Business Day

Ruthless India complete humiliatio­n of Proteas

Captain Faf admits the batting line-up was mentally weak and SA were outplayed

- Telford Vice Cape Town /Isuru Sameera Peris/Gallo Images

Ruthlessne­ss. Of the many factors that separated India and SA in their Test series‚ it is up there with the most significan­t.

Faf du Plessis knows it‚ and SAs he ’should. worst Having series in presided 83 years over not since 1936 have they endured consecutiv­e innings defeats he was a good choice to explain it all.

“The way the Indian seamers especially showed us as an SA fast bowling attack how to bowl speaks volumes for this series‚” Du Plessis told reporters in Ranchi on Tuesday after India won by an innings and 202 runs in less than two-and-a-half days of actual playing time more than half of which India spent batting.

They lost nine wickets before declaring after 116.3 overs‚ and needed only 104.2 to dismiss the Proteas. Twice.

“The pace they bowled the consistenc­y they bowled‚ the skill that they showed‚ there’s learning for us in that‚” Du Plessis said.

“Seam bowling is one area; spin‚ they were better than us. From a batting unit [perspectiv­e]‚ exceptiona­l ruthlessne­ss in the way they put massive scores on the board.

“That’s one of the reasons why mentally we were probably so weak towards the end. The relentless ruthlessne­ss in the way that they put big totals on the board. Obviously they did bat first every time, which made it easier‚ but they still put on 500‚ 500‚ 600.

“And the scoreboard pressure‚ the effect that it has on you mentally as a batting line-up‚ it takes a lot of energy and it takes a lot of toll and that’s why we could see‚ towards the end‚ our batting line-up was mentally weak.

“We don’t want to be mentally weak. Obviously you try as hard as you can‚ but their ruthlessne­ss right through this series

you just feel like there’s no SA captain Faf du Plessis faces the media after his team suffered a whitewash at the hands of India. opportunit­y or no moment in the game when you can hide.

“It’s constant. Your body is tired‚ your mind is tired and then you make mistakes. That’s what makes them such a powerful team the ruthlessne­ss. That’s where we’re falling short with the batting.

“In the first Test Dean [Elgar] and ‘Quinny’ [Quinton de Kock] played great knocks [scoring 160 and 111] but after that a lot of 50s‚ a lot of starts.

“They didn’t have that. They had huge scores. And also from a fielding point of view‚ it’s tough to say that‚ but they outfielded us. The energy that they showed‚ it was a complete performanc­e and we were outplayed.”

That was no less true on Tuesday‚ when the Indians needed only a dozen deliveries to take the last two wickets they needed to clinch the series 3-0.

Debutant left-arm spinner Shahbaz Nadeem had Theunis de Bruyn caught behind before‚ with his next delivery‚ catching Lungi Ngidi’s mighty mow after it ricocheted off nonstriker Anrich Nortjé’s wrist.

With that another triumph was added to a list that already featured victory by 203 runs in Visakhapat­nam and by an innings and 137 runs in Pune, which was SA’s biggest loss to India until Tuesday.

The difference of 53.91 that looms between SA’s batting average for the series 23.01 and their bowling average 76.92 is an unwanted record for all their rubbers since readmissio­n.

SA’s seamers took 10 wickets at an average of 70.2 in 219.3 overs. India’s claimed 26 at 17.5 in 152.5.

That is another record in comparison terms.

All told, SA snared 25 scalps and India 60: still another worst for them measuring the difference between them and their opponents in a series‚ and there are plenty more where those came from.

That is what ruthlessne­ss looks like.

 ??  ?? Horror show:
Horror show:

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa