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Skipper Jaydev Unadkat removed run-machine Wasim Jaffer with a gem of a delivery as Saurashtra dominated the opening day of the Ranji Trophy final by reducing defending champions Vidarbha to 200/7 at Nagpur on Sunday, 3 February.
It proved to be a good toss to lose for Saurashtra, who succeeded in removing the most impactful Vidarbha batsmen – Jaffer (23) and captain Faiz Fazal (16) – cheaply.
Saurashtra’s bowlers, especially Unadkat (2/20) and his pace colleague Chetan Sakariya (1/13), kept the rival batsmen on a tight leash.
Unadkat was consistently accurate with his nagging line and length, while Sakariya swung the ball and troubled the batsmen with movement.
The defending champions struggled to create partnerships, and would have been in more trouble had it not been for a 57-run seventh-wicket stand between Akshay Wadkar (45) and Akshay Karnewar (31 not out).
The batsmen were too circumspect, save Ganesh Satish (32) and Wadkar, who went for their shots in their small yet crucial innings. Mohit Kale (35 of 126 balls) too got a start but did not build on that.
Batting at number eight, Karnewar produced some lusty hits in a sensible knock in the final session.
Saurashtra would fancy their chances from here on, having finished runners-up twice in the last seven seasons.
Sakariya got only one wicket (he was unlucky not to get Jaffer lbw) and that too towards the fag end, but was easily the best bowler of the day. In 14 testing overs he bowled, the diminutive pacer conceded just 13 runs.
Prerak Mankad (1/27), Dharmendraisnh Jadeja (1/72), and Kamlesh Makwana (1/46) took one wicket apiece.
However, all the action unfolded before empty stands despite it being a Sunday, with a handful of school students cheering for the home side, often teasing the fielders in the deep.
Left-arm pacer Sakariya got the ball to swing early on, troubling R Sanjay (2) while Unadkat asked a few questions to his counterpart Fazal with some swing and bounce.
Sakariya was rewarded when Sanjay went for a lazy drive and just managed an edge, which was taken by Arpit Vasavada in first slip.
Fazal too went back soon, though, in a bizarre dismissal. He rather gifted his wicket by slowing down a few steps away from the crease, thinking the throw from the deep is going towards the other end.
Sakariya also troubled Jaffer with moving ball and seemed to have caught the king of domestic cricket plumb but the vociferous appeal did not move the umpire.
Medium pacer Mankad and left-arm spinner Jadeja replaced the two opening bowlers but it was skipper Unadkat who dealt another blow to the hosts.
Jaffer was mostly defensive and his array of strokes was nowhere to be seen, maybe because of the two wickets that fell. With Kale, he just sought to steady the innings, playing in 'V' zone, just driving and pushing the ball safely.
Just before lunch, Unadkat brought himself into the attack and struck big. He got one move away from Jaffer, who, without moving his feet, fished and edged it to wicket-keeper. Unadkat jumped with joy and his fist-pumping celebration showed what the wicket meant to his side.
The innings moved at a snail's pace with hosts taking lunch at 67 for three in 33 overs.
Kale and Ganesh Satish resumed and surprisingly Unadkat did not bowl in the beginning of the second session. Jadeja created an opportunity when Kale flashed one hard to edge it behind but first slip Harvik Desai reacted late to see the ball pass him.
However, after some time Kale literally steered one from off-spinner Makwana to first slip and Desai did not miss the chance this time.
Before the wicket fell, Unadkat bowled a probing outside off line with perfect field setting. He kept hitting short of length, never giving batsmen any opportunity to go for drives.
For Vidarbha, Satish batted with a lot of positive intent. He drove the ball when it was pitched up and did not mind going for cuts behind the square on back-foot. He also used his feet against spinners, playing a crucial role in keeping the Vidarbha innings together.
Wicketkeeper Wadkar, who had scored 98 against Uttarakhand in the quarterfinal at this venue, too offered good resistance as the hosts took tea at 130 for four.
Mankad got rid of Satish while Jadeja did not let Aditya Sarwate open his account in the final session.
Sakariya ended the resistance from Wadkar and Karnewar by removing the former, three overs before stumps.
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