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The Sydney epic: When India pulled a draw from the jaws of defeat

Of course, India did defy all the odds in Melbourne by making a stunning comeback in the Test series after being humiliated in Adelaide. Yet, one will struggle to completely comprehend the enormity of an epic draw by this Indian team at the Sydney Cricket Ground on January 11.

January 11, 2021 / 22:35 IST
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Not out batsman India's Ravichandran Ashwin (right) and Hanuma Vihari walk from the field following play on the final day of the third cricket Test between Australia and India at the Sydney Cricket Ground, Australia on January 11, 2021. (Image: AP Photo/Rick Rycroft)

Even before this Indian team could reach Australia , former India captain and current BCCI president Sourav Ganguly had "doubted" about an encore of the historic 2018 series win. And, at that time Virat Kohli was not supposed to leave the tour after just one match.

"It’s going to be a tough series. It’s not going to be what it was in 2018 when they went," said Ganguly to India Today news channel in July 2020. And, now just one match to go in the series, India is still capable of winning the series with a team so depleted by senior and regular members which perhaps has no parallel in Indian cricket. Certainly not in Australia or for that matter in an away series ever.

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Of course, India did defy all the odds in Melbourne by making a stunning comeback in the Test series after being humiliated (36 for 9 runs in the second innings) in Adelaide (the pink-ball Test). Yet, one will struggle to completely comprehend the enormity of an epic draw by this Indian team at the Sydney Cricket Ground on January 11. "If you thought India's win at the MCG was good, you should have seen their draw at the SCG," wrote seasoned cricket journalist Peter Lalor in The Australian.

However, none could have perhaps summed it up as beautifully as did the venerable Gideon Haigh, in the same paper. "Astrological determinism? Yesterday was Rahul Dravid’s birthday. India faced a task at the Sydney Cricket Ground that called forth all the gifts of the batsman they called 'The Wall'. Between them they formed just such an obstacle: call them 'The Barricade', evoking their alert, improvised collective defiance.