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India vs Australia, Live Cricket Score, Fourth Test Day 3 in Sydney: Khawaja & Harris Bring Up Fifty Partnership

Cricketnext Staff | Updated: January 5, 2019, 5:38 AM IST

4th Test, Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG), Sydney 03 - 07 January, 2019

Live Now : Toss won by India (decided to bat)

05:38(IST)

The Aussies are dealing in boundaries at the moment, Jadeja and Kuldeep are bowling in tandem but till now there has been nothing on offer for the bowlers. Looks like a long day for the Indians in the field. Australia are 67/0. 

05:32(IST)

FIFTY PARTNERSHIP: That's another four from Harris, this time off Jadeja. That four brings up the fifty partnership between Khawaja and Harris. Australia march forward to 57/0. 

05:28(IST)

FOUR: Harris is looking in great form. That is good news for the Aussies as he leans into a drive of Shami and the ball races down the long off boundary. He moves into the 30s. Australia are 47/0. 

05:22(IST)

CHANCE: Jadeja comes into the attack and induces a false shot from Harris. Rahul at mid on takes a brilliant catch. But as soon as he gets up, Rahul signals to the captain that he fell short. Harris survives. Australia are 36/0. 

05:20(IST)
05:15(IST)

India will have to come up with a really special effort to bowl the hosts out twice on this flat pitch to win the match. For now Harris and Khawaja have looked comfortable. They are 30/0. 

05:11(IST)

No assistance for Shami or Bumrah for the wicket. With India going with two spinners, they could be in action pretty soon in the day and fast bowlers could be seen in the support role only. Australia move to 29/0. 

05:04(IST)

Jasprit Bumrah starts the proceedings and the first ball is a loosener. Harris makes the most of it and gets three runs. India bowlers will have be really tight. Australia are 27/0.  

05:01(IST)
04:55(IST)

We are just minutes away from the start of the third day's play. Another good in the offing for the batsmen. Expect hard work for the Indian bowlers and this will be the biggest test for them in the series. 

04:49(IST)

India amassed 622 for 7 in their first innings and have kind of already batted Australia out of the game. Ponting said Khawaja and Shaun Marsh will have to step up if Australia want to save this game. "The important thing for the Australians is they have to bat really big," he said. "Even if it means it's going to be a drawn game, they have to bat really big because if you look back to Adelaide and certainly the first innings in Melbourne, they let a couple of really good opportunities slip there by not making enough runs in the first innings.

04:43(IST)

"He played really well in the second innings in Perth in a really critical position and got 72 in a good partnership with (skipper Tim) Paine that got the Aussies a big enough lead to go on and win that game. "He's the classiest player we have and probably hasn't got the rewards out of the series that he would've wanted to."

04:27(IST)

The former Australian skipper had earlier predicted that Usman Khawaja will outscore Kohli in the series, but all the left-hander has managed is one half-century in the first three Tests. "I think he (Khawaja) has played well," Ponting said. "He's struggled to rotate the strike more in this series than ever before. He's faced a lot of balls.

04:21(IST)

"To be fair, India have probably had the best of the batting conditions. The first part of the game in Melbourne was the best time to bat, and now (day one and two) is going to be the best time to bat here in Sydney. "You look at the top five run-scorers and four of them are Indians and we've got Travis Head sitting at No.5 with 217 runs when Rishabh has got 350 as their keeper-batter. That highlights how little impact our batsmen have had on this series."

04:17(IST)

"As far as I'm concerned, this batting group through this series has made way too many mistakes," Ponting told cricket.com.au. "Technical, mental, whatever those mistakes may be, they’ve made a lot of mistakes. "It hasn't necessarily been the first mistake they've made either that's led to them getting out. They've made a lot of mistakes then eventually got out.

