[caption id="attachment_37719" align="aligncenter" width="580"]C5ahAkFWcAAXtAP O’Keefe took 6 wickets against India on Friday. Image Source: BCCI[/caption] Internet Desk: India suffered an astonishing collapse after lunch on day two, as they started loosing wickets like a pack of cards to get bundled out on 105, losing last 7 wickets for just 11 runs, which helped the visitors took a grip on the first Border-Gavaskar Test in Pune. After Mitchell Starc had earlier rocked India with a double-wicket maiden, including the prize scalp of India captain Virat Kohli for a duck, the spin twins of Stephen O'Keefe and Nathan Lyon shocked India to the core. O'Keefe started the carnage after KL Rahul was caught in the deep by David Warner. Rahul injured his shoulder attempting to slog O'Keefe out of the ground - having already done the same thing in the first session when he launched a straight six. A single put Ajinkya Rahane on strike, and he then was brilliantly caught by Peter Handscomb at gully millimetres above the ground. Wriddhiman Saha defended his first ball then gloved a delivery to Smith in the slips as India suddlenly slipped to 6-95. Next over Lyon had Ravi Ashwin defending, only for the ball to bounce off the toe of his boot and was brilliantly snaffled by Handscomb diving forward from the bat-pad position. Matthew Wade silenced doubters of his wicketkeeping ability with a sharp piece of work behind the stumps to give O'Keefe a fourth wicket, removing the bals with Jayant Yadav's foot still on the line with no part behind it. Australia had opened the bowling with Starc and O'Keefe but it was Josh Hazlewood in the unfamiliar position of first change that made the first breakthrough for Australia on the second day. Brought on for the seventh over as first change, Hazlewood struck with his fifth ball to find the outside edge of Murali Vijay's bat for a simple catch to carry through to wicketkeeper Matthew Wade. It left India at 1-42 at drinks on the second morning, with KL Rahul 27 from 41 balls and Cheteshwar Pujara on 5 from 14. Vijay made 10 from 19 balls. Shortly after drinks Starc had Pujara gloving a short-ball behind to Wade for a second straight-forward catch. But better was to come for the Australians. India's captain shouldered arms to his first ball wide of the off-stump, but a repeat of the delivery saw Kohli chase it, aiming a drive through the covers that was nicked into the waiting hands of Peter Handscomb at first slip. A slightly early drinks break was called when Rahul appeared to have injured his left shoulder smashing a huge straight six against O'Keefe. But the right-hander was able to continue after a drink and a massage from the India team medical staff. Starc had picked up where he left off with the bat on the second morning, striking the second ball of the day for a boundary, but the fireworks proved short lived as he holed out to end the tourists' innings on 260 in the first over. Starc had started day two on 57 from 58 balls, and blasted his sixth boundary before he was caught by Ravindra Jadeja to give Ravichandaran Ashwin his third wicket off the innings. For India, pacer Umesh Yadav was the pick of the bowlers with 4-32 from 12 overs, including two in two balls as O'Keefe and Nathan Lyon fell in consecutive deliveries.