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King Kohli stars, delivers India a T20 win

3 minute read

Captain Virat Kohli's unbeaten 61 has helped India haul in a target of 165 in their Twenty20 series finale against Australia at the SCG.

AARON FINCH of Australia plays a shot during game two of the One Day International series between Australia and England at The Gabba in Brisbane, Australia.
AARON FINCH of Australia plays a shot during game two of the One Day International series between Australia and England at The Gabba in Brisbane, Australia. Picture: Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images

Australia suffered another spin-induced collapse then Virat Kohli outclassed them with the bat in Sunday's Twenty20 series finale at the SCG, where India hauled in a target of 165.

Kohli top-scored with an unbeaten 61 to deliver his side a six-wicket win with two balls remaining, ensuring the three-game series finished drawn 1-1 after a second game washout.

The topsy-turvy tussle was played in front of a sell-out crowd of 37,339, a venue record for a T20 international.

As was the case in Brisbane and Melbourne, India's supporters comfortably outnumbered Australia's. They were at their loudest when Kohli rattled off the winning runs with a boundary.

"It's always been like that. MCG and SCG especially," Kohli said of his team's following.

"They're two stadiums where our fans come out in huge numbers.

"They were really loud and it really motivated the guys to get this victory for us.

"Skill-wise we were better on the day than Australia."

The captain cracked AJ Tye's delivery over mid-wicket to emphatically end the match and his match-changing innings, which came a week and a half before the four-Test series starts in Adelaide.

Australia did well to post 6-164 as they chased a maiden T20 series win over India. No side had ever produced such a big T20 score without hitting at least one six.

But their inability to clear the rope and Kohli's composed response, coupled with a collapse of 3-5 that followed a promising 68-run opening stand from Aaron Finch and D'Arcy Short, ultimately led to their downfall.

"There's still a bit of work to do but we seem to be going in the right direction," Finch said.

India shot out of the blocks in their run-chase, cantering to 0-67 in the sixth over.

Recalled spearhead Mitchell Starc broke a boundary-laden opening partnership between Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan then legspinner Adam Zampa's wicket maiden gave Australia a sniff.

KL Rahul and Rishabh Pant went cheaply as India slipped to 4-108 then Kohli steadied superbly.

"He's an unbelievable chaser," Glenn Maxwell said on Fox Cricket.

Finch and Short, having struggled to produce an opening partnership of substance in Australia's past seven T20s, both fired after the former won the toss.

But Finch, who scored 28 after being given a life on 22, and Short (33) fell sweeping in quick succession.

The sweep shot, combined with the guile of left-arm spinner Krunal Pandya, also led to a golden duck for Ben McDermott. The collapse would have been worse if not for Maxwell's successful review of his lbw dismissal.

Marcus Stoinis and Nathan Coulter-Nile pushed the total beyond 160 with a couple of late boundaries but couldn't swing momentum after Pandya's game-changing haul of 4-36.

Pandya was named man of the match, while Dhawan took man-of-the-series honours for knocks of 76 and 41.

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