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Smith, Johnson give Australia edge at Gabba

Last updated on: December 19, 2014 13:45 IST

Australia captain Steve Smith (right) celebrates scoring a century with team mate Mitchell Johnson

Australia captain Steve Smith (right) celebrates scoring a century with team mate Mitchell Johnson. Photograph: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

Skipper Steve Smith scored a controlled 133, Mitchell Johnson a game-changing 88 and Australia's tail wagged vigorously as the hosts barged their way back into the second Test against India on day three in Brisbane on Friday.

- Scorecard

- PHOTOS: Day 3

The hosts took a first innings lead of 97 after being dismissed for 505 after tea and India had shaved 71 runs off the deficit by the close of play at the cost of one second innings wicket.

Murali Vijay, who contributed 144 to India's first innings tally of 408, departed for 27, leaving Shikhar Dhawan (26 not out) and Cheteshwar Pujara, who had made 15, to resume on day four 26 runs behind.

Australia had looked to be facing a sizeable deficit of their own when they lost two wickets in the first hour to slip to 247-6 but Smith and Johnson combined for a Gabba record seventh-wicket partnership of 148 runs from 160 balls.

Both fell to paceman Ishant Sharma in the same over an hour after lunch but Mitchell Starc (52) continued the resistance with his fourth Test half century and partnerships of 56 with Nathan Lyon (23) and 51 with Josh Hazlewood (32 not out).

Starc was the last Australian batsman to fall but the left-armer returned after the innings break to bowl Vijay when the Indian made the mistake of leaving an angled delivery.

SECOND CENTURY

Smith, deputising for the injured Michael Clarke, became the first Australian to score a century in his maiden Test as captain since Graham Yallop in 1978.

It was his second century of the series after his unbeaten 162 in the opening Test victory in Adelaide last weekend and a fourth in eight matches this year.

It was Johnson's pugnacious 93-ball knock, though, that turned the day in Australia's favour after Indian controlled the first hour and dismissed Mitchell Marsh and Brad Haddin cheaply.

Fired up by some sledging and short balls from the tourists, paceman Johnson stopped the rot in no uncertain fashion by clubbing the ball around the ground with 13 fours and one six.

The lefthander looked to be heading for his second Test century when he chased an Ishant delivery only to get a top edge which Mahendra Singh Dhoni snaffled up behind the stumps.

Smith, who had brought up his century with his 10th four just before lunch, followed five balls later when he chopped on to be dismissed for the first time in the four-match series.

Source: REUTERS
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