India win mind games in Mohali
India are
gloating and the South Africans are smarting after the first Test in Mohali
ended on the third afternoon with India winning by a significant margin of 108
runs in what was a low scoring encounter.
Winning
the toss and batting first on a parched looking pitch with cracks, was a huge
psychological advantage for Virat Kohli and his men. The hosts needed to
produce a good performance in the Tests to boost the shattered confidence after
losses in the T20 and one-day series.
Most
tourists invariably expect grass-less turners and it was no different this time
as the South Africans, having come off a successful limited overs campaign in
the T20’s and one-day series, saw a surface that didn’t surprise them in the
least.
For the
visitors, a first look at that pitch seemed to put them into negative frame of
mind. That they were able to dismiss India for a lowly 201 was encouraging and
more so as the part-time left-arm spin of Dean Elgar managed to grab 4 wickets
in 12 overs. He was interestingly brought on before Imran Tahir and this proved
a master-stroke from Hashim Amla. The captain sensed that the left-arm spin was
difficult to handle and persisting with Elgar proved the Indian batsmen’s downfall.
South
Africa’s record against spin and on spinning tracks is better than most touring
teams in recent times. Batsmen in both teams lacked application and more
importantly, to read the match situation and playing accordingly. A number of aspects
come to mind; South Africa last played a Test series against Bangladesh earlier
this year and the batsmen failed to impress against a much improved and competent
attack. South Africa were found chasing the game. So no lessons were garnered
from that unfinished series where just over six days out of ten was lost due to
incessant rain.
India on
the other hand have not played a home Test in two years. It doesn’t help that their
schedulers lean so heavily towards the limited overs game. So both teams looked
stuck in the limited overs mentality. Spinners accounted for 34 of the 40 wickets
in Mohali and most of them did a fine job on a pitch that looked more dangerous
than it actually was. The key to most dismissals in this Test was that the
batsmen in both teams were out straight deliveries, playing for the turn
instead of reading the ball out the hand.
The hosts
failed to capitalise after electing to bat first and only opener Murali Vijay
with a patient and intelligently compiled 75 in 202 minutes held sway as all
around him crumbled. Imran Tahir grabbed two wickets and Simon Harmer accounted
for Vijay, resulting in seven wickets falling to spin. The Indians were obviously
disappointed with their overall performance with the bat, but the maxim to not
judge the wicket until both teams have batted proved true.
The South
Africans were now wearier after the knowledge that their spinners dominated the
Indian batsmen. So instead of being positive, they went into a shell and
allowed the spin triumvirate of Ravi Ashwin (5/51), Ravi Jadeja (3/55) and Amit
Mishra (2/35) to completely bamboozle them and ended conceding a 17 run lead. Most
failed to apply themselves and were out to shots of uncharacteristic indecisiveness.
Vijay (47)
played confidently once again and shared an 86 run second wicket partnership with
Chetashwar Pujara (77) and followed with a 66 run stand with skipper Kohli (29).
Then the hosts suffered a calamitous collapse and wilted under the pressure
with speculative shots, losing 7 wickets for 39 runs with Tahir and Harmer
grabbing four wickets apiece.
South
Africa failed to ram home the advantage again when they were reduced to 10 for
3. Vernon Philander promoted to open, fell to a straight delivery from Jadeja, Faf
Du Plessis edged to slip and Amla shouldered arms to a ball that pitched on
middle and hit middle stump. A deeper malaise descended on the rest of South Africa’s
batting after A B De Villiers played on when playing back to a tossed up delivery
and the team was beyond salvage.
Kohli
shuffled his bowling with dexterity as he watched the remaining batsmen also
capitulate to straight deliveries. He sensed the South Africans losing faith. Ashwin
proving to be more than a handful and in the end a match-winner.
So how
will the visitors counter the spinners on pitches that are destined to be
shaven bare?
Stand on
an off-stump guard perhaps; by studying footage and be able to read Jadeja and
Ashwins arm-ball? They need to be reminded that there is ample time in Tests
and that winning Test matches requires courage and deep resourceful thinking. It
may be a slight simpler, if they just win the toss!