Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Scorecard

-

“This is not Adelaide. The South African batsmen should realise this is India and the ball will keep low,” former South Africa skipper Graeme Smith bristled in the commentato­rs’ box.

Indeed, the low bounce was evident from the way it played on Saturday, but it claimed some more victims in the first session. Opener Aiden Markram dug in and tried to put up resistance with captain du Plessis. He did edge deliveries but they mostly kept low and found the gaps.

But when the pitch did not get the batsmen, the brilliance of the bowlers did. Like the beauty from Shami that castled du Plessis.

He had been patient to leave the outgoing deliveries, watching the ball closely. But on this occasion, Shami’s delivery pitched wide of off-stump and nipped back, keeping low. Du Plessis had raised his arms to let the ball go through, and was stunned as it hit the stumps.

“We’ve seen him (Shami) in these conditions, not just today A Markram c & b Jadeja 39 D Elgar lbw b Jadeja 2 T de Bruyn b Ashwin 10 T Bavuma b Mohammed Shami 0 F du Plessis (c) b Mohammed Shami 13 Q de Kock b Mohammed Shami 0 S Muthusamy not out 49

but earlier also. I still remember our debut together in Kolkata where the pitch was not exactly like this but on day four and five was slightly lower and slower. He knows how to bowl on these pitches. Shami gets reverse swing straight into play once he knows there is some help on offer. It is not easy to bowl when reverse is happening. You need to pitch in the right areas, make sure the ball is just around the V Philander lbw b Jadeja

K Maharaj lbw b Jadeja

D Piedt b Mohammed Shami K Rabada c Saha b Mohammed Shami 18 Extras (b-2, lb-2) 4 Total (all out in 63.5 overs) 191 FOW: 1-4, 2-19, 3-20, 4-52, 5-60, 6-70, 7-70, 8-70, 9-161.

Bowling: R Ashwin 20-5-44-1, R Jadeja 25-6-87-4, M Shami 10.5-2-35-5, I Sharma 7-2-18-0, R Sharma 1-0-3-0. 0 0 56

off-stump and it comes and hits middle. He has mastered that art now, bowling with the old ball and getting it to reverse,” Rohit Sharma, the Man-of-the-match for his twin centuries, said after the match.

That was not all as Shami produced another stunner in his next over. This time Quinton de Kock was the victim. The delivery pitched and nipped in a bit, also keeping a touch low. De Kock pushed forward and the ball sneaked in between bat and pad and rattled the stumps. Four of his five victims were bowled. South Africa were 60/5 when de Kock fell and the hosts sniffed a quick victory.

If Shami opened the floodgates, Ravindra Jadeja delivered even rapid punches as he scalped three in one over.

The first was a stunner to end Markram’s resistance. The opener went for a lofted shot, but the delivery came slow off the surface, messing his timing. And the best fielder in this Indian side leapt high to take the left-handed return catch.

Two balls later, Jadeja got his next when Vernon Philander was trapped leg before trying to flick. The next ball, Keshav Maharaj fell in similar fashion. South Africa at 70/8 were staring down the barrel.

Yet the best knock of South Africa was yet to come. Piedt and debutant all-rounder Muthusamy combined to frustrate the Indian bowlers. While the latter was a picture of concentrat­ion, Piedt played aggressive­ly. He went after every delivery he could, even extending the record for most sixes in a Test, hitting the 36th.

The s p i nners c o ul d not extract much from the pitch as the ninth wicket pair carried on. From 70/8, South Africa reached 117/8 at lunch, though a fight back looked remote. They frustrated India, and Piedt reached his half-century in 86 balls.

It was Shami again who broke the resistance. His fuller delivery took the inside edge of Piedt, who went for a cover drive, and broke his stump. He completed the fifer when last man Kagiso Rabada edged to wicketkeep­er Wriddhiman Saha.

“It’s difficult to bowl on such a wicket because it was getting slower. So the plan was to bowl at the stumps. Jaddu and Ash bowled well. We knew the variable bounce and reverse swing would help us in the second innings. So we tried to attack the stumps. It was important to get the top batters out as early as possible,” Shami said.

 ??  ?? Mohammed Shami (second right), who took five wickets, ran through South Africa’s middle-order. This was his fifth five-wicket haul.
AFP PHOTO
Mohammed Shami (second right), who took five wickets, ran through South Africa’s middle-order. This was his fifth five-wicket haul. AFP PHOTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India