Cricinfo Mobile
Email Feedback Print

India v New Zealand, 2nd Test, Mohali, 5th day

Tuffey's off-theory worked a treat

Daryl Tuffey cut down on pace, and concentrated on off-stump accuracy to embarrass India on the final day at Mohali

Dileep Premachandran

October 20, 2003

Text size: A | A

When India's batsmen emerged this morning, they would have expected Daniel Vettori to be the main obstacle between them and the follow-on target of 431. But as it turned out, he was relegated to bit-part status by a magnificent spell of controlled medium-pace from Daryl Tuffey, which pushed India over the edge and into the humiliating situation of following on in a home Test match.

Tuffey never attempted to match the pace of Ian Butler, bowling most of his deliveries at around 125kph, but he compensated with an unerringly accurate line that gave the batsmen no room to take liberties. His spell in the morning - straddling two innings - produced 4 for 14 from 10 overs, and was characterised by his ability to put the ball on a spot just on or about off stump, while also obtaining occasional steepling bounce. Of the 60 balls he bowled, 55 pitched on or outside off stump, and all four wickets came courtesy of edges to the wicketkeeper or slip.

Line Balls
Outside off 47
off 08
Middle Off 01
Leg 03
Outside Leg 01

He started off by snipping off India's excuse of a tail to enforce the follow-on. L Balaji and Zaheer Khan were both undone by deliveries that pitched bang in the corridor of uncertainty outside off stump. Two feathered edges did the rest.

But Tuffey wasn't done. Virender Sehwag, who lashed a cavalier 130 in the first innings, was tempted into slashing at one that was just a mite too close to his body, while Rahul Dravid played a more hesitant stroke to one that was pitched on off stump. Stephen Fleming took both catches, and Tuffey went to lunch well pleased.

As if to prove that he wasn't just a morning person, he came back after the interval to castle Sachin Tendulkar. Medium-pace bowling in Indian conditions doesn't get much better than that.

Dileep Premachandran is assistant editor of Wisden Cricinfo in India.

RSS Feeds: Dileep Premachandran
Email Feedback Print
FeedbackTop
Share
E-mail
Feedback
Print
Dileep PremachandranClose
Dileep Premachandran Associate editor Dileep Premachandran gave up the joys of studying thermodynamics with a view to following in the footsteps of his literary heroes. Instead, he wound up at the Free Press Journal in Mumbai, before Gentleman gave him a column called Replay. He arrived at Wisden Cricinfo after also having worked for total-cricket.com. Sunil Gavaskar and Greg Chappell were his early cricket heroes, though attempts to emulate them had hideous results. He considers himself obscenely fortunate to have watched India's incredible comeback against invincible Australia at the Eden Gardens in 2001, and Liverpool's inc-RED-ible resurrection in the 2005 Champions' League final. His girlfriend remains astonishingly tolerant of his sporting obsessions.
Related Links
Players/Officials: Daryl Tuffey
Series/Tournaments: New Zealand tour of India
Teams: India | New Zealand
Tour Results
India v New Zealand at Hyderabad (Decc) - Nov 15
India won by 145 runs
Australia v New Zealand at Guwahati - Nov 9
Australia won by 44 runs
India v New Zealand at Cuttack - Nov 6
New Zealand won by 4 wkts (with 15 balls remaining)
Australia v New Zealand at Pune - Nov 3
Australia won by 2 wkts (with 1 ball remaining)
Australia v New Zealand at Faridabad - Oct 29
Australia won by 8 wkts (with 200 balls remaining)
More results »
  • Twenty years of Tendulkar
Sponsored Links

Access your Indian Rupee earnings from anywhere in the world.

Debate now on the new ESPN Soccernet Castrol Rankings Blog

Cricshop.com - leading online cricket store

on www.scrum.com

20 Years of Tendulkar

Cricinfo celebrates two decades of the maestro

Bodyline

Bowl a fast one

Cricinfo Mobile Site

Our brand new mobile site