India must face up to South African pace for any series success

India must face up to South African pace for any series success
Ravi Shastri, India's coach, will have to impart wisdom to current captain Virat Kohli if their side stands any chance against South Africa. (AFP)
Updated 04 January 2018
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India must face up to South African pace for any series success

India must face up to South African pace for any series success

CAPE TOWN: It happened a generation ago, but those who watched it carry with them technicolor images of a sunlit Newlands afternoon. South Africa piled up 529 for seven in the New Year Test of 1997, and India were in utter disarray at 58 for five when Mohammad Azharuddin, the team’s senior pro, strode out to join Sachin Tendulkar, the captain. For the next 40 overs, they put on a batting masterclass. Tendulkar did it by the book, even when attacking audaciously, while Azharuddin — freed from the cares of captaincy — was in free-flowing mode.
They added 222, with Azharuddin smashing 115 off just 110 balls. Tendulkar would stay right to the end, crafting a magnificent 169 off 254 balls that helped India save the follow-on before an unbelievable catch on the boundary from Adam Bacher. Despite that dazzling spell of strokeplay, Tendulkar and his team would go on to lose the match by 282 runs. One of the main reasons being the lack of quality back-up for Javagal Srinath and Venkatesh Prasad. Dodda Ganesh, who made his debut in that game, finished with just five wickets in four Tests.
Things were little different a decade later. S Sreesanth and Zaheer Khan bowled magnificently to script a 123-run win at The Wanderers, but the support for them just wasn’t good enough. Vikram Raj Vir Singh leaked runs in Durban, and a palpably unfit Munaf Patel bowled just one over with the series on the line in the final innings in Cape Town.
If you go back even further to India’s first tour of the rainbow nation a quarter century ago, Newlands saw an aging Kapil Dev and Manoj Prabhakar, never more than medium pace, take the new ball instead of Javagal Srinath, one of the fastest bowlers in the world at the time. When he was finally utilized properly, and that too only as first change in the second innings, Srinath took four for 33 in 27 overs.
These are the cautionary tales that Ravi Shastri, the current coach who played three of the four Tests on that first tour, might have shared with Virat Kohli, the captain, as India embark on their toughest challenge since they were beaten 2-0 in Australia in 2014-15. Unlike his predecessors, Kohli will not be hamstrung by lack of resources.
Mohammed Shami can move the ball both ways at pace, while Ishant Sharma’s hit-the-deck methods offer both control and menace. At Newlands, Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s ability to swing the ball should see him get the nod in place of the skiddier Umesh Yadav. When the series moves to the Highveld, Jasprit Bumrah will also be an option.
But at a ground where Tendulkar played two of his greatest innings — a full 14 years after the 169, he made a sensational 146 against Dale Steyn in his prime — it is the batsmen who will have to take centerstage against the best pace attack in the game. Ottis Gibson, the coach, and Faf du Plessis, the captain, both hinted that the fit-gain Steyn would play only if accompanied by three other quicks — Morne Morkel, Vernon Philander and Kagiso Rabada.
For India’s batsmen, the trial by pace will be relentless. On their last tour in 2013-14, they acquitted themselves well, but one bad collapse in Durban was enough to give South Africa the rubber. After nine series wins on the bounce, this will be the real test of their mettle.