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Proteas crush
India in three days with an innings victory |
Link to Scorecard
Indian
batting failed for the second time to a potent
fast bowling attack from the Proteas. The
visitors finished a comprehensive innings and 90
runs victory in just three days with India
getting bowled out in their second innings for
328. The South Africans declared their first
innings straightaway this morning and went onto
take 10 Indian second innings wickets in a
little over 94 overs.
The day's play got off to a 30-minute delayed
start at 9:30 because of the outfield being wet
because of overnight rain. Graeme Smith did the
right thing in getting India to bat on a track
that was fresh with the morning moisture.
Virender Sehwag took the strike in the first
over against Dale Steyn to hit him twice over
square leg for a couple of daring sixes! But
Sehwag was troubled by Makhaya Ntini and a
superb inswinger caught him in the crease.
Sehwag had made an entertaining little innings
of 17 (from 20 balls) with a boundary and two
sixes. India tried to repair the early damage
through Jaffer and Dravid until the latter got
yet another beauty to be dismissed cheaply. This
time it was a nasty lifter from the tall Morne
Morkel which made Dravid (17 from 41 balls )
helplessly fend behind. Wasim Jaffer (19 from 53
balls) followed Dravid back in the pavilion
after 11 deliveries when he was caught in the
slips off a Kallis' outswinger that saw him
tentatively forward.
India
finished the morning session at a disappointing
95 for 3 in 25 overs. The experienced pair of
Laxman and Ganguly showed some promise but the
question was could they go on to make their
fight last long. And the answer was no with
Laxman falling to a false drive to a Morne
Morkel delivery which found a faint edge. Laxman
lasted for just 45 deliveries and he had looked
good for his 35 which had six boundaries. The
loss of Laxman didn't get on the mind of Ganguly
as the left hander forged a well controlled
partnership with MS Dhoni to lead India's
fightback. India managed to survive the
afternoon session and went to Tea at 191 for 4.
Ganguly after Tea was closing on a hundred but
an umpiring error cost him his 16th test
hundred. The southpaw had made a wonderfully
made 87 (from 149 balls with 8 fours) before he
was given caught behind off Steyn. Ganguly was
unlucky as it was the bat hitting the turf that
made all the wrong impressions of a nick.
Ganguly and Dhoni had put on 110 runs for the
5th wicket which lasted nearly 36 overs.
After Ganguly's exit, there was no fight at
all from the remaining players. Dhoni, who had
worked hard to get to his 9th fifty got out to a
tame shot off Ntini to be caught in the slips.
He made a patient 52 (from 132 balls with 5
fours) in a stay of exactly 200 minutes. The
rest of the Indian batting was cleaned up by the
combination of Steyn, Harris and Ntini. Irfan
Pathan helped himself to an unbeaten 43 (from 77
balls with 4 fours and a six) which reduced the
margin of defeat. Much to the relief, India were
bowled by the end of the day's play which went
nearly upto 5:45 PM. AB de Villiers was the Man
of the Match but it was the South Africa pace
trio that set the match up. Steyn and Ntini
shared three wickets each while Morkel came up
with two and Kallis, Harris got a wicket each.
This incidentally happens to be India's only
innings defeat since 2001 and it was their worst
defeat in the last 50 years! It's going to be
one big task for the Indians to come back from
this morale shattering defeat to win the last
test at Kanpur to draw this Test Series.
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