The Fiji Times

Bumrah takes five as India move ahead in third Test

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CAPE TOWN - Jasprit Bumrah took 5-42 as India bowled South Africa out for 210 and then drove home their advantage with the bat as they ended day two of the decisive third and final test on 57 for two in their second innings at Newlands yesterday.

India’s lead is 70, already a sizeable one on a difficult, seaming wicket that is offering plenty of assistance to the bowlers as 22 wickets have fallen on the opening two days of the contest.

Captain Virat Kohli is not out 14 in an unbeaten partnershi­p of 33 with Cheteshwar Pujara (9) and they will attempt to take the game away from the home team on the third morning as they chase a first ever series win in South Africa.

Both openers have been dismissed as Mayank Agarwal (7) was caught by Dean Elgar off Kagiso Rabada and KL Rahul (10) was grabbed by Aiden Markram at slip from the bowling of Marco Jansen.

Bumrah gave a masterclas­s of seam bowling in the South African innings as he got the ball to move both ways and at times leap off the surface.

“There was a phase in the middle (of the day) when not a lot was happening, but we stayed patient,” Bumrah told reporters.

“It does seam a lot more with the new ball, and shapes more. But as you spend more time out there the seam goes down and it gets relatively easier (to bat).

“When bowling with the new ball, you have to make the most of it.

“I was trying to focus on the things I can do and generate a good rhythm, and when I am in that frame of mind I usually have a lot of fun and enjoy my game.”

Keegan Petersen scored a careerbest 72 for the home side but played almost a lone hand in the innings with the next highest score being Temba Bavuma’s 28. Petersen, in just his fifth test, showed admirable patience as he batted for 166 balls before becoming the fourth victim for Bumrah when he edged to Pujara at slip. It is the kind of surface where batsmen never quite feel settled at the crease and the fact that the ball might misbehave at any point is always in their minds.

Mohammed Shami (2-39), Umesh Yadav (2-64) and Shardul Thakur (1-37) were also among the wickettake­rs for the tourists.

“We will keep an eye on how the wicket is going, but it is about keeping the discipline­s up, bowling as a unit and applying the pressure by giving less boundary opportunit­ies,” Bumrah said.

The series is level at 1-1 after India won the first test before South Africa bounced back to claim the second.

LIMBE, Cameroon - Mali completed a 1-0 victory over Tunisia in a controvers­ial Group F game at the Africa Cup of Nations that was ended prematurel­y by referee Janny Sikazwe, who later tried to play the final four minutes only for the north Africans to refuse.

Zambian Sikazwe, who officiated at the 2018 World Cup in Russia, initially blew for the final whistle on 85 minutes as he got his timekeepin­g all wrong.

But after playing on, he repeated the error when he blew for fulltime once more before the clock had ticked over to the 90 minutes.

Tunisia were furious and officials stormed on to the pitch in protest, but the man of the match trophy was handed out and the post-match news conference­s in full swing before Confederat­ion of African Football (CAF) officials decided the remaining minutes should be played.

Mali came out onto the pitch again 40 minutes after the controvers­y began, but Tunisia refused to play on and Sikazwe ended the game for a third time.

“The players were taking ice baths for 35 minutes before they were called back out again,” Tunisia coach Mondher Kebaier told reporters.

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