Ranji Trophy | Pujara, Vasavada wear down Bengal with marathon stand

Cheteshwar Pujara and Arpit Vasavada gave a masterclass in defensive batting with a five-hour partnership on day two, taking Saurashtra to a strong position in their Ranji Trophy final against Bengal here on Tuesday.     

Their 142-run stand off 380 balls wore down the oppositionwho had a slight edge after reducing Saurashtra to 206 for five on the openingday.

   

Pujara (66 off 237), who was on five when he retired hurt onday one due to fever, and Vasavada (106 off 287) batted for two sessions andfive overs as the hosts reached 384 for eight at the close of play.

On day two, the hosts managed 178 runs in 79.1 overs for theloss of three wickets. 

Speedster Mukesh Kumar removed Pujara and Prerak Mankad (0)in the final session but by then the damage had already been done. Bengal tooktheir first wicket of the day in the fifth over after tea with Wriddhiman Sahaeffecting a sharp stumping off Shahbaz Ahmed to send back Vasavada.  

Bengal coach Arun Lal had rated the pitch as “verypoor” on Monday with the odd ball keeping low but their pace attack couldnot make much use of the conditions after Akash Deep struck thrice on dayone.     

Run scoring indeed was difficult but Pujara and Vasavada’splans were crystal clear: tire the bowlers out and pounce on the loose balls.Their stay in the middle may not have been pleasing to the eye but proved to bevery effective.

While it was a typical Pujara knock, full of patience,Vasavada, who is coached by the India batsman’s father Arvind Pujara, made abigger contribution to the team’s cause with a back-to-back hundred and fourthof the season. 

Vasavada, who had made a match-winning knock against Gujaratin the semi-final, played with remarkable patience and composure. His inningscomprised 11 fours. This was Vasavada’s eighth first-class hundred. 

It was a commendable effort from Pujara too, consideringthat he had not been keeping well ever since his return from New Zealand lastweek.

Such was the slow pace of the Pujara-Vasavada stand that thefirst boundary of the bat came in the 15th over of the day when Vasavada pulledAkash Deep.

Bengal, who had bowled 80.5 overs on day one, took the newball after the 85th over but it did not lead to a breakthrough.

Vasavada brought his fifty with a four off off-spinner ArnabNandi, driving him past mid-on. Pujara broke the shackles in the following overby stepping out to cover-drive left-arm spinner Ahmed. Soon after, the Testspecialist survived an lbw appeal after Bengal went for the limited DRS.

The closest Bengal came to getting a wicket in the afternoonsession was when Vasavada straight-drove Mukesh, who claimed the ball kissedhis hand before hitting the stumps with Pujara at the non-striker’s end.However, the appeal was turned down as there was no conclusive evidence.

The left-handed Vasavada reached three figures 20 minutesbefore the tea break as he cut one off Nandi through cover, leading to anintense celebration. The entire dressing room applauded his valuable effort forwhich he also got a hug from Pujara.   

Pujara, who collected five boundaries, got his half-centuryoff 191 balls at the stroke of tea. In the morning and afternoon sessioncombined, Saurashtra scored 133 runs in 58.1 overs. Pujara’s best shot of theday came when he caressed one off Akash Deep between cover and point.Saurashtra batsman Vishvaraj Jadeja, who scoreda half-century on day one, had hoped for 100-150 runs on day two. The home teamgot more than that.

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