Everything that could go wrong went wrong for India, who were 135-9 on a rain-hit day of the hotly-anticipated first day of the Centurion Test. The wicket was fast, bouncy but India couldn't have bargained for the torrential rain that freshened up the wicket, making batting near impossible against Morne Morkel and Dale Steyn, who exposed every weakness in India's batting line-up.
This match is India's best chance of taking the fight to South Africa in this series. Should they lose here, there may be greater woes in Durban, a venue India have fared poorly at, and Cape Town, where only Australia have tasted victory in the last 17 years. At the moment, with this miserable score, with skipper MS Dhoni (33) at the crease with Jaidev Unadkat, and with Zaheer Khan's absence, India don't stand a chance barring rain or a miracle.
With pools of water forming all over the Supersport Park, the first day's play looked unlikely in the morning. The game thankfully commenced at 3 pm local time. Inserting India on this spongy wicket was a no-brainer. India would have been lucky to not be 50-5 in these conditions. Lucky they were not.
Often Virender Sehwag is excused for rash strokes on account of letting him enjoy his natural game. Today, his shot to Steyn on zero is inexcusable. On a fresh wicket, on a day as important as this, against the world's best new-ball attack, the only reasonable way to bat would have been with caution. Not for Sehwag, though. His keenly awaited battle with Steyn lasted three balls. In the third over, Sehwag chased a wide one outside off-stump, slashing it to Hashim Amla at third-man. Then on, it was an early Christmas for South Africa.
Gautam Gambhir had a torrid time today. He had two lives. First ball of the game, Steyn bent one into him and appealed for LBW. Replays suggested it would have brushed the outside of the off-stump. One run later, he gloved Morkel to Mark Boucher but Steve Davis ruled not out. South Africa offered him and Rahul Dravid nothing to drive in the first hour. Everything was short or behind length, keeping them on the backfoot.
Resultantly, Gambhir batted 43 balls for his five. He was done in by the surprise full delivery. Gambhir was in no position for it, edging it to slip. Dravid outscored Gambhir quickly having himself survived a loud LBW shout first ball. Steyn kept bouncing him outside off-stump but the Indian veteran was prepared for a scrap. He managed to keep the edges down or away from the slips. But he too fell to the unexpected full delivery. Morkel had begun hitting the high 140s on the speed gun, and thudded one into Dravid's pads for a plumb LBW.
Sachin Tendulkar's approach to the innings was most refreshing. With the new ball seen off, he picked Lonwabo Tsotsobe as the bowler to target. A short ball from outside off was pulled for four, followed by a signature cover drive. In Tsotsobe's next over, Tendulkar repeated the dose: a pull through mid-wicket and a guide past third-man for fours.
This flurry of fours from Tendulkar injected life into the innings which stood shaky at 27-3. Jacques Kallis was flicked for one more four, followed by three off Steyn: a lemon cut, a cover drive and a square cut.
This is where the fun ended for India. Steyn swung a ball past VVS Laxman's feet cemented to the crease, while Suresh Raina guided a straight ball from Kallis to slips. And immediately after a break brought about by repairs to the slippery bowling crease, Tendulkar was conquered by Steyn with straightforward LBW.
To symbolise India's rotten fortunes today, Harbhajan Singh (27) ran himself out when his bat plugged into the ground as he tried to drag it while completing a run. It's even more remarkable that this incident occurred just as Boucher backhanded a brilliant throw between his legs to the stumps, catching Harbhajan just short.
Ishant Sharma and Sreesanth both made ducks while Unadkat has made his first Test run. Dhoni has been on the attack, having hit two sixes. Tomorrow, Morkel will be on the lookout for his fifth wicket. And India would be looking for ways to avoid a massive defeat.
This match is India's best chance of taking the fight to South Africa in this series. Should they lose here, there may be greater woes in Durban, a venue India have fared poorly at, and Cape Town, where only Australia have tasted victory in the last 17 years. At the moment, with this miserable score, with skipper MS Dhoni (33) at the crease with Jaidev Unadkat, and with Zaheer Khan's absence, India don't stand a chance barring rain or a miracle.
With pools of water forming all over the Supersport Park, the first day's play looked unlikely in the morning. The game thankfully commenced at 3 pm local time. Inserting India on this spongy wicket was a no-brainer. India would have been lucky to not be 50-5 in these conditions. Lucky they were not.
Often Virender Sehwag is excused for rash strokes on account of letting him enjoy his natural game. Today, his shot to Steyn on zero is inexcusable. On a fresh wicket, on a day as important as this, against the world's best new-ball attack, the only reasonable way to bat would have been with caution. Not for Sehwag, though. His keenly awaited battle with Steyn lasted three balls. In the third over, Sehwag chased a wide one outside off-stump, slashing it to Hashim Amla at third-man. Then on, it was an early Christmas for South Africa.
Gautam Gambhir had a torrid time today. He had two lives. First ball of the game, Steyn bent one into him and appealed for LBW. Replays suggested it would have brushed the outside of the off-stump. One run later, he gloved Morkel to Mark Boucher but Steve Davis ruled not out. South Africa offered him and Rahul Dravid nothing to drive in the first hour. Everything was short or behind length, keeping them on the backfoot.
Resultantly, Gambhir batted 43 balls for his five. He was done in by the surprise full delivery. Gambhir was in no position for it, edging it to slip. Dravid outscored Gambhir quickly having himself survived a loud LBW shout first ball. Steyn kept bouncing him outside off-stump but the Indian veteran was prepared for a scrap. He managed to keep the edges down or away from the slips. But he too fell to the unexpected full delivery. Morkel had begun hitting the high 140s on the speed gun, and thudded one into Dravid's pads for a plumb LBW.
Sachin Tendulkar's approach to the innings was most refreshing. With the new ball seen off, he picked Lonwabo Tsotsobe as the bowler to target. A short ball from outside off was pulled for four, followed by a signature cover drive. In Tsotsobe's next over, Tendulkar repeated the dose: a pull through mid-wicket and a guide past third-man for fours.
This flurry of fours from Tendulkar injected life into the innings which stood shaky at 27-3. Jacques Kallis was flicked for one more four, followed by three off Steyn: a lemon cut, a cover drive and a square cut.
This is where the fun ended for India. Steyn swung a ball past VVS Laxman's feet cemented to the crease, while Suresh Raina guided a straight ball from Kallis to slips. And immediately after a break brought about by repairs to the slippery bowling crease, Tendulkar was conquered by Steyn with straightforward LBW.
To symbolise India's rotten fortunes today, Harbhajan Singh (27) ran himself out when his bat plugged into the ground as he tried to drag it while completing a run. It's even more remarkable that this incident occurred just as Boucher backhanded a brilliant throw between his legs to the stumps, catching Harbhajan just short.
Ishant Sharma and Sreesanth both made ducks while Unadkat has made his first Test run. Dhoni has been on the attack, having hit two sixes. Tomorrow, Morkel will be on the lookout for his fifth wicket. And India would be looking for ways to avoid a massive defeat.
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