We were lucky to get Dhoni out lbw: Jhye Richardson

Despite the 34-run victory over India in the first ODI of three-match series, Australia pacer Jhye Richardson admitted they were lucky to get Mahendra Singh Dhoni out with a dubious call at the Sydney Cricket Ground (SCG) on Saturday.

Dhoni was given out leg before wicket (LBW) when the Australian team appealed after the second ball of the 33rd over, bowled by debutant Jason Behrendorff, but TV replays showed the ball had pitched outside the leg-stump. The former Indian skipper could not opt for a review as it was unsuccessfully used up by Ambati Rayudu, breaking a 141-run partnership with opening batsman Rohit Sharma.

“There was a period there when they had a partnership through the middle and it almost could have taken the game away from us. But we were lucky to get Dhoni out lbw and we kept getting wickets from there on,” Richardson said.

Richardson took his best figures in ODI cricket, 4-26 in 10 overs, as Australia won the series opener to take a 1-0 lead in the series.

He also praised centurion Rohit Sharma’s effort.

“Rohit batted really well. Credit to him and he summed up the conditions just as well as we did. He batted very patiently and knew the balls he could put away. He picked the gaps really well tonight.

“Rohit was very dangerous and we understood that. So our plan sort of changed to getting him off strike and just bowling at the batsman down the other end.”

The young pacer said that the hosts were confident of defending 288 as they thought the SCG wicket was on the slower side.

“It was a really good wicket and we understood that it wasn’t the quickest wicket in the world. So we knew when the ball goes a little softer later in the innings, when we turn the slower balls, we could use change of pace and we thought it would be quite effective,” Richardson said.

The 22-year-old played a crucial role in Australia’s comfortable victory.

“We saw it at the end and the change of pace worked really well. We thought it would be a competitive score and 280 is a competitive score. There are a few long boundaries at the SCG and I think we actually bowled well according to that tonight,” Richardson said.

Australia made a slow start but managed to score 288/5 after opting to bat, thanks to Richardson, India had a poor start and were reduced to 4/3 at one stage before finishing at 254/9 as Rohit’s 22nd ODI century went in vain.

“I was actually disappointed when the ball came out. I probably bowled a bit too straight,” said the pacer about Virat Kohli’s dismissal.

“I had a fielder there who hung on to it, so it is a wicket I will remember for a very long time.”

“I am ecstatic and really excited for the team. It’s good to put a personal performance on the board but I am really excited in the way Australian cricket is heading.

“The way we prepared for this game and the research we did on Indian players. Everything leading up to this game, I felt was absolutely perfect and the result was ideal tonight,” Richardson added.

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