Showing posts with label india vs south africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label india vs south africa. Show all posts

Monday, 23 November 2015

Coming here as a fast bowling unit we don't expect favours: Morne Morkel

Morkel Morkel said the final call on playing Dale Steyn, who picked up 10 wickets in South Africa's innings win over India at Nagpur five years ago, would be taken by the team's medical staff.

Nagpur: Injured South Africa pacer Dale Steyn bowled for a short while in the nets, raising hopes of him being included in the playing XI in the third Test here against India, but his fast bowling partner Morne Morkel said the team is keeping its fingers crossed.


Morkel said that while it was pleasing to see Steyn bowling in the nets on Monday, his progress would be monitored and a final call on including him will be taken on the opening day morning of the third Test at the VCA Stadium in Jamtha here.
"Dale bowled this morning. It was a pleasing thing for us to see. Obviously groin is a tricky sort of injury. So I think we will keep monitoring and give him 9 am on Wednesday to decide," Morkel told reporters.
Morkel said the final call on playing Steyn, who picked up 10 wickets in South Africa's innings win over India at this venue five years ago, would be taken by the team's medical staff.

"I think it will be a medical call. You don't want to select a bowler who could break down and upset the combinations. It's a bit of a tough one, but I know medical staff will take the right call," he said.
"Dale is dying to get out there, do his things. Fingers crossed," he added.
On Steyn's back-up Marchant de Lange, Morkel said: "He can be quite tricky to face. He's been busy with one-day competitions at home. Of late he's not played much of four day cricket, (but) he knows what to do."
Down 0-1 in the four-Test series, Morkel said South Africa, as a No 1 ranked Test outfit, must deliver in the upcoming must-win game.
"We are the No 1 Test team in the world. The dressing room atmosphere is very positive. The first Test could not go our way, but we are starting fresh on Wednesday. We are hungry to go and deliver the goods. We speak that language in the change room.
There are a lot of good memories (about this venue where Proteas won by an innings in 2010), but you have to put those things aside and focus on disciplined cricket. One has to be mentally tough. We are the No 1 Test playing nation. We need to show that. Whatever conditions, people have to put up their hands and take it on," he said.

"It's been tricky. We have had injuries throughout the tour (Steyn and Vernon Philander, who have gone back and JP Duminy who has recovered from a palm injury). But there are no excuses for us. We need to come in and play. Hopefully, we will have five days of good Test cricket," Morkel added.
Morkel said that the team was aware of the spin-friendly pitch conditions here as well. "Coming here as a fast bowling unit we don't expect favours. We knew we were going to get turners. The way we prepared was the key for us. From a personal point of view it's just (about) bowling well and if we can keep the pressure on the batters."
He said the team had the option to playing a second frontline spinner. "Definitely that's an option. We have to see. We have Simon Harmer and Dane Piedt," he said.

The pacer felt that the Proteas batsmen are capable of doing much better against the Indian spin attack than they have done so far in the three innings in which the score has not crossed 220.
"Our top-order (batsmen) are quality players of spin. They have not got the starts, unfortunately. They are preparing very well and doing the rights things. I am pretty sure their time will come. It's a matter of sticking to plans and grinding it out and try and bat deep," he said.
Morkel hoped that the out-of-form captain Hashim Amla, who scored a double hundred at this venue for a winning cause five years ago, to come good.
"Hashim is a rock for us. He's hungry to score runs. He's been hitting a lot of balls. Hopefully, his time he will come in this Test match." 


IND vs SA, Third Test: India poised to spoil Proteas' away record

In fact, South Africa had won only one Test rubber in five visits to India, in 1999-00 under Hansie Cronje before the match-fix saga blew up. 

Nagpur: An enviable nine-year overseas record of 10 Test series wins in 14 rubbers by South Africa is under serious threat by India when the two teams face-off in the third and penultimate game of the current series at the VCA Stadium in Jamtha here on Wednesday.
After the 0-2 reversal against Sri Lanka in 2006, South Africa have not lost a Test series away from home and the list includes two wins over mighty Australia in 2008-09 and 2012-13, other than victories in one rubber each over England (2008), West Indies 2010), New Zealand (2011-12), Pakistan (2007-08), Sri Lanka (2014), Bangladesh (2007-8) and Zimbabwe (2007-08).
Significantly in this period South Africa, who are trailing India by 0-1 with two Tests left in the current rubber, have not won in the latter's backyard on the two visits they had made prior to the ongoing one - in 2007-08 (Three-Test series) and 2009-10 (Two-game contest).
On both occasions, South Africa drew 1-1 with India. Their other drawn series encounters in the last nine years were against Pakistan (0-0) in the series played in the United Arab Emirates in 2010-11, against England in 2009-10 with the series drawn 1-1 and Bangladesh (0-0 draw in 2015).
In fact, South Africa had won only one Test rubber in five visits to India, in 1999-00 under Hansie Cronje before the match-fix saga blew up.
The Proteas lost in 1996-97 (1-2 in the three-Test series) and 2004-05 (0-1 in the two-Test encounter) before holding India to draws in 2007-08 and 2009-10.
If India surge to a win here on what promises to be a spin-aiding track, South Africa will be confined to their third series defeat in six Test rubbers on Indian soil.

Wednesday, 18 November 2015

We would have won the second Test: Kris Srikkanth


 Former cricket captain Krishnamachari Srikkanth on Wednesday said that India can win the Twenty20 World Cup to be held at home next year. "T20 World Cup is going to be a huge thing in India. India have always done well in T20 format. I am sure India will do very well probably who knows India will win the World Cup also in 2016," Srikkanth told reporters on the sidelines of an event here.
On the ongoing Test series against South Africa, the former Indian skipper said the home team is doing very well. "The first Test match (in Mohali) we beat South Africa very comfortably. And in the second Test match (in Bengaluru), unfortunately for rain, otherwise I think we would have probably won the second Test match as well," he said.
Srikkanth noted that South Africa were beaten "hollow" in the first Test and said had rains not interrupted, they would have met with same fate.
"The confidence level of the Indian cricket team is always high and especially when they beat a team like South Africa so comfortably in the first Test match," he said.
"They (Indians) were very comfortably positioned in the first day of the (second) Test match. Probably if there had been just three-days of Test match we would have had a result favouring India. Unfortunately, I think the rains spoiled everything," he said.
The former opener said the current Indian Test team is well balanced with tremendous potential. "We have a lot of youngsters who are doing very well which is a great sign for Indian cricket. Definitely I find the Indian cricket going in the right direction," Srikkanth added.