India clinch Test series

Bangalore, December 12:

Anil Kumble raised visions of a dramatic Indian victory with a five-wicket haul before Pakistan managed to escape with a draw in the third and final Test here today.

The veteran leg-spinner grabbed 5-60 as Pakistan finished at 162-7 chasing an improbable 374-run target off 48 overs on the final day. The Kumble-led India clinched the Test series 1-0 after winning the opening match by six wickets in New Delhi and drawing the next two in Kolkata and here.

It was India’s first Test series triumph against Pakistan at home in more than two decades, the last success coming in 1980 under Sunil Gavaskar.

India needed the last three wickets when bad light thwarted their incredible victory bid. Mohammad Yousuf (10) and tailender Mohammad Sami (four) were the unbeaten batsmen with 12 overs remaining.

There was no hint of collapse when Pakistan were 144-3 in the 32nd over following a 71-run stand for the fourth wicket between Faisal Iqbal (51) and in-form Misbah-ul-Haq (37). But Kumble virtually turned the match upside-down when he dismissed Iqbal and Kamran Akmal off successive deliveries on a day when team-mate Sourav Ganguly missed out on a rare landmark.

It was the second time Kumble had grabbed two wickets in an over, having earlier removed opener Yasir Hameed (39) and stand-in captain Younis Khan. Kumble was brilliantly backed

by part-time spinner Yuvraj Singh, who removed

Misbah and debutant Yasir Arafat as Pakistan lost four wickets for 10 runs in a dramatic collapse.

A dull draw looked on the cards when India declared their second innings closed at 284-6 an hour after the lunch-break. But Kumble enlivened the proceedings by striking in quick succession to push Pakistan on the verge of defeat with his 34th haul of five or more wickets in a Test innings.

Ganguly’s march towards to a rare feat and Pakistani fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar’s duel with the batsmen were the only talking points in the first two sessions. Former captain Ganguly fell nine runs short of becoming the seventh batsman to score a double-century and a hundred in a Test. The left-hander, who cracked a maiden double-ton in the first innings, was dismissed for 91.

Ganguly looked set to

join the elite club in his

99th Test before uppishly driving Mohammad Sami to Iqbal. But he had completed 1,000 runs in a calendar year at that stage.

Australians Doug Walters and Greg Chappell, West Indies’ Lawrence Rowe and Brian Lara, Gavaskar and England’s Graham Gooch are other batsmen to have scored a double-century and a hundred in the same Test.