Batsmen’s nightmare: India on top after 20 wickets fall on day two

South Africa 32-2 chasing 310 after being dismissed for record low 79 in first innings


Afp November 26, 2015
Ashwin added another scalp in the second innings to his first innings’ five-for, with 29 of the 32 wickets so far falling to spin. PHOTO: REUTERS

NAGPUR:


India seized control of the third Test in Nagpur on Thursday after South Africa, shot out for a record low of 79, fumbled again in their chase of a tough target.


Off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin finished with 5-32 and Jadeja took 4-33 on a spin heaven at the VCA stadium to bowl South Africa out in just 33.1 overs, giving India a healthy first-innings lead of 136 runs.

India were themselves dismissed for 173 runs in their second knock, setting the top-ranked Proteas an improbable target of 310 on a pitch where the ball is turning sharply and keeping low.

South Africa, needing a win to level the four-Test series, ended the second day’s play on 32-2, with Dean Elgar unbeaten on 10 and skipper Hashim Amla on three.

Morkel, Harmer skittle India on dicey pitch

The tourists will start the third day requiring 278 runs more on a dicey pitch that has already claimed 32 wickets over the first two days.

Targets of over 300 runs have been chased successfully just once on Indian soil — by the home team which made 387-4 to defeat England in Chennai in 2008.

Starting the day at 11-2, the Proteas suffered a sensational collapse as they lost three wickets for one run in the first four overs to slip to 12-5.

The world’s number one Test side were at that stage in danger of falling below their lowest ever total of 30, but a defiant 35 by JP Duminy saved them the blushes.



But South Africa’s meagre score was the lowest total by any team against India, coming in below Sri Lanka’s 82 in Chandigarh in 1990.

As the ball turned and kept low, Ashwin removed Elgar off the fifth delivery of the day, the left-hander being bowled off the inside edge on his overnight score of seven.

Skipper Hashim Amla’s poor run in the series continued as he fell in Ashwin’s next over, gloving an intended sweep to Ajinkya Rahane in the slips after the ball bounced off the wicketkeeper.

Steyn-less South Africa head to must-win Nagpur Test

Amla — who had scored 43, 0 and seven in his three previous innings — managed just a single run this time before walking off even before the umpire gave him out.

Jadeja held a return catch from dangerman AB de Villiers, who failed to score, and bowled Faf du Plessis for 10 when the batsman attempted an ugly heave and missed the line of the ball.

Duminy, who hit two sixes off Jadeja, was ninth out when he was trapped leg-before by leg-spinner Amit Mishra, who was required to bowl just three overs in the entire innings.

Virat Kohli 'excited' by day-night Tests

When India batted a second time, Shikhar Dhawan (39) and Cheteshwar Pujara (31) showed the way to tackle the turning ball by adding 44 for the second wicket.

Leg-spinner Imran Tahir, who was surprisingly kept out of the attack till the 25th over as India moved to 82-2, picked up five wickets for 38 runs to restrict the Indian innings.

India slipped to 108-5 from a comfortable 97-2, before being all out in the post-tea session. 

Published in The Express Tribune, November 27th,  2015.

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COMMENTS (2)

G Indian | 8 years ago | Reply @Disgusting - What is your complaint. Both teams played on same pitch. India won conclusively, It is not like India changed the rule of game by playing more than 11 players. It is more fun to watch a result oriented match than a five day boring draw. A good batsman should be capable of playing in all conditions including spin pitches. Here is the proof that South African players are not that great.
Disgusting | 8 years ago | Reply A typical Bharati mentality to prepare a wicket which is an insult to test cricket. Will ICC take notice of such waste of time and money apart from an insult! Let us see what has South Africans to say about this atrocity to the game.
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