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Rahul Dravid and Virender Sehwag laud Muttiah Muralidharan after the latter dismissed Matthew Hayden at SCG on Friday. (Reuters) |
Sydney: Matthew Hayden completed a century and Adam Gilchrist was racing towards his own hundred as Australia amassed 331 for six on the opening day of the ICC Super Test with the World XI on Friday.
Hayden made a determined 111, while Gilchrist finished the day unbeaten on 94 when bad light ended play five overs early at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
Hayden and Gilchrist also shared a 97-run partnership for the fifth wicket as the world champions recovered from a mid-order slump to pile on the runs against a World XI still licking their wounds from last weeks 0-3 loss in the one-day series.
The world selection had made the perfect start when Steve Harmison clean bowled opener Justin Langer for a duck from the third ball of match and his England teammate Andrew Flintoff captured the prize wicket of Australia captain Ricky Ponting for 46.
Luck also seemed to be going their way as three Australians, Michael Clarke, Simon Katich and Shane Watson, were all given out by the TV umpire as part of an experiment into the increased use of technology.
Clarke left the playing arena shaking his head in disbelief after being adjudged to have been caught bat-pad for 39, Katich was run out for a duck and Watson was trapped leg-before wicket to Sri Lankan off-spinner Muttiah Muralidharan for 24.
Their dismissals threatened to ruin Australias hopes of building a big total on a placid Sydney pitch offering little encouragement to either pace or spin.
Muralidharan was the pick of the World XI bowlers, capturing two wickets from 30 overs, while Harmison, Flintoff and New Zealand spinner Daniel Vettori collected one apiece.
Hayden, whose international career was in jeopardy before he scored a century in the last Ashes Test, repaid the selectors for their faith with his 22nd Test hundred.
The broad-shouldered Queenslander began cautiously, scoring just 28 in the morning session, before accelerating after lunch.
He twice got the benefit of the doubt to loud leg-before appeals, including one which was referred to the video umpire, before reaching his hundred after tea off 161 balls when he drove Harmison to the boundary. He was dismissed after tea, caught by Jacques Kallis off Muralidharan.
Gilchrist, Player of the Series in last weeks three one-dayers in Melbourne, was in a typically aggressive mood.
He smashed eight boundaries and four sixes off only 109 balls to reach the close just six runs away from his hundred with Shane Warne on one.
Ponting had also looked to be in great touch as he got within sight of a half-century before an uncharacteristic error brought him undone just before lunch.
Harmison sent Langer tumbling to the pitch with his second ball and then knocked his off-stump out of the ground with the next ball. Ponting struck six boundaries and a six before being caught by a diving Kallis off Flintoff.
The most contentious video decision was Clarkes, who was given out caught by Virender Sehwag off Vettori, despite some doubt.
(agencies)
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