'It wasn't easy to bat at all' - Chappell
Greg Chappell and Jacques Kallis spoke to the media at the end of the day's play
Dileep Premachandran at Johannesburg
15-Dec-2006
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The late loss of VVS Laxman's wicket made the scoreboard a less appealing
prospect for the Indians, but Greg Chappell, the coach, was satisfied with
the application that most of his batsmen showed on a surface that gave
enough encouragement to the pace bowlers.
"I thought all the middle-order batsmen batted well and fought it out,
given the conditions and the nature of the surface," said Chappell,
speaking to the media after the day's play. "It wasn't easy to bat at all.
It's not a wicket where you could say you were 'in' at any stage.
Hopefully, there will be more sunshine tomorrow, and we can continue from
here and bat better."
The decision to bat, despite the damp pitch, was Rahul Dravid's, and
Chappell supported it. "It was a courageous decision to bat first," he
said. "But as a team, we always look to bat first. This appears a dry
track, and we wanted to take the initiative because batting last will be
very difficult here."
Jacques Kallis, who sent back both Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid, was
delighted with his nine-over spell, and said that it had been pretty much
a typical Wanderers pitch. "There was a little bit in the wicket, and you
just needed to put the ball in the right areas. You always expect it to
play a little up and down. If anything, what was different was the lack of
pace. It was very slow. If you get in and see off the new ball, it's
usually a good scoring ground."
He was confident that South Africa could wrap up the Indian innings
quickly and then set up the game with the bat. "We would like to cash in
batting during our first innings, and put them under pressure," he said.
"Normally, days two and three are the best batting days on this ground,
hopefully the track will get a little quicker too."
South Africa might well be without Dale Steyn for that second day, after
he pulled up with a recurrence of a quadriceps strain after bowling the
first ball of his 11th over. "He had a Grade I strain in his left thigh
some three weeks back," said Shane Jabaar, the team physio. "He has been
receiving treatment and bowling in the nets for the last one week, but in
a Test match, there is an increased ten percent intensity in bowling.
"He felt very mild pain and left the field as a precaution, which was
good. We'll see how it responds in the morning, and see if he can come
back for the first innings, or whether we should get him ready for the
second innings."
They might need him too, on a pitch that Chappell reckons will grow
increasingly bowler-friendly. "I think the bowlers will dominate this
game," he said. "This could turn out to be a low-scoring Test. The odd
batsman might get stuck in, but generally, the bowlers will have the upper
hand. We have no target as such, but 350 is usually what we aim for in a
Test match batting first."
Even if they get within a 100 runs of that stated target, it will be an
achievement in itself. After the limp surrender of the one-day series,
this was a day to show some fight. And though no man lasted the distance,
there was some true grit on display. What price a Ganguly epic on day two?
Dileep Premachandran is features editor of Cricinfo