At stumps, the hosts were 190-4 for a formidable lead of 403 with six wickets in hand.
Kohli smashed 10 fours in his composed 154-ball knock and shared 133 runs for the unbroken fifth wicket with first-innings centurion Ajinkya Rahane (52) to pull India out from a precarious 57-4.
It was India’s day: Rahane, Jadeja run riot in South Africa’s misery
India, who have already sealed the series with wins in the first and third Tests, had bowled out the top-ranked tourists for 121 after making 334 for a first-innings lead of 213 runs.
The fiery skipper, 27, completed his 12th Test half-century in the process, delighting a sizeable home crowd at the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium in New Delhi.
Kohli’s stand with Rahane, who top-scored with 127 in his first outing, was the first century-stand of what had been a low-scoring series so far.
Rahane steers India to 231-7 against South Africa
With the Kotla pitch likely to deteriorate on the fourth and fifth days, it will be an uphill task for the Proteas to breach India’s run wall.
The visitors have been bowled out under 200 five times out of six innings in the series.
Paceman Morne Morkel was the most impressive bowler on show, taking three wickets while giving away just 29 runs from 17 overs. After picking two scalps in the morning, Morkel returned to dismiss Shikhar Dhawan (21) with a stinging yorker from around the wicket that sneaked under the bat and hit the leg stump.
4th Test: India in no mood of letting up despite series win
Cheteshwar Pujara (28) was castled by Imran Tahir soon after but the bowlers were denied any further success by the determined pair of Kohli and Rahane. The Indians were off to a shaky start in their second knock, losing two wickets with just eight runs on the board.
Opener Murali Vijay (three) was given out to a rising ball from Morkel that appeared to have grazed his armguard before flying through to wicketkeeper Dane Vilas, who leapt high in the air to take a one-handed catch over his head.
Morkel struck again with the first ball of his next over to dismiss the struggling Rohit Sharma for a golden duck, the ball zipping past his bat and flattening the off-stump.
Sharma’s best score in the series has been a 23 in Nagpur, raising doubts about his temperament in the longest form of the game.
Published in The Express Tribune, December 6th, 2015.
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