Rohit Sharma
India's Rohit Sharma (L) hits a shot past West Indies' Andre Russell during the first One Day International between the two countries, at Cuttack on November 29. Reuters

A patient 72 from Rohit Sharma helped India to a tense one-wicket victory over the West Indies in a low-scoring One Day International at the Barabati Stadium in Cuttack on Tuesday.

India's last wicket pair of Varun Aaron and Umesh Yadav added the 12 runs needed to take India past their target, with seven balls to spare.

Sharma, declared the Man of the Match, struck three boundaries and a six to launch India's fightback after the hosts were reduced to 59-5 chasing a 212-run target for victory. He added 83 for the sixth wicket with left-hander Ravindra Jadeja (38) and another 42 runs for the eighth wicket with tailender R. Vinay Kumar (18) to anchor India's chase.

Sharma and Kumar fell in successive overs, with the score on 201. India still needed 11 runs to win with just one wicket in hand. The hosts survived some tense moments before Yadav hit a boundary to take his team home.

The West Indian pacemen, Kemar Roach (3-46) and Andre Russell (2-29), extracted good pace and bounce off the pitch and picked up the first five wickets inside of the first 12 overs of the Indian innings. However, they failed to make further inroads and were also guilty of giving away 23 extra runs, which proved crucial in the low-scoring match.

Earlier, India's pace trio of Kumar, Yadav and Aaron struck three times in the first 10 overs, to reduce the tourists to 52 for three, from which they never recovered. The visitors finished on 211-9 in their 50 overs, after being put in to bat first.

Darren Bravo (60), the most consistent batsman for West Indies during the 2-0 Test series loss, continued his good form and added 75 for the fourth wicket with Danza Hyatt (31).

Hyatt's run out, just after he started scoring freely and Bravo's dismissal to part-time off-spinner Suresh Raina, robbed the visitors of any momentum.

Off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, who was adjudged Player of the Series during the Test matches, conceded only 30 runs off his 10 overs for the wicket of the hard-hitting Kieron Pollard.