South Africa top order starts series on a high
Posted on Mar 26, 2008 at 09:12 | Updated Mar 27, 2008 at 11:02
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Chennai: South African skipper Graeme Smith would certainly be smiling at the end of Day One of the first Test with India at the MA Chidambaram Stadium here.
At stumps on Wednesday, his side was sitting pretty at 304-4, with the captain himself, Neil McKenzie (94) and Hashim Amla (85 not out) putting it across the Indian attack. Anil Kumble was left holding the consolation prize of four wickets.
It could have been far worse for the hosts.
With Amla and A.B de Villiers (10) at the crease, and Mark Boucher and Morne Morkel still to bat, South Africa could well be in a position to force the issue here. India, on the other hand, would be hoping for contributions from all the bowlers, not just the spinners.
There is a flip side of having seven batsmen in the team. If you lose the toss and have to field first, the two medium-pacers have to really get their act together. Once Graeme Smith won the toss and predictably elected to bat, all the Indians could do was hope that their limited bowling strength would be able to do the job.
India went in with the expected two spinners, while RP Singh and S Sreesanth got the nod for sharing the new ball, Irfan Pathan having to sit out. While there may be questions raised about his being left out, the fact remains that there was no place for three seamers, and playing both left-armers did not look like such a great idea.
In any case, both RP Singh and Sreesanth have shown greater wicket-taking knack off late.
Anil Kumble was as always expected to be the mainstay for the Indian attack, and with the pace attack not showing enough teeth, the job became even more demanding.
However, the captain took to it like he always does, and it was thanks to his and Harbhajan Singh’s efforts that India at least had something to show at the end of the day. He got rid of Smith (73) and then Ashwell Prince (23), the latter thanks to a sprawling caught and bowled, which was definitely the highlight of the Indian fielding on day one.
The South Africans, on the other hand, promised a lot individually, especially Smith and McKenzie, but neither stayed around long enough to convert potential centuries into real ones.
Given the none-too friendly conditions, Harbhajan should at least be commended for the effort he put int, which kept India in some sort of shape. He bowled an unchanged spell of 16 overs, his second, on either side of tea to claim the wickets of McKenzie and Jacques Kallis (13), the former falling to a fine piece of bowling as he failed to negotiate the delivery drifting away and edged it to Rahul Dravid at slips.
Kallis gave Pakistani umpire Asad Rauf a bit of a reprieve. The batsman played the ball onto his pads and was held by Wasim Jaffer at bat-pad. However, Rauf didn’t seem too inclined to give the batsman out but Kallis walked.
Amla is the sort of batsman who can drive any bowling up the wall. He takes the concept of using time to heart, and while he is slow, he tends to keep the bowlers away, which can be really trying. The Indians really didn’t find much joy against him, and with Prince, a batsman of the same mode, things were sedate, but the South Africans wouldn’t be complaining.
At tea, South Africa left it one step short of total domination. Looking like batting away with the day’s honours, they left the Indians with a toe-hold. The Proteas were 206-2 off 54 overs at the break.
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