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India fight
back to bowl out SA
KANPUR—It took nine days for the series to finally witness an absorbing
battle between bat and ball. While Chennai produced a featherbed and
Ahmedabad saw a track with generous sprinklings of green, Kanpur laid
out a crackling surface that assisted turn.
South Africa made the most of winning the toss, grinding out 265 at the
end of a tense first day, but India's spinners, with some good support
from Ishant Sharma, ensured they remained in the hunt.
A bone-dry pitch with conspicuous cracks gradually deteriorated through
the day. Graeme Smith and Hashim Amla thrived when conditions were best
for batting, steering South Africa to 152 for 1, before India clawed
their way back through turn and bounce. Seven of the ten wickets fell to
spinners, both specialist and part-time, but plucky contributions from
the lower order stretched the score past 250. With the ball stopping on
the batsmen, and a few starting to stay low, it could well turn into
match-winning total. South Africa ensured they didn't miss out on
scoring opportunities. Smith led the early charge and the plucky duo of
AB de Villiers and Mark Boucher made valuable contributions down the
order. None of the batsmen were completely assured at the crease - they
survived vociferous appeals every once in a while and the ball regularly
beat the outside edge - but made sure they scored at a healthy clip.
India's shoddy fielding hurt them, as did their inability to sustain
pressure. Barring Harbhajan Singh, who was miserly throughout the day,
the rest regularly doled out loose deliveries that allowed the batsmen
to break free. Both Piyush Chawla, in his second Test, and Ishant
struggled with their accuracy and a number of misfields only hurt them
further. How Anil Kumble would have wished to be out in the middle
rather than nursing a groin injury back in the dressing room.
Kumble's absence, for the first time since December 2003, meant that
Mahendra Singh Dhoni became the first wicketkeeper to captain India. He
didn't have a great start, though, losing the toss and then watching his
faster bowlers squander the new ball. Sreesanth had a perilously close
lbw appeal turned down in the fourth ball of the match - against Neil
McKenzie, who shouldered arms to one that came in - but didn't go on to
make the batsmen play enough. Ishant's first six overs cost 35 and
allowed South Africa's openers to lay a solid base. Sreesanth didn't
cause too many flutters through the day but Ishant came back with
renewed enthusiasm. Managing reverse-swing at a pace close to 140kph, he
broke through Amla's defences during his mid-afternoon spell. He
returned late in the day to nip out Boucher, with one that jagged back
and kept low, and polished off Paul Harris with one that uprooted leg
stump.
The spinners, though, had most of the say. Chawla created the first
breakthrough, beating McKenzie in flight and luring him out of the
crease, while Yuvraj foxed Smith with one that fizzed off the surface.
It was a crucial wicket, especially because of the confidence with which
Smith was handling the spinners. He appeared to have sussed up the
situation perfectly - clattering the loose balls and showing the
temperament to overcome the nervy moments. Along with Amla, who milked
the spinners with wristy manoeuvres, he was threatening to take the game
away.
Yuvraj, though, should have had Smith with his very first ball. Turning
one across Smith, he caught him on the shuffle with a ball that would
have gone on to rattle leg stump. Undeterred with the decision, Yuvraj
struck a few overs later and triggered a mini-collapse - Amla, who had
added 91 with Smith, was undone by Ishant's reverse-swing, deflecting a
pacy ball onto his stumps, and Kallis lasted only seven balls, playing
on to the stumps to Harbhajan.
—Agencies |