29 December,2023 07:00 AM IST | Centurion | R Kaushik
South Africa’s Kagiso Rabada (left) celebrates India captain Rohit Sharma’s wicket at SuperSport Park yesterday. Pic/AFP
The capitulation was abject, the surrender complete. Having come to South Africa entertaining visions of finally securing a Test series win in the only country where it has remained elusive so far, India's hopes were buried just three days into the series at SuperSport Park on Thursday.
Having seen Dean Elgar and Marco Jansen extend South Africa's first-innings advantage in the first Test to a commanding 163, India faced the daunting task of batting with application and purpose if they were to make a match of it. Instead, in a lacklustre display totally out of sync with their standing as the No. 1 Test side, India rolled over for just 131 in 34.1 overs in the second innings, well beaten by an innings and 32 runs with more than two days remaining.
Also Read: India slump to their biggest defeat on South African soil in Test history
ALSO READ
T2O World Cup 2024: South Africa edge past USA by 18 runs in a thrilling contest
"Can't judge their form on wickets we have played on": Rabada backs Klaasen
T20 World Cup 2024: Markram seeks to build WC on South Africa junior success
Injured Rabada’s IPL exit may not affect WC preparation
Rabada on scheduling It was unacceptable
Even South Africa must have been pleasantly surprised at the rapidity with which India's batsmen departed the crease, in unseemly hurry as strokes were played with gay abandon. Virat Kohli's stylish 76 was no more than a consolation, the top-order fired out as much because of their adventurism as the discipline of the South African bowling.
As is to be expected, there were a clutch of excellent deliveries, including the one from Kagiso Rabada in the third over that slanted into Rohit Sharma and seamed away on pitching to hit off-stump, but there were also outlandish strokes with no respect for the game situation or the conditions. South Africa put down two catches, including off the first delivery of the Indian second innings when Aiden Markram failed to grab an offering low to his right at first slip off Yashasvi Jaiswal. Yet, India continued to look a gift horse in the mouth, failing to tread the thin line between aggression and indiscretion judiciously.
That only two batsmen, Kohli and Shubman Gill, topped double digits must also be a source of worry. South Africa's pace battery did just about enough, but they didn't need to do more, not with India in such generous wicket-surrendering mode after having seen the opposition pile on the runs. Nandre Burger, who had an excellent debut, finished with four wickets while Jansen added to his career-best unbeaten 84 with a three-wicket burst including the scalps with identical full balls of Gill and Shreyas Iyer.
Jansen had taken the lead role in the morning when South Africa resumed at 256 for five in reply to India's 245. The game was still in the balance but there was no joy for India's bowlers as the sixth-wicket alliance burgeoned to 111. Jasprit Bumrah was tireless and unflagging and R Ashwin asked tricky questions on a seam-friendly surface, but the other pacers again disappointed, too full or too short and mercilessly punished.
Elgar's seven-and-a-quarter-hour vigil that fetched him 185 was finally ended by Shardul Thakur. India finished well short of that tally in their second dig, comprehensively schooled by the hosts.
Brief scores
India 245 & 131 all out (V Kohli 76; N Burger 4-33, M Jansen 3-36, K Rabada 2-32) lost to South Africa 408 (D Elgar 185, M Jansen 84', D Bedingham 56; J Bumrah 4-69, M Siraj 2-91) by an innings and 32 runs