Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

INDIA BAG RECORD 11TH HOME SERIES WIN

THUMP THE PROTEAS BY INNINGS AND 137 RUNS

- Sanjjeev K Samyal sanjjeev.samyal@htlive.com ■

PUNE: It was at the 2006 Champions Trophy in India that then ICC CEO Malcolm Speed made a statement that India’s performanc­es were not in keeping with the cricket board’s riches.

At a press conference in Mohali, the Australian official said sports bodies are not judged by the money they possessed but on the basis of the performanc­e of the team they represent. Though not mentioned in as many words, it was a dig at India’s inconsiste­ncy and Australia’s domination of world cricket at that time.

“I have read a lot about India’s money power. But we don’t judge sporting organisati­ons on the basis of how much money they have. What matters in the end is performanc­e. The criterion for judging organisati­ons is how their team has performed, how well they look after their stakeholde­rs and how many good cricketers they produce. I am not trying to be critical of India, but the last time they won a major title was in 1983,” said Speed.

Till a couple of seasons ago, Indian cricket was vulnerable to such criticism, known more for being the wealthiest cricket board in the world and its influence in the game. In a dramatic turnaround, the riches and the team’s results are on a par now.

On Sunday, the team underlined the point with an emphatic all-round performanc­e to defeat South Africa in the second Test at the Maharashtr­a Cricket Associatio­n Stadium here by an innings and 137 runs—a record 11th straight series win at home.

India are the No 1 ranked Test side and lead the World Test Championsh­ip table with 200 points. One of the biggest factors in India’s rise has been how Virat Kohli has led from the front, and it was fitting he tasted victory in his 50th Test as skipper, claiming the Man-of-the-Match award for a career-best, unbeaten 254.

“When we started off as a group we were at No.7 (in Test rankings). The only way was up. We laid down a few things, told everyone to work hard at practice. We are lucky to have the group of players we have had in the last three-four years. It’s amazing to see that hunger and passion for all the guys to keep improving,” Kohli said at the post-match presentati­on.

For South Africa, the most disappoint­ing factor in their conceding the series 0-2 with a game to go will be losing the matches despite the surfaces having been good. The last time they played in India in 2015, the wickets were crumbling from Day 1. At Visakhapat­nam and Pune this time, it has been a test of skills and India have beaten them fair and square.

On the fourth day, for the first time in 11 years South Africa were made to follow on. The humiliatio­n didn’t stir them into action and there was little resistance as they folded for 189. Umesh Yadav and Ravindra Jadeja finished with three wickets each while R Ashwin grabbed the two big wickets, of Dean Elgar and Faf du Plessis. Only Keshav Maharaj and Vernon Philander again showed fight, putting on 56 runs for the eighth wicket.

Kohli made the visitors wait till 15 minutes before the start of play before conveying the follow-on message. Caught out, South Africa had the worst possible start when opener Aiden Markram bagged a pair, out second ball of the innings to Ishant Sharma. To their dismay, the batsman didn’t seek a review after being given out leg before. Replays showed the ball would have easily missed the stumps. South Africa’s misery was complete when the set Elgar threw his wicket away at the stroke of lunch, reducing it to 74/4.

It was all-round brilliance from Kohli’s men. The bowlers were backed admirably by the fielders to build pressure. Ajinkya Rahane was outstandin­g in the slips, but the star of the day was wicket-keeper Wriddhiman Saha, taking spectacula­r catches on the leg side. Umesh had Saha to thank for two of his wickets. Saha made an acrobatic dive to catch Theunis de Bruyne’s leg glance. He took another down the leg to end Philander’s resistance, and quickly recovered to pouch du Plessis’s catch on the rebound.

South Africa vice-captain Temba Bavuma admitted his team was left bamboozled after the first innings. “Probably being hypercriti­cal, you would’ve expected our bowling attack and their skill that we have to be able to make a lot more inroads, looking at the conditions. Their bowlers have been able to put us under pressure. It’s quite obvious in the batting totals we’ve been able to accumulate. They are doing something we are not. Or, their batters are just playing bowlers better than our batters.”

From their credential­s being questioned, Indian cricket has become the world’s envy. The most impressive thing is no player looks indispensa­ble. Before the series, the bowling spearhead was out injured and another player steps in and is switched on, Umesh Yadav coming good with Jasprit Bumrah injured. In an earlier era, an injury to Kapil Dev or Zaheer Khan would have reduced the team’s strength by half.

In 2011, Zaheer limped out on the first day of the series and England ran all over India. On the only day Zaheer bowled, he had made the England batsmen look like the proverbial cat on a hot tin roof. After he suffered a hamstring injury, James Anderson and Co had a free run. From there, ECB fearlessly laid green

tops for the India batsmen. They knew Anderson and Stuart Broad would spit fire and India won’t have an answer without Zaheer. The result was a 4-0 whitewash.

This time, though at home, India without Bumrah have still out-bowled the South Africa pacers, including Kagiso Rabada. Yadav’s bowling highlighte­d the team’s qualities that have helped them become a formidable unit. “Most guys are very experience­d and know what needs to be done at this level to be successful. So, the guys coming up the system know they need to show consistenc­y. And as far as team ethics is concerned, everyone understand­s what it requires. No one is selfish and everyone adheres and focuses on team plans. As seniors, we are 7-8 guys who have played 40-plus Tests, we know how to play and plan. New guys who come see that… They know they need to get better than us to be in the side,” Yadav said.

The depth of India’s resources is striking. SA skipper Faf du Plessis, who was a shadow of himself, scoring five off 54 balls after moving up to No. 4, blamed the seniors for the debacle.

“It hurts. It (India) is a tough place to play cricket. But even with a lot of inexperien­ce in our team, we never came here thinking we are going to roll over and out. We are a very, very proud cricketing nation. Our performanc­e doesn’t really adjust it.

“I said before this series your best Test teams are those with the most experience. One-day cricket and T20 cricket are different, but when it comes to this Indian team... there’s a lot of experience, lot of Test matches behind their names. We’re at a stage where we’ve lost almost all of our experience—Steyn, Morkel, Amla, de Villiers were all seasoned.

“For us it is important as a senior player group to make sure we put in performanc­es. Myself, Elgar, Quinton, we need to make sure we make the runs first and then the others chip in with us.”

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 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? ■ Umesh Yadav stepped into Jasprit Bumrah’s shoes and gave a good account of himself.
AFP PHOTO ■ Umesh Yadav stepped into Jasprit Bumrah’s shoes and gave a good account of himself.

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