50 overs will be enough to beat India: Boucher Saturday, December 30, 2006 03:05 [IST]
Durban: South African
wicket-keeper Mark Boucher said his team were confident that 50 overs on the
final day would be enough to clinch a win in a second Test against India.
India were 38 for two, after being set 354 to win, when bad
light took another huge chunk out of play on the fourth day at Kingsmead
Friday.
With another cloudy day forecast, Boucher said it was
possible play would not go much beyond tea on the final day Saturday but said South Africa believed they level the series
ahead of the final Test in Cape Town
next week.
"If we hit good areas and pick up one or two important
wickets I believe we need 50 overs," he said.
South
Africa have already dismissed two key
opponents in Virender Sehwag and Indian captain Rahul Dravid.
"Viru (Sehwag) is the one batsman who can really take
the attack to you and Rahul is someone who can really bat time," added
Boucher.
Indian wicketkeeper Mahendra Singh Dhoni said the match was
evenly poised.
And even though it is unlikely given the prevailing weather
that there will be a full day's play, he said India could not afford to assume
that there would be another early stoppage.
"We'll look to be positive," he said. "It's
not about chasing the score or saving the match. We will try to bat positively
until tea and see what the situation is then," he said.
Makhaya Ntini dismissed Sehwag before tea and then claimed
the key wicket of Dravid after the interval, just eight balls before play was
called off early for the fourth successive day.
There were 35 overs still due to be bowled. Ntini took two
for 14.
Dravid, the victim of a dubious lbw decision in the first
innings, appeared to be unlucky again.
He was drawn forward by Ntini and was given out by umpire
Asad Rauf, although replays suggested his bat had made contact with his pad and
not the ball.
Shaun Pollock made a stroke-filled 63 not out to enable
South Africa to declare their second innings at 265 for eight, leaving India
with a nominal 146 overs to make the runs or keep out the bowlers.
Given the weather pattern it seems unlikely that a full
day's play will be possible on the final day Saturday, when 98 overs are
scheduled to be bowled.
More cloudy weather is predicted for Saturday with possible
showers.
South
Africa batted aggressively despite losing
six wickets for 44 runs at one stage before lunch.
Pollock shared quick-scoring half-century stands with Andrew
Hall and Morne Morkel as South
Africa recovered from a top order collapse.
Shanthakumaran Sreesanth, India's exciting young fast bowler, took three
of the wickets as South
Africa fell from 99 for no wicket to 143 for
six.
Sreesanth finished with four for 79, taking his tally for
the series to 16.
VRV Singh made the first breakthrough, dismissing AB de
Villiers for 47, before Sreesanth, 23, took three wickets in eight balls to
plunge the home team into trouble.
One of Sreesanth's victims was South African captain Graeme
Smith, who emerged from a batting slump to make 58.
Pollock regained the initiative for South Africa in a 99-ball innings
which included 10 fours. Hall (21) helped him put on 70 in 68 minutes for the
seventh wicket before Morkel (27) shared in a 52-run stand in 50 minutes for
the eighth wicket.
The floodlights were turned on soon after India started their second innings. |