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Proteas fall under spin pressure in pursuit of 310 as hosts eye series win

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3rd-test-2nd-daysIndia took complete control of the third Test against South Africa after bowling out the visitors for 79 in their first innings before setting a 310-run victory target on Thursday. 20 wickets fell in the second day’s play.

At stumps at the VCA Ground, Jamtha, South Africa were struggling at 32 for two with opener Dean Elgar (10) and captain Hashim Amla (3) battling it out at the crease after the dismissals of Stiaan van Zyl (5) and night watchman Imran Tahir (8).

On a pitch that saw vicious turn, a record 20 wickets fell during the day after the dozen yesterday to turn the contest into a lop-sided one in favour of the spinners.

This is the highest wicket-fall in a single day in India after 20 wickets fell in a day during the India versus Australia match in Mumbai, 2004.

India, after taking a handy lead of 136 runs, went for quick runs and were all out for 173 in the second, which left the visitors with more than three full days to get 278 more runs to win the game and keep the series alive for the fourth tie at Delhi commencing on December 3.

Considering the state of the pitch and the happenings of the first two days, the match is all set to end on the third day tomorrow, most probably in favour of India that will mark an end to South Africa’s enviable nine-year unbeaten Test series away from home record as they are trailing the hosts 0-1 in the four-game rubber.

Opener Shikhar Dhawan (39), one-down Cheteshwar Pujara (31) and no. 6 Rohit Sharma (23) were the only batsmen in the Indian second innings to get into the 20s as leg-spinner Tahir picked up five wickets and speedster Morne Morkel got three.

In the morning itself expectations were high that the Indian spinners would create mayhem on the venomous track after the Proteas resumed at the overnight 11 for 2 in reply to the hosts’ modest tally of 215.

True to predictions, Ravichandran Ashwin (5 for 32), Ravindra Jadeja (4 for 33) and Amit Mishra (1 for 9) combined forces to slice through the nervous Proteas’ batting order and shoot them out for their 12th lowest Test score and their worst since readmission to international cricket in the early 1990s.

The visitors lost eight wickets this morning after resuming at the overnight score, in one and a half hours’ batting during which they faced 24.1 overs.

The South African innings, that commenced late last evening, lasted seven minutes over two hours and 33.1 overs.

It beat the previous low of 84 against India made in Johannesburg in December 2006 as well as the previous lowest in this country of 105 in November 1996.

It’s also their lowest total since returning to international cricket after the end of apartheid in the early 1990s.

None of the Proteas’ batsmen, barring to some extent left handed Jean-Paul Duminy, who top-scored with 35 in 65 balls and 71 minutes after being let-off twice, showed inclination or skill to counter the threat posed by Ashwin and Jadeja.

Off-spinner Ashwin bowled unchanged for 16.1 overs from the end opposite to the pavilion to return with his 14th five-wicket in an innings haul in his 31st game.

Having accounted for the wicket of opener van Zyl last evening, he added the wickets of the other opener Dean Elgar, rival skipper Amla, Simon Harmer and Morne Morkel today by making the ball ‘talk’ on a spiteful pitch.

He sent back Elgar and Amla in the space of three balls in successive overs to leave Proteas gasping at 11 for four.

Left-arm spinner Jadeja was not too far behind and sent back danger man A B de Villiers for a duck, Faf du Plessis and Dane Vilas today to add to his wicket kitty that already had Tahir yesterday.

The deliveries that got rid of de Villiers and du Plessis were classy ones, the first one stopping and deceiving the batsman who put up a return catch and the second turning across the face of the bat and clean bowling du Plessis.

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