Aaron Finch did look disappointed when the umpires decided to call off the 2nd T20I at Melbourne but that was just for a moment. He immediately turned towards his teammates, who were getting ready to defend 46 off 5 overs and waved his arms to signal there was no need. The rain had come to the rescue of the Australian team and ensured that they don’t lose a series after 7 months.


India had Australia on the brink at 132 for 7 in 19 overs when rain forced the first stoppage and then it returned four more times before the umpires finally decided that it was enough.


Kohli arguing with the umpires






Till the time it was clear to play, India completely dominated the proceedings at the MCG. Bhuvneshwar Kumar (2-20) and Khaleel Ahmed (2-39) shared four wickets to rock the Australian top-order and reduce them to 41-4 at one stage.


This was after India won the toss and opted to bowl. The visitors went in with an unchanged side while Australia made one change, bringing in Nathan Coulter-Nile for Billy Stanlake who picked up an ankle niggle during warm-up.


Kumar then struck with his second delivery, dismissing Aaron Finch (0) caught behind. From there onwards, India exerted themselves on the field and there was never any let-up.


But there were hiccups. The swing bowler should have had at least a couple more wickets, but was twice unlucky in the third over.


First, Rishabh Pant spilt a difficult diving catch behind the wickets with D'Arcy Short (14) getting a life on 7. Two balls later, Chris Lynn (13), on nought, should have been caught at fine leg, only for Jasprit Bumrah (1-20) to spill it over the rope and for a six.


Ahmed did strike in the fourth over and pegged Australia back as Lynn was caught in the deep going for another big one. Two overs later, he bowled Short and India's missed chances didn't cost them too much.


The longer boundaries further aided India as Bumrah had Marcus Stoinis (4) caught in the deep in the seventh over to put the hosts under more pressure.


Glenn Maxwell (19) and Ben McDermott (32 not out) added 21 runs for the fifth wicket to stem the rot, but Krunal Pandya (1-26) struck to remove danger-man Maxwell. The spinner found some grip and a hint of turn as Maxwell was bowled in the 11th over.


Kuldeep Yadav (1-23) too made his presence felt, chipping in with Alex Carey's (4) dismissal, sending the 60000-odd prominently Indian crowd into raptures.


Australia somehow managed to cross the 100-mark in the 16th over, thanks to a 27-run partnership between Nathan Coulter-Nile (18) and McDermott.


Coulter-Nile hit two sixes and a four during his nine-ball stay. McDermott held one end together and put on 31 runs off 20 balls with Andrew Tye (12 not out), providing a little impetus to the innings before rain halted proceedings.