The Phnom Penh Post

No1 India face fierce South Africa examinatio­n

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INDIA’S status as the world’s No1 Test team will face a fierce examinatio­n when they come up against second-ranked South Africa in a three-Test series which starts at Newlands today.

South Africa will be banking on their formidable fast bowling attack to dismantle India’s strong batting line-up, but after nine successive Test series wins India are brimming with confidence – and a belief that they can thrive in any conditions.

Six of India’s winning series were played at home and the others – two in Sri Lanka and one in the West Indies – were in conditions where fast bowling was not a major factor.

The last time India lost a series was when they were beaten 2-0 in Australia in a four-match contest in 2014-15, but it was a series which showed India’s batsmen could stand up to raw pace on hard, bouncy pitches.

They scored more than 400 in each of their first innings, losing the first two Tests before drawing the last two.

“The tour to Austra lia is t he one t hat laid a great foundat ion for t his tea m,” India n captain Virat Kohli said during his a r r iva l press conference last week.

Kohli hit four centuries in that series and it marked the start of his captaincy, initially in a stand-in capacity in two of the Tests in Australia but afterwards on a full-time basis when Mahendra Singh Dhoni retired from Test cricket.

India have a poor record in South Africa, losing five out of six series with one drawn, and winning only two out of 17 Test matches against eight defeats and seven draws.

Significan­tly, though, they have pushed South Africa hard on their two most recent tours, in 2010-11 and 2013-14, sharing the first series and narrowly losing the second.

Thirteen of the 2013-14 tourists are in t he current part y, a nd t hey a re now a va st ly more experience­d squad who have become used to winning.

Both teams have selection dilemmas.

South Africa have to make room for returning captain Faf du Plessis in their batting order and will have to decide on their best bowling line-up.

Pitch ‘ideal for Proteas’

Fast bowler Chris Morris will vie with medium-pacer Andile Phehlukway­o as an all-rounder to augment an expected pace attack of Morne Morkel, Vernon Philander and Kagiso Rabada.

India have to choose between Lokesh Rahul and Shikhar Dhawan as an opening batting partner for Murali Vijay, while in pace-friendly conditions there may be room for only one specialist spinner, meaning that one of Ravichandr­an Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja, a match-winning combinatio­n in India, could miss out.

South African captain Du Plessis yesterday said the pitch for the first Test looked ideal for his team.

“The groundsman has done a fantastic job,” Du Plessis said. “It’s been very, very hot but it looks like it’s going to be a good cricket wicket – nothing too extreme but it looks like it’s going to be exactly what we wanted.”

For t he f i rst t i me i n more than a year, South Africa have all t heir key bowlers f it, while their star batsman AB de Villiers is available after returni ng f rom a brea k f rom Test cricket.

 ?? AFP ?? Captains Virat Kohli (left) and Faf du Plessis pose with the Freedom Trophy, which is awarded to the winners of India-South Africa
Test series.
AFP Captains Virat Kohli (left) and Faf du Plessis pose with the Freedom Trophy, which is awarded to the winners of India-South Africa Test series.

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