Sunday Times

Proteas battling to save India Test

- By TELFORD VICE

● Winning is no longer a serious option for SA in Visakhapat­nam, and their chances of saving the first Test against India are as slim and brittle as a poppadom.

The outlook wasn’t quite as bleak as that until halfway through what became the sixth over before stumps yesterday, when Ravindra Jadeja came around the wicket and sneaked a delivery under Dean Elgar’s bat and onto his pad.

Replays said the ball pitched on leg stump, and the rest was a formality of television umpiring.

Elgar’s street-fighting 160 in the first innings was why SA passed 400 for only the third time in the nine Tests in which they have batted second in India.

Welkom’s finest faced more than half the number of deliveries his 10 teammates managed combined.

The danger of what Elgar might do the second time around was the reason Virat Kohli batted on and on yesterday, only declaring when the target was 395: beyond anything any side have successful­ly chased in India.

SA were 384 runs from what remains an impossible victory when bad light ended play four overs early, and the most important stat today is the 50% forecast for rain.

What are the chances of anything except an India win?

“The last time we came here the wickets were a lot worse — you can still bat on this one,” Vernon Philander told reporters after the close, a reference to the wretched surfaces prepared in 2015, and which Elgar described on Friday as “a farce”.

Still, closer to the truth though this surface is, it’s still a fifth-day pitch in India.

With Elgar removed from the equation, SA might be close to losing by the time you read this. Or worse.

How did we get here?

On the blazing bat of Rohit Sharma, who shared a stand of 169 with Cheteshwar Pujara and became the only man in all 2,363 Tests yet played to score centuries in both innings opening the batting for the first time.

Sharma’s 127 followed the 176 he made in the first innings, and the 13 sixes he smote is more than anyone has hit in a single Test.

Neither has any team launched more sixes in a match than India’s 27 in this game.

Keshav Maharaj, Dane Piedt and Senuran Muthusamy won’t need reminding of those frightenin­g facts.

“If you’re a SA spinner you need someone to erase this from your brain,” Graeme Smith said on commentary as another mighty blow sent the ball sailing through the evening sky like a dark comet.

Maharaj, a slight figure at the best of times, was reduced to a gauntly skeletal shadow after adding 29 overs to the 55 — a SA record for a Test innings — in the first dig. A match bag of 5/318 is not nearly a fair reward for that much hard work.

Maharaj’s nadir came when Ajinkya Rahane, having swept him for four convention­ally, didn’t bother turning his bat when reverse-sweeping his next delivery. The ball scooted to the boundary off the pitched spine of the back of Rahane’s bat just as surely regardless.

But at least Maharaj looked threatenin­g. Not so Piedt, who went wicketless for 102 after taking 1/107 in the first innings and suffered the indignity of Sharma heaving a hattrick of sixes off his bowling.

Muthusamy made a decent enough debut, not least because he used up 106 balls to score his unbeaten 33.

More of that kind of batting today could give him the chance to be a hero.

How much more? That’s like deciding how many poppadoms is enough.

 ??  ?? Rohit Sharma, left, and Senuran Muthusamy were to the fore for India in the first Test against the Proteas in Visakhapat­nam
Rohit Sharma, left, and Senuran Muthusamy were to the fore for India in the first Test against the Proteas in Visakhapat­nam
 ??  ?? Batting stars
Batting stars

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