs. Wanted to hit the odd boundary, hang in there and take the game deep. We knew that if we were there till the end, we could do it with ease. I do a lot of training, I love to field. As a kid too, I loved to field. I enjoy that part of the game, I love to work 100 percent on my fitness.
Finch, winning captain: I thought the way we fought back during the middle overs was impressive. Shikhar and KL were batting really well, looking to accelerate. So, I'm proud of the way the boys fought back. We could still brush up in the field a bit but that happens sometimes when the outfield is slightly damp. Overall, a good performance. Always tough to beat India in India. (On Warner's red-hot ODI form) He's been fantastic, especially in this format of the game. He's been unstoppable for quite sometime now. Quite special. Once he gets in, he has so many options to score. Always great to bat with him. Of course, India are a quality team and we expect them to bounce back.
Kohli, losing captain: We were totally outplayed in all departments. It's a strong Australian team, if you don't play well, they could hurt you. We saw that with the bat in hand. We didn't get enough runs. I thought we were too respectful at certain phases and it cost us. Can't do that against a team like Australia. This is a chance for the team to bounce back but as I said, credit to Australia today. International cricket is always priceless. The experience you get in any format does well for you when you play other formats. The game time you get is important. If you perform in any format, it gives you confidence for the other formats. Today was one of those days when we weren't allowed to get into the game at all. (On him at no.4) We've had this discussion many times in the past as well, due to the way KL has been batting. We've tried to fit him into the team. Having said that, it hasn't gone our way when I have batted at no.4, so we have to see how it goes. At the same time, it's about giving opportunities to the other guys. People need not panic for just this one game. I think I am allowed to experiment a bit.
Deepu's stats corner:
Fourth consecutive ODI win for Australia against India in India - first side to do so since Australia themselves between 2003 & 2006.
Highest targets chased down without losing a wkt (ODI)
279 SA v Ban Kimberley 2017 (Amla, De Kock)
256 Aus v Ind Mumbai 2020 (Finch, Warner)
255 Eng v SL Edgbaston 2016 (Hales, Roy)
236 NZ v Zim Harare 2015 (Guptill, Latham)
230 SL v Eng Colombo RPS 2011 (Dilshan, Tharanga)
Third successive loss for India at the Wankhede
Lost to SA by 214 runs, 2015
Lost to NZ by 6 wkts, 2017
Lost to Aus by 10 wkts, 2020
Highest p'ships for AUS (ODIs)
284 T Head - D Warner v Pak (1st) Adelaide 2017
260 S Smith - D Warner v Afg (2nd) Perth 2015
258*A Finch - D Warner v Ind (1st) Mumbai WS 2020
10-wicket wins vs India (ODIs)
113 (target) NZ MCG 1981
200 WI Bridgetown 1997
165 SA Sharjah 2000
189 SA Kolkata 2005
256 Aus Mumbai Wankhede 2020 *
Rishabh Pant update: He is under observation at the moment. His progress will be tracked overnight. A specialist has been consulted and an update will be given accordingly.
20:24 Local Time, 14:54 GMT, 20:24 IST: An extremely one-sided contest and the Aussies are 1-0 up in this three-match ODI series. 255 was below-par but the way the visiting openers batted, I doubt if even 320-330 would have made any difference. India's bowlers lacked discipline and were mauled around by a determined Warner-Finch pair, both of them cruising to unbeaten tons. The Aussie skipper was the aggressor initially, allowing Warner to take his time but once the latter got set, runs bled from both ends. The scoring rate was ultra-rapid and it's safe to say that the game was virtually over inside the first 15-20 overs itself. India's batsmen weren't good enough earlier in the afternoon, but you have to credit Australia's bowlers, the spinners in particular. Australia now have won four ODIs in a row in India against India. They are starting to have a mental edge over Kohli's men.
Shami to Warner, FOUR, that's a 10-wicket drubbing! Low full toss, straight-batted drive by Warner and nobody moves as this races away to the long-off fence. Clinical and ruthless from the Aussies
Misbah: "This called a thumping victory and brute humiliation of opposition."
Shami to Warner, FOUR, short and down leg, Warner just gets inside the line and controls the pull nicely. Fine leg is quite fine and this is placed squarer
Shami to Warner, wide, well-directed bumper by Shami but it's too high as Warner evades it. 250-run partnership!
Shami to Warner, no run, low full toss and it's toe-ended towards mid-off
Highest p'ships vs India (ODIs)
249*A Finch - D Warner (1st) Mumbai WS 2020
242 S Smith - G Bailey (3rd) Perth 2016
235 G Kirsten - H Gibbs (1st) Kochi 2000
234*R Ponting - D Martyn (3rd) Joburg 2003
231 A Finch - D Warner (1st) Bengaluru 2017
- four of the top five by Australia
Shami to Warner, no run, banged in short on off stump, Warner sits back and pulls this towards mid-wicket
Karthikeyan N: "India have a lot of homework that needs to be done in terms of consistency in batting and hitting the deck in bowling on flat tracks. Turns out to be a easy outing for the Aussies. Aussie squad looks formidable again like their 2003 side."
END OF OVER 37
5 Runs
AUS: 249 - 0
0 1 0 1 2 1
David Warner
120 (108)
Aaron Finch
110 (114)
Ravindra Jadeja
8-0-41-0
Jadeja to Warner, 1 run, fuller and on the pads, Warner flicks it away to deep square leg
Jadeja to Warner, 2 runs, quicker one on middle and leg, Warner makes room and threads the gap at backward point with a nice open-faced punch