Melbourne: India beat Australia by 137 runs at the haloed Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) in the third Test of the series on Sunday. With that Virat Kohli and his men took a 2-1 lead in the four-match series and look primed to become the first-ever Indian side to win a Test series in Australia.  

With this win, India have retained the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, having taken an unassailable lead in the series. India will retain the coveted trophy even if the series is drawn level at Sydney as they have won the previous series at home in 2017.

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Australia started Day 5 on their overnight score of 258/8, with Pat Cummins keeping the wolves at bay with a polished half-century, but they could add only three runs to their total, as India took only 27 balls to bag the two remaining wickets and hand themselves a win to remember for ages. 

India thus won a Test match at the iconic MCG after 37 long years when Sunil Gavaskar's men beat Greg Chappell's side in the 1980-81 series. None of the players on the current side were born at that time. 

Fittingly, it was the legendary Kapil Dev, who had then played a major role taking five wickets in defending a low total while it was young Bumrah with match figures of 9 for 86, who was the hero on what looked like a docile track.

This win was India's 150th Test win and they became the only country after Australia, England, West Indies and South Africa to do so. The MCG win also helped Kohli equal Sourav Ganguly's record for most overseas Test wins as Indian skipper. This was Kohli's 11th overseas win out of 24 Tests as captain. Ganguly had led India to 11 overseas Test wins in 28 matches. It is also only the second time in history that India have won two Test matches in a series in Australia.    

India's victory in this match was largely crafted by the monk-like Cheteshwar Pujara, who scored a hundred in the first innings and was a big reason for India getting to a sizeable total.  And then the fiery Jasprit Bumrah took over, ripping through the Australian batting line-up, and ending with figures of 6/33. If Pujara and Bumrah were the lead performers, they were ably supported by debutant Mayank Agarwal (76), captain Kohli (82), Rohit Sharma (63*) and Ravindra Jadeja (2/45). Australia were skittled out for 151 in their first innings after India had put up 443. 

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The massive 292-run lead proved to be the turning point, as even after a collapse in the second innings that saw India score only 106/8, Australia had a mountain to climb.  

Bumrah did the star turn in the second innings too, with three wickets for 53. He was aided well by Ishant Sharma, Jadeja and Mohammed Shami, who shared the wickets among themselves. 

Bumrah got rid of Pat Cummins (63), who edged to first slip and brought an end to his heroic effort in this Test.

Five balls later, Ishant Sharma got rid of Nathan Lyon (7), caught behind as Rishabh Pant took his 20th dismissal in this series, which is highest by any Indian wicket-keeper.

For Bumrah, 48 wickets in his debut Test season is highest by any pace bowler and also is a testimony to a lethal pace trio involving the veteran Ishant and the wily Shami (2/71), who also played his part well.

The trio has collectively taken 134 away wickets (Bumrah 48, Ishant 40 and Shami 46) in a single calendar year eclipsing the 34-year-old record that stood in the name of the fearsome West Indies trio of Malcolm Marshall, Michael Holding and Joel Garner (130 wickets in away tours in 1984). Bumrah was adjudged the Man of the Match for his efforts. 

No wonder skipper Virat Kohli was delighted and attributed their success to their ability to complement each other.

"We knew that it would be tough for Australia, but credit to our bowlers, especially Jasprit. The three fast bowlers have broken the record for most wickets by pacers in a calendar year for a team, which is brilliant," Kohli was all praise for his speed merchants.

"I certainly feel proud as a captain when they bowl in partnerships. No one is looking to out-bowl each other. Our first-class cricket is amazing, which is why we won. Credit must go to first-class set-up in India, which challenges our fast bowlers in India, and that helps them abroad," the skipper said.

Even Bumrah spoke about how India's first-class set-up has him a better bowler.

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"My aim is to always focus on consistency. We train very hard and we are used to bowling a lot of overs in Ranji Cricket, so the body is doing well. My focus is on the next Test now," said Bumrah.

Having got only better since his debut in South Africa, Bumrah is hopeful that better things await for him in near future.

"It was always a dream to play Test cricket and I was really happy when I debuted in South Africa. I started learning slowly, in England it was a different experience. Coming to Australia has been a different experience as well. The start has been good, and hopefully, I will keep getting better," the bowler said.

Bumrah's skipper is confident that his men won't take their feet off the pedal and win the series 3-1.

"We are not going to stop here. This (win) will give us more confidence and we will play more positively in Sydney. I think we have been really smart in all the departments in the two matches that we have won," Kohli said.

"That is the reason we have at least retained the trophy but job is not done yet. It's not finished at all. We want to win the last Test match as well, if an opportunity comes our way. We don't want to be complacent. We are all but ready for the final Test match," he added.

There was a bit of scare when the morning session was lost due to rain but Kohli said that he was not bothered about talks of not enforcing the follow-on.

"It's a good thing that I don't read any comments or what the opinions are. What matters is what we decide inside the dressing room as a team unit. We were pretty clear that we wanted to bat third on this pitch and wanted to get more runs as the pitch was only getting worse.

"I always felt the pitch had enough for the bowlers and a score around 400 will be extremely tough for Australia to chase down," the skipper said.

With PTI inputs