At the Adelaide Oval, the left-handed opener was batting on 69 off 105 balls. He hit seven fours and a six, putting on 101 runs with Shane Watson (33*, 83 balls, 4 fours, 1 six) as the hosts' lead reached 212 runs.
Warner and Chris Rogers resumed after lunch, looking to frustrate the Indians further. But that didn't work out for long as Karn Sharma (1-50) got an early breakthrough in the session, dismissing Rogers in only the third over. The opener scored 21 runs off 45 balls with two fours.
Clearly the Indian team's plan was to use medium pace from only one end and to this effect Ishant Sharma (0-31) toiled hard. But this combination of Karn-Ishant-Vijay couldn't bring about the desired effect and even Rohit Sharma (0-3) was introduced later on in the session. Meanwhile, Warner-Watson motored along nicely to bring up the 50-run mark in the 16th over, with the former completing 1000 Test runs in the 2014 calendar year.
The answer came in the 32nd over when he first came on to bowl in this second Australian innings. He bowled four eventful overs, and was nearly successful in his second one - the 34th of the innings - when he bowled Warner with the batsman on 66 at that time. But the umpire ruled it a no-ball giving a second chance to the opener.
