The Australian cricket team is facing a tough time in their test match against India, with Yashasvi Jaiswal leading the Indian team to dominance. The Australian bowling attack struggled to contain the Indian openers, and by the end of the second day, Australia was facing a daunting task to recover.
Summary
The Australian cricket team is facing a tough time in their test match against India, with Yashasvi Jaiswal leading the Indian team to dominance.
Key Points
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Yashasvi Jaiswal’s partnership with KL Rahul has put India in a strong position.
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The Australian bowling attack struggled to contain the Indian openers.
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Australia is facing a daunting task to recover by the end of the second day.
Document 1 Content
Australia is facing a tough time in their test match against India, with Yashasvi Jaiswal leading the Indian team to dominance. Jaiswal has been impressive, batting with style and substance, and his partnership with KL Rahul has put India in a strong position. The Australian bowling attack, which had done well on day one, struggled to contain the Indian openers, and by the end of the second day, Australia was facing a daunting task to recover.
Document 2 Content
Mitchell Starc and Australia’s bowlers were left frustrated as India’s opening pair piled on the runs in the second innings. Steve Smith had a sniff of a run-out after a mix-up, but his throw at the stumps was outrageously wild. And that was just about it. In the last hour of the day, Cummins bowled a bouncer that was so short not even Jaiswal could reach it with an uppercut. It sailed over the batter, carried on beyond Alex Carey and trickled away to the rope.
Document 3 Content
Australia were back bowling far earlier than they expected. The Aussie bowling attack, rightly held up as the best four-man combination the country has put forward in Test cricket, started their work with a purpose fuelled by frustration. They had done their job on day one, and now were being asked to do it again. This time, there was no juice left. The bowling certainly wasn’t bad, and the same balls that caught the edges on Friday were slipping painfully by them on Saturday, but the ease with which Jaiswal and Rahul set about their task visibly sapped the life out of Australia.
Task
To extract relevant information from multiple documents with similar metadata:
The Australian cricket team is facing a tough time in their test match against India. Yashasvi Jaiswal has been leading the Indian team to dominance, batting with style and substance, and his partnership with KL Rahul has put India in a strong position.
Document 1 Metadata
| Key | Value |
| — | — |
| source_url | https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-24/australia-batted-into-oblivion-by-indian-tyro-yashasvi-jaiswal/104639552 |
| author | Unknown Author |
| tags | |
| published_date | 2024/11/23 |
Document 2 Metadata
| source_url | https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11/24/australia-batted-into-oblivion-by-indian-tyro-yashasvi-jaiswal/104639552 |
fell short of Usman Khawaja at slip, though perhaps only because his effort to beat the grass to the ball was half-hearted. Mitchell Starc and Australia’s bowlers were left frustrated as India’s opening pair piled on the runs in the second innings.
Task Metadata
| title | Extract relevant information from multiple documents with similar metadata |
| source_url | |
| author | |
| published_date | |
The Australian cricket team is facing a tough time in their test match against India, with Yashasvi Jaiswal leading the Indian team to dominance. The Australian bowling attack struggled to contain the Indian openers, and by the end of the second day, Australia was facing a daunting task to recover.
Mitchell Starc and Australia’s bowlers were left frustrated as India’s opening pair piled on the runs in the second innings. Steve Smith had a sniff of a run-out after a mix-up, but his throw at the stumps was outrageously wild.
Australia were back bowling far earlier than they expected. The Aussie bowling attack started their work with a purpose fuelled by frustration, but there was no juice left. The bowling certainly wasn’t bad, and the same balls that caught the edges on Friday were slipping painfully by them on Saturday, but the ease with which Jaiswal and Rahul set about their task visibly sapped the life out of Australia.
Barely a chance was created. There was an edge that fell short of Usman Khawaja at slip, though perhaps only because his effort to beat the grass to the ball was half-hearted.