Cape Argus

Bumrah: Our confidence isn’t dented after one Test match

- STUART HESS

INDIA remain confident that they can beat South Africa despite a losing the first Test after putting themselves in a favourable position.

“Your confidence isn’t dented after one Test match...if your confidence goes away after one match you don’t deserve to play. You learn from the mistakes and you keep moving forward,” said Jasprit Bumrah, who made his debut at Newlands, and finished that match with four wickets, including dismissing AB de Villiers twice.

Bumrah showed signs of learning in that match, improving vastly from the first innings to the second, mainly by shortening his length. He’d conceded 73 runs for De Villiers’ wicket in the first innings - which proved costly ultimately – and in the second, in picking up three wickets, he went for just 39 runs. .

“We are not focusing on the result, because if we do that, we lift away too far from our plans,” said Bumrah.

The Indian team had its first net session at SuperSport Park yesterday morning, and there is plenty of speculatio­n about the make-up of the starting team for the second Test that starts tomorrow.

In fact Bumrah, despite his excellent performanc­e in the first Test, may find himself sacrificed if India aim to strengthen their batting by adding Ajinkya Rahane or if Ishant Sharma’s ability to extract extra bounce is deemed a better option here.

“There seems to be a good amount of bounce based on the what we saw in the nets,” remarked Bumrah.

“We were focused on the lengths we wanted to bowl,” he said about their training stint yesterday.

India, despite all the pre-series talk about this being their best opportunit­y to win in South Africa, weren’t overly disappoint­ed about the loss at Newlands, with skipper Virat Kohli, adopting a reasonably philosophi­cal attitude. It is one Bumrah appreciate­s.

“My basic motto is not to get too excited after some success, or get too down when things are tough… but take the confidence from the previous match and move forward,” he said.

There was enough to please India about their performanc­e in that first Test, but also several areas that could be improved.

Whether those improvemen­ts will occur as a result of personnel changes, only the next 48 hours will tell.

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