|
|
AB de Villiers ended the day on an unbeaten 217, the highest Test score by a South African against India
© AFP
|
|
|
If an Indian team with ambitions to world dominance found the opening
day at the Sardar Patel Stadium humiliating, day two was soul-destroying, with a
classy AB de Villiers double-century and a dogged Jacques Kallis hundred
underpinning a relentless South African charge to victory. By the time the
rain came down to wash away Indian tears, they had rampaged to 494 for 7,
with de Villiers still going strong on 217, the highest score by a South
African against India.
In the 77.2 overs bowled in the day, India managed just three wickets, two
of them when the batsmen were in the quest for quick runs after tea. Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh picked up one apiece, with Mark Boucher and Morne Morkel trapped leg before, but by then the only question being posed was just how imposing
the lead would be.
de Villiers needed just 146 balls for his second hundred, and played some
stupendous strokes in the final session. A huge six off Harbhajan landed
on the roof at what is a massive venue, and when he was later gifted a
full toss that he creamed through cover, the celebrations could begin.
That stroke also brought up the 400-run lead, and de Villiers put the seal
on an impressive day's work with a mighty heave off Kumble that soared
into the empty stand at deep midwicket. As a weary Indian side trudged
off, a defeat of mammoth proportions beckoned unless they could bat with a
great deal more application at the second time of asking.
Kumble and his men could reflect on opportunities that came their way
early in the proceedings. Harbhajan, the pick of the bowlers, was
desperately unlucky against both batsmen. Kallis had made just 61 when he
fended one awkwardly off the glove, only to see it roll back and strike
the stumps. The bails stayed on, Harbhajan held his head, and the chance
had gone. In his very next over, an offbreak went right through de
Villiers, missing the stumps by a whisker.
Irfan Pathan was insipid with the old ball, and Kumble soon replaced him
at the other end, but the runs slowly started to mount as the pitch showed
few signs of menace. de Villiers cut Harbhajan for four, and Kumble was
then far from thrilled as a Kallis cover-drive was fumbled over the rope
by Sourav Ganguly.
Despite slightly overcast conditions, Kumble didn't call on Sreesanth. By
the time the new ball was taken after 81.2 overs, whatever little moisture
that might have been in the pitch was long gone. Sreesanth soon made an
impact too, striking Kallis on the shoulder with a bouncer and then having
an excellent leg-before shout turned down.
Once the initial threat posed by the new ball passed, the runs came
freely. de Villiers flicked RP Singh for four and then glanced Sreesanth
fine, before Kallis highlighted his power with two contemptuous pulls for
four. On the stroke of lunch, Ganguly came on, and a paddle down to fine
leg saw de Villiers reach his fifth Test century.
Kallis was on 97 at the time, and the 30th century that took him past Sir
Donald Bradman arrived soon after the interval, with a magnificent
cover-drive for four off Ganguly. It had been a stolid and at times
fortuitous effort, spanning 228 balls, but vital in the context of the
match after Harbhajan's three quick wickets on the first afternoon.
The 200-run partnership came from 401 balls, and the runs were milked with
ease after that. Pathan was pedestrian at best and Kumble merely
restrictive. Both men played the sweep with increasing confidence and it
was quite bizarre that Sreesanth, the most effective Indian pace bowler on
view, was called on only an hour and ten minutes after lunch.
Kallis swatted the first ball for four, and when an edge then streaked
past slip, Sreesanth's frustration boiled over. But instead of
self-destructing, he used the anger to produce a gem of a delivery that
lifted from outside off stump and caught Kallis in two minds. By the time
he tried to arc the bat away, it was too late and the inside edge cannoned
into the stumps. He had batted six hours, and the partnership of 256 was
South Africa's highest against India, surpassing the 236 that Gary
Kirsten, currently India's coach, and Andrew Hudson added at the Eden
Gardens in 1996-97.
A sparse crowd watched it all with a mixture of frustration and reluctant
admiration, and there was something forlorn about the few Indian flags
being waved in the stands on a day when dreams of global conquest
evaporated in egg-frying heat.
Dileep Premachandran is an associate editor at Cricinfo