Elgar, Amla hit fifties as South Africa reach 136-3 at tea

Dean Elgar and Hashim Amla hit gritty half-centuries before India fought back with two quick wickets as South Africa reached 136 for 3 at tea on day four of the third Test here today.

By :  migrator
Update: 2018-01-27 14:21 GMT
Dean Elgar congratulates Hashim Amla for reaching his fifty during the fourth day of the third Test

Johannesburg

Amla and Elgar added 119 runs off 304 balls for the second wicket on a pitch that appears to have become less threatening.

Just four overs before tea, Ishant Sharma dismissed Amla, while Bumrah accounted for AB de Villiers to give India a glimmer of hope.

At the break, Elgar was batting on 61 runs, while Faf du Plessis (0*) was giving him company in the middle with South Africa still needing 105 runs with 7 wickets in hand.

Post lunch, Elgar and Amla continued building their second wicket stand even as India looked to make quick inroads to gain footing back in the match.

The duo batted calmly and took South Africa past the 100 -mark.

Ishant (1-27) bowled a tight spell after lunch, but India struggled to string together a bowling partnership that could put Elgar-Amla under pressure.

Soon the duo raised a 100-run stand, the first in this Test, and Elgar reached his 10th Test half-century off 153 balls.

At the other end, Amla crossed 50 off 134 balls, his 38th in Test cricket. It was also the 9th time that he scored twin half-centuries in the same Test.

Hardik Pandya (0-15) was also introduced into the attack in the second hour of play as India desperately searched for a breakthrough. They looked for some reverse swing, but the soft Kookaburra ball didn't aid them at all.

The long-awaited wicket finally came in the 53rd over when Amla chipped Ishant straight to midwicket and was out caught by a diving Pandya, much in the same manner as the first innings.

India made it a double blow as three overs later, AB de Villiers (6) was caught at gully off Jasprit Bumrah (1-46) to give themselves a glimmer of hope.

Earlier, Elgar and Amla had taken South Africa to 69/1 at lunch after start on day 4 was delayed due to heavy morning rains here. The team arrived on schedule but had to wait for better conditions for play to resume.

The umpires – Aleem Dar and Ian Gould – had two inspections at 10 am and 10.30 am (local time). After the second inspection, they were happy enough to allow play to resume 30 minutes later.

Finally, the game began at 11 am local time, with all three sessions rescheduled, after an hour’s delay. The morning session was 90 minutes long.

Starting from their overnight score of 17/1, South Africa made steady progress. Bumrah completed his over from last evening, while Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Mohammed Shami started off proceedings properly.

Elgar encountered a couple hairy moments once again, against Bumrah in particular, but settled down shortly enough.

He shrugged off whatever happened last evening and looked more confident as the session went on.

At the other end, Amla looked ever solid. He left the ball well and looked to score whenever the opportunity presented itself.

India gave away too many quick runs early on in the session, not helped by uneven bounce as they conceded 9 extras in the first hour of play. But later they tightened up the scoring.

Bumrah and Shami were guilty of getting carried away and bowling a tad shorter, even if they didn't concede too many runs. They didn't hit the length enough, where the uneven bounce truly lies on this pitch, and didn't really attack the batsmen enough.

Kumar and Ishant Sharma (0-10) managed to keep things quiet though, even as Amla and Elgar built their gritty partnership.

South Africa crossed 50 in the 22nd over, while their 50 -partnership came off 125 balls. They made good use of heavy roller in the morning, which might have sedated the pitch somewhat.

To their discredit, India didn't even create a single half-chance for getting a breakthrough this morning.

Visit news.dtnext.in to explore our interactive epaper!

Download the DT Next app for more exciting features!

Click here for iOS

Click here for Android

Similar News