Team India Win At Gabba: What Our Cricket Team Can Teach Our Political Leaders

Rain intervenes as they begin their response. Most observers assume that the target of 328 in the 98 remaining overs is impossible to attain, on a wearing fifth-day pitch with ominous cracks opening up, the Aussies snarling at the bit, and more rain threatened. Maybe if it rains enough, some hope, we might hold out for a draw. Otherwise India is doomed.

Denouement: The fifth morning of the Test starts with India losing its talented opening batsman, Rohit Sharma. The Cassandras expect calamity. It doesn’t come.

Instead, every batsman pulls his weight: the self-possessed Gill, in his debut series, unfurling silken strokes before falling just short of a hundred; the doughty Pujara, standing solid as a wall for a half-century; the light-footed captain, Rahane, with a quickfire 24 to seize the momentum; and then, the astonishing Pant, his brilliance suddenly allied to a maturity he had not earlier revealed, stage-managing the miracle with the audacity of hope. With just three overs left…

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