Johannesburg: The match between India and South Africa has taken a turn once again. Where India was on backfoot with poor batting on the first day, the bowler has brought him back into the match and the match has made a match.
In the match played in the Wanderers on the second day of the series in the last and third Test match, the Indian bowlers reversed the South African fiasco just 194 runs and prevented them from taking big lead. Africa only took lead of seven runs After this, India finished the day at 49 for one wicket and took 42 runs lead. In the second innings when the Indian team started batting, the change in the batting order changed and Lokesh appeared instead of Rahul, opening with Parthiv Patel Murali Vijay. Although Patel scored a few shot for a 16-run score, but after the third position with Murali Vijay, Lokesh Rahul fired time till the stumps. At the end of the second day’s play, Murali Vijay is 13 and Lokesh Rahul is playing with 16 runs. Telenders give Africa edge Africa, who lost one wicket to 6 runs on the first day, was not good on the second day. In the opening spell of the second day, Elgar scored 4 runs and Bhuvneshwar’s delivery was caught by Patel. After this, De Villiers 5, Captain Fawd du Plessis 8, Cook 8, AndyL 9, Ndidi also made the move quickly. Morkel remained unbeaten 9 runs But in the middle of the fall of the wickets, Hashim Amla stood on the edge of the handle. He scored 61 runs with his well-played tailor Rabada. He scored 30 runs, but played well with Amla. Rabada showed the sentiment of standing on one end, adding 30 runs in 84 balls with six boundaries. They shared a 64-run partnership with Amla for the third wicket. In the end, Viren Philander also made important 35 runs, which helped South Africa reach 194 runs.
Before India, Jaspreet Bumrah and Bhuvneshwar Kumar bowled brilliantly. Bumrah took 5 for 54 in 18.5 overs, then Bhuvneshwar Kumar took three wickets for 44 runs in 19 overs. Ishant Sharma also hit 1 wicket by 33 runs in 14 overs. Shami was successful in taking a wicket with 46 runs in 12 overs.