04:15(IST)

Ricky Ponting feels Australia's batting group have made way too many mistakes and that has led to the team's downfall in the ongoing Test series against India. India's immovable object at No.3, Cheteshwar Pujara has plundered 521 runs from a record 1,258 balls faced in the four-match series, while the likes of Rishabh Pant (350 runs) and Virat Kohli (282 runs) too have been amongst runs. Meanwhile, for Australia, only Travis Head has managed to breach the 200-run mark in the series, which India lead 2-1.

04:07(IST)

With Australia 598 runs away from their first innings total, India clearly have their nose in front in this match, but their bowlers face an uphill task of gettting the opposition out twice on this flat SCG wicket. Hello and welcome to the day three of fourth Test. 

India vs Australia, Live Cricket Score, Fourth Test Day 3 in Sydney: Khawaja & Harris Bring Up Fifty Partnership

(Image: AP)

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Live Updates:The Aussies are dealing in boundaries at the moment, Jadeja and Kuldeep are bowling in tandem but till now there has been nothing on offer for the bowlers. Looks like a long day for the Indians in the field. Australia are 67/0.

Catch all the live action from the third day of the fourth Test between Australia and India in Sydney on Cricketnext.com's live blog.

Day 2 round-up One by one, India's batsmen piled on the misery on helpless and hapless Australia bowlers, making them toil for 167.2 overs before declaring on 622 for 7. Pujara scored 193, Pant was unbeaten on 159 while Jadeja scored 81, all but ensuring India will win their first ever series in Australia. And no team has ever lost a game after scoring 600 or more in first innings in Test history. At stumps on the second day, Australia were 24 for 0 with Marcus Harris and Usman Khawaja in the middle, trailing India by 598 runs.

India began the day on 303 for 4, which meant the only way Australia could have fought back was through some quick wickets in the first session. They did get one, when Hanuma Vihari was caught at bat-pad off Nathan Lyon, the third umpire sticking with the on-field call despite a review. The 101-run stand for the fifth wicket was broken, but bigger partnerships were to follow. Pujara kept batting and batting, going past his 150. Pant too seemed to have got a hang of India's approach - keep batting, keep grinding. He was relatively sedate initially and gave good company to Pujara, taking India to 389 for 5 by lunch. Pujara seemed set for a double-ton but was slightly jittery in the 190s. He was dropped by Usman Khawaja at slip off Lyon on 192, but one run later, came down the track to chip a return catch to Lyon. A marathon 373-ball effort had ended, and Pujara walked off to a standing ovation. But that was certainly not the end of the torture for Australia's bowlers. Pant went past his half-century, and opened up in the company of Jadeja. The shots gradually began to come out, and Pant raced to his century off 137 balls. His first 50 had taken 85 balls, the next 50 came off 52. It was the first century by an Indian wicketkeeper in Australia. At the other end, Jadeja was having some fun too. He took a special liking to Pat Cummins, who he slammed for a straight six, celebrated his half-century in typical talwar style. He even hit four fours in an over off Cummins to take India past 600. With each passing ball, one almost felt bad for Australia's bowlers. For the second consecutive match, they were forced to take the third new ball. It only traveled faster to the boundary, as Pant played some audacious strokes. He even tried to reverse-scoop Josh Hazlewood, albeit he didn't connect.

The bowlers were tiring, and India could have gone on and on. A century was there for the taking for Jadeja. A double-ton, for Pant. Jadeja, though, fell 19 short when he stepped down and missed a Lyon delivery, prompting Virat Kohli to declare. It was Lyon's fourth wicket - a small consolation after bowling 57.2 overs. Hazlewood (35), Cummins (28) and Mitchell Starc (26) had plenty of work as well. Australia then had a tricky 10-over period to negotiate. They should have lost Khawaja for nought, but Pant dropped a sitter after Mohammed Shami found the edge. It was a small blip on an otherwise brilliant day for India.

Team Rankings

RankTeamPointsRating
1 India 4397 116
2 England 5310 108
3 New Zealand 3213 107
4 South Africa 3712 106
5 Australia 3663 102
FULL Ranking
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