Australia's top five have clicked into gear in brutal fashion, all feasting on a pop-gun attack to set India a mammoth target of 360 in the second one-day clash of the series.
In a fearsome display from the tourists, the hardest working people at Sawai Mansingh Stadium in Jaipur on Wednesday were the operators inside the manually-operated scoreboard.
Every member of Australia's top five passed 50, the first such instance in one-day international history, as the score ballooned to 5-359 - their equal sixth highest international total.
It is also the highest ever score at the ground.
The rout was started with a terrific knock from Phil Hughes (83) at the top, and completed with a breathtaking, unbeaten 92 off just 50 deliveries from captain George Bailey.
India once again face a record-setting chase, with the confronting 360-run target dwarfing their previous highest successful chase against Australia.
That came in Visakhapatnam in 2010, when they mowed down Australia's target of 290.
Following on from their victory in the series opener in Pune on Sunday, Australia's top order fired in a big way.
Aaron Finch (50) registered his third half-century of the tour and Shane Watson (59) played the aggressor as both combined well with Hughes for partnerships worth 74 and 108 respectively.
But the real fireworks were set off following Hughes' controversial dismissal, which paired Bailey and power-hitter Glenn Maxwell.
Bailey and Maxwell (53 off 32) hit the accelerator in the final 12 overs, putting on 96 runs at nearly 12 an over for the fourth wicket.
Ishant Sharma (0-70 off nine), Vinay Kumar (2-73 off nine), Ravindra Jadeja (0-72 off ten) and Yuvraj Singh (0-35 off four) all copped severe punishment as the crowd were regularly forced to duck for cover.
All up, 12 sixes were hit.
Hughes was the rock on which the platform was built.
The Test hopeful, who scored 47 in Pune, took advantage of the small boundaries and less-than-threatening bowling to hit eight fours and one six in a sparkling knock.
His charge was stopped by a questionable piece of umpiring - given out caught behind off Ravi Ashwin despite replays indicating there was no edge, leaving Hughes unimpressed.
Both Finch and Maxwell had their innings' ended by run outs - but in vastly different fashion.
Finch was caught short of his ground care of a direct hit from Suresh Raina, but Maxwell only had himself to blame - pushing for a second despite a clear call of 'no' from his captain at the other end.
Watson, playing at the ground where he plies his trade in the Indian Premier League for the Rajasthan Royals, lifted the tempo from the outset and set the tone for the Twenty20-style explosives which followed.
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