India suffers worst-ever home defeat to South Africa in Test
India lose by 408 runs in Guwahati, suffer a 2-0 home whitewash, and face questions over selection and planning.
PTI
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This was the second time in a span of mere 13 months that India ended up whitewashed at home (PTI)
Guwahati,
26 Nov
A clueless Indian team, which seemed lacking in both skills and resolve,
succumbed to its biggest defeat in terms of runs, losing the second Test toSouth Africa by a whopping margin of 408 here on Wednesday, giving the visitors
their first series triumph in the country in 25 years.
This was the second time in a space of mere 13
months that India ended up whitewashed at home, severely denting their chances
of qualifying for the World Test Championship final.
Under head coach Gautam Gambhir, India havenow lost five Tests against New Zealand and South Africa at home.
A chase of 549 was never possible but what one
expected was a semblance of fight, which wasn't there on a day-five Indian
track presenting itself in all its might, on which the ball bounced like a
hissing snake and turned as if on a hairpin Himalayan bend.
Marco Jansen, who played the perfect
all-rounder in this Test match, took a one-handed stunner to skittle India for
140 in 63.5 overs and give the Temba Bavuma-led side a victory to cherish for a
long time.
"It's little disappointing. As a team we
need to get better. We need to give credit to the opposition. They dominated
the series but at the same time, you can't take cricket for granted (because of
playing at home)," said a downcast India skipper Rishabh Pant in the
post-match presentation, trying to make sense of his team's recent home record.
Courtesy Gambhir's inexplicable tactics and
selection calls, the aura of invincibility that once accompanied the team at
home lay in tatters at the Barsapara Cricket Stadium on a slightly nippy
Wednesday afternoon.
But the man was his usual combative self in
the aftermath.
"I am the same guy who got you results in
England and was coach for Champions Trophy," he asserted in the post-match
press conference.
"You don't blame any individual or any
particular shot. Blame lies with everyone. I never blamed individuals and won't
do it going forward," he added.
Off-spinner Simon Harmer's career got a second
wind as he decimated the Indian team with turn, bounce and zip off the same
surface on which home bowlers looked pedestrian.
Once Pant (13) was dismissed failing to
counter the bounce, the writing was on the wall.
"I have been coming to India but never
thought that we will walk away with a 2-0 series win," an expectedly
delighted Bavuma said later.
The likes of Sai Sudharsan, Washington Sundar,
Dhruv Jurel and Nitish Reddy, which is the new brigade in Test cricket, simply
didn't have enough preparation to read a spinner from his hands.
Sudharsan scored 14 in 139 balls but was about
to be dismissed about six times and looked like getting out to every delivery.
His lack of readiness was the buck that would
stop at Gambhir's door for his poor choice of personnel.
Gambhir's obsession with bits-and-pieces
cricketers in the traditional format has left the team in a flux with none of
the players sure about their places and roles in the side.
The impact of this defeat will have
far-reaching implications in terms of confidence and psyche of the red-ball
team going forward.
It wasn't an easy pitch to survive on but the
poor technique was disappointing along with the inability to read the drift,
not playing with a soft bottom hand and a completely non-existent back-foot
play.
Only Ravindra Jadeja (53) walked the talk when
it came to putting up a good fight but there was no one at the other end to
help the veteran.
In the end, lack of planning was evident and,
for the time, India look easily conquerable at home.
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