Mohali: India set up a World Cup final clash with Sri Lanka by inflicting a 29-run defeat on arch-rivals Pakistan in their semifinal match clash at the PCA stadium in Mohali on Wednesday.
Misbah-ul-Haq top scored for Pakistan with 56 and his was the last wicket to fall as India bowled out Pakistan for 231 runs in 49.5 overs.
Ashish Nehra dismissed Wahab Riaz and Umar Gul in his successive overs to take India to the verge of victory.
Nehra had Riaz caught by Sachin Tendulkar and in his next over trapped Gul plumb in front.
Harbhajan Singh tightened the Indian stranglehold on Pakistan by having Shahid Afridi caught by Virender Sehwag in the covers off a full toss.
Munaf Patel clean bowled the dangerous Abdul Razzaq with a superb leg-cutter to choke Pakistan's run chase.
Munaf bowled a good length delivery that landed on middle, just straightened after pitching and Razzaq was caught napping inside the crease as he tried to defend it but he missed it completely and the off-stump was shaken.
Harbhajan Singh struck when it mattered the most when he clean bowled Umar Akmal with a superb delivery.
Harbhajan bowled a flatter, faster delivery on middle that skidded on with the angle, Akmal tried to cut it but was beaten for pace and his off-stump was disturbed.
Yuvraj Singh dismissed Asad Shafiq and Younis Khan in his successive overs to lead the Indian fight back.
Yuvraj gave India the third breakthrough when he clean bowled Shafiq and in his next over had Younis caught by Suresh Raina in the covers to reduce Pakistan to 106/4.
Munaf Patel took the second wicket when he had Mohammad Hafeez caught behind by MS Dhoni.
Hafeez was trying a scoop shot to fine leg but the ball took an edge and went straight into the hands of Dhoni. Hafeez hit 7 fours in his 59-ball 43.
Zaheer Khan gave India the first breakthrough when he had Kamran Akmal caught by Yuvraj Singh at backward point.
The breakthrough came after Pakistan got off to a good start with an opening stand of 44 runs.
Earlier, Sachin Tendulkar rode his luck as India made 260/9.
India's total would have been considerably less had not Tendulkar been dropped four times on his way to top-scoring with 85 -- an innings that still left him one shy of a hundred international hundreds.
Wahab Riaz kept Pakistan in the match with an impressive display of left-arm fast bowling on his way to a career-best 5/46.
The 25-year-old's performance was all the more admirable as he would have been omitted had Pakistan recalled veteran fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar.
But Riaz, who took a wicket in his first over and later struck twice in two balls, was a constant threat as he surpassed his previous best of three for 22 against Bangladesh in Dhaka three years ago
"I think 260 will be enough. The wicket's taking spin and if we bowl in the right places it will be very difficult for them," said Suresh Raina, who finished unbeaten on 36.
Virender Sehwag made a typically brisk start after India captain MS Dhoni won the toss, with 21 runs coming off Umar Gul's second over -- the paceman's eight costing 69 in all.
However, a bowling change saw Riaz strike fifth ball when he had Sehwag, hitting across the line, lbw for 38 including nine boundaries.
Tendulkar, opening with Sehwag, subsequently square-drove Riaz for four to become the first batsman ever to score 400 runs in World Cups.
But off-spinner Saeed Ajmal nearly had him out twice in successive balls for 23, a reviewed lbw and tight stumping call both going against Pakistan.
Then, on 27, Tendulkar pulled Pakistan captain and leg-spinner Shahid Afridi hard to short mid-wicket only for Misbah-ul-Haq to drop the two-handed catch.
And Tendulkar was dropped again, on 45, when he mistimed a drive off Afridi and Younis Khan at mid-off failed to hold on.
Tendulkar completed a 67-ball fifty with his eighth boundary, off Afridi, before Riaz struck again.
He had Virat Kohli fending to Umar Akmal at backward point and next ball clean bowled Yuvraj Singh, the hero of India's quarter-final win over champions Australia, for nought on the batsman's home ground with a swinging full toss.
Dhoni survived the hat-trick after the ball just missed his outside edge.
Tendulkar was given a third reprieve by Pakistan on 70 when wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal failed to hold a tough chance off an edged Afridi leg-break.
And he was on 81 when a leaping Umar Akmal at short mid-wicket dropped a checked drive against off-spinner Mohammad Hafeez.
However, Afridi -- who had vowed Tendulkar would not reach the landmark score in this match -- ended his innings when he took a sharp catch at short extra-cover off a hard-hit drive against Ajmal.
Tendulkar faced 115 balls with 11 fours.
Brief scores
India 260 for 9 (Tendulkar 85, Wahab Riaz 5-46)
Pakistan 231 (Misbah-ul-Haq 56)
Results India won by 29 runs
MOM Sachin Tendulkar (India)