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Sachin Tendulkar's highest score of the calender year was more significant than the scorecard might suggest
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Another attritional day of Test cricket that started with blazing sunshine ended with grey, leaden skies and impromptu games of football on the
outfield. There was, however, enough time for South Africa to seize
control of proceedings, with a spirited late-order rally the precursor to
a disciplined effort with the ball. India now need big runs from the
middle order, a task complicated by the loss of Rahul Dravid to a pretty
ordinary decision.
Having arrived at the ground in the morning ready to bury the last
vestiges of South African resistance, the Indians found the corpse alive
and kicking. Ashwell Prince duly completely an impressive
hundred, but the real revelation was Mornè Morkel on his Test debut. He
showed just why he had a first-class 50 to his name, getting into line and
playing some pleasing drives to frustrate the bowlers. Albie, his elder
brother, thumped one out of the suburb during the Pro20 game at the
Wanderers, and while Morne didn't reveal any such big-hitting prowess, his
assured unbeaten 31 left the Indians to chase at least 50 more than they
would have liked.
The new spin on things didn't stop there. Shaun Pollock, so impressive up
at the Wanderers, wasn't given the ball till the 15th over, with
Andrè Nel taking the shiny red Kookaburra instead. Nel bowled at lively
pace and was as hostile as ever, but didn't really make the batsmen play
enough. The solitary success before lunch came in the shape of a
disgraceful waft from Virender Sehwag.
The Indian dressing-room could have been forgiven for fearing the worst at
that stage, given Wasim Jaffer's travails on this tour. But with Gautam
Gambhir poised for a Cape Town appearance, Jaffer played a dogged little
knock, caressing some lovely drives when given the chance to free his
arms. He couldn't kick on though, falling victim to bore-the-pants-off
tactics after a phase of play that saw only eight runs scored in 10 overs.
Seen in isolation, those figures might suggest that the batsmen had
retreated deep inside a defensive shell, but the reality was very
different. Of the 232 deliveries that India faced before bad light
intervened, a whopping 73 were left alone. A small number beat the outside
edge, but the rest sailed harmlessly over their heads or well outside off
stump and into the keeper's gloves.
It wasn't pretty, but it was effective on a pitch that gave the batsmen
full value for positive intent. Sachin Tendulkar was granted one reprieve,
but otherwise batted as well as he has done for a long time, picking off
the loose deliveries with precision and panache. VVS Laxman too played a
couple of pretty drives, in between long periods when he had to do little
but lift the bat out of harm's way.
Devoid of a spinner, South Africa's attack again had little to offer in
the variety stakes. Morkel was perhaps overawed by the occasion, and will
doubtless come back stronger for the experience, while Andrew Hall was a
pallid substitute for Jacques Kallis. Pollock and Makhaya Ntini were tidy
without being especially threatening, and it was Nel's energy and bluster
that offered the most likely wicket-taking option when he actually
bothered to make the batsmen play.
For Tendulkar, who hasn't gone without a Test 50 in a calendar year since
1991, this innings had added significance, given that his
previous 10 in 2006 had produced just 204 runs at 22.66. He had no
problems with the pace and his judgement of which deliveries to leave was
impeccable, except for the one aberration against Hall.
He'd made just 21 when Smith dropped that sitter, and it was interesting
to note the response from the hecklers up in the stands. "Go take a dip in
the pool," yelled one, while another pointed out in colourful language
that AB [de Villiers, who took two excellent catches] was better than him.
Given Smith's luck thus far in the series, he shouldn't contemplate going
anywhere near a pool - unless there's a float on hand.
Dileep Premachandran is features editor of Cricinfo