To arrange India’s top ten run-getters in increasing order of percentage of runs scored in draws is to travel backwards in time, more or less.It’s no slight on Sunil Gavaskar and Dilip Vengsarkar that they scored so many of their runs in draws. They were great batters in teams that often lacked potent bowling attacks, and their runs often turned defeats into draws. You can only play the sport that exists in your time. You have to recognise, however, that Test cricket in Kohli’s time is an entirely different sport to the one played in Gavaskar’s time, and significantly different even to the one played in Sachin Tendulkar’s time.Watching Kohli progress towards his hundred on Sunday, then, felt like an experience from the past. India began day three with a deficit of 191, and with one of their middle-order batters laid low by a bad back. There was no way that Kohli would take undue risks, and there was little chance of Australia’s bowlers – who had toiled magnificently on day three to keep India’s scoring rate in control – giving him an inch.Kohli simply batted time, and along the way collected whatever runs came his way. From 59 off 128 balls overnight, he went to 102 off 250 before he hit his first boundary of the day, and it came off a Mitchell Starc full-toss.It was old-fashioned Test cricket on a flat pitch where the team batting second was still playing its first innings on day four. Great India batters of the past played a lot of Test matches like this. India in the Kohli era? Not so much.Even on the flattest of surfaces, you need to bat really well to score a Test hundred. And you still need a bit of luck. On day three, Shubman Gill could have been bowled through the gate by Todd Murphy, or played on to Starc. He was fortunate that the Murphy ball bounced over the stumps and the Starc ball missed leg stump.On another day, the uppish punch that sent Rohit Sharma back could have flown wide of short extra-cover. The misjudgment that ended with Pujara lbw to Murphy could have happened off a ball that turned sharply enough to miss leg stump. Both had seemed on course for bigger scores than 35 and 42.Virat Kohli’s century celebration now – a kiss of his wedding ring•Getty ImagesKohli looked all at sea when he first came to the crease. Nathan Lyon had seen him demonstrate a sound method of playing offspin on the sharply-turning pitches of Delhi and Indore, based on going back and across to most lengths and playing everything with the spin. Kohli had adopted an open stance for this, and stuck to that set-up here.Lyon, though, was bowling from over the wicket, and he floated three successive balls well outside Kohli’s off stump. From its starting position outside leg stump, Kohli’s front foot was being asked to move a long way across. Kohli ended up doing this via a two-step process, across and then forward, and found himself moving a touch too late to get where he needed to. It can happen when you’re new to the crease, and this out-of-tune footwork left him jabbing at the ball. He got a thick inside-edge to the first ball, which flew to the left of the fielder at short leg. He was beaten on the outside edge by the second ball, and he edged the third one just short of slip.Batting is perilous by definition. One moment you’re in, the next you’re out. But with a bit of luck, good batters have the time to work their way into an innings on true pitches, and Kohli isn’t just a good batter. He’s one of the greatest India have had.There have been times in the past when a Kohli century has seemed inevitable as soon as he’s spent 15 minutes at the crease. It wasn’t quite like that this time, but you sensed that while there was a gradually diminishing chance of Australia’s bowlers getting him out, there was next to no chance of Kohli doing anything to get himself out. He was in to have his fill, and the circumstances allowed him to simply bat.By the time he’d brought up his hundred, India had brought their deficit down to double-figures, and Australia had spent 138.2 overs in the field. Their bowling began to fray around the edges – the symbolic moment came immediately after Kohli had reached three-figures, when Lyon dropped short and Axar Patel slapped him for four.Kohli took just 72 balls to rush from 100 to 150, and his highlights reel began to grow to proportions commensurate with the magnitude of his innings. There was a wristy pull with terrific use of the crease’s depth to place Murphy between square leg and backward square leg. There was a step-out-and-reach-out flat-bat cover drive off Cameron Green. The shot he played off the next ball took him from 149 to 153: he shuffled across his stumps, met the full ball outside off stump, and clipped it between a diving midwicket and a chasing mid-on.As Kohli and Axar hustled India into the lead and beyond, possibilities began to emerge. India’s innings eventually ended with their lead at 91, leaving them just over three sessions in which to try and eke something out on a still largely forgiving pitch. There’s a chance, then, that Kohli will end this Test match with an increased tally of runs in drawn Tests. There’s also a chance, however, that he’ll have added 186 to his tally of runs scored in victories.

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