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RESULT
1st Test, Centurion, December 16 - 20, 2010, India tour of South Africa
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136 & 459

South Africa won by an innings and 25 runs

Player Of The Match
1/20, 201* & 1/56
jacques-kallis
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Steyn, Morkel leave India in tatters

With Virender Sehwag gone, Dale Steyn and Morne Morkel gave India a South African welcome - one that involved tenderizing gloves, bruising bodies and the smell of lacquer and leather

38.1 overs India 136 for 9 (Morkel 4-20, Steyn 3-34) v South Africa
Scorecard and ball-by-ball-details
It lasted three deliveries. After weeks of anticipation, and a four-and-a-half-hour rain delay, the duel between Dale Steyn and Virender Sehwag ended the moment the batsman touched the ball at SuperSport Park. Anti-climatic it may have been, but the South Africans were in raptures. With Sehwag gone, Steyn and Morne Morkel gave India a hostile welcome - one that involved tenderising gloves, bruising bodies and the smell of lacquer and leather. India were hustled and hurried by bouncers, but it was the fuller follow-up delivery that brought South Africa the wickets.
The Indians had spent a week at Gary Kirsten's academy in Cape Town customising their preparation for today but no simulation could match the reality of Steyn and Morkel. The batsmen were unable to score - even if only to get off strike, to deny the bowler consecutive deliveries at a particular player and the time to execute plans. Of 122 deliveries bowled in the first session, 101 were dots and India's accomplished line-up continued to underperform in their bogey country.
Overnight and early-morning downpours had dampened conditions, prompting Graeme Smith, with an attack far classier than India's previous opponents New Zealand, to put India in. The first delivery set the tone: Steyn hit Gautam Gambhir's back pad and a close lbw appeal was denied. Sehwag shouldered arms twice in Steyn's opening over, and in the bowler's second, he attempted to flay the ball through cover point. It moved away a fraction and flew off the edge to Hashim Amla, placed at third man for precisely that. Steyn 1, Sehwag 0, India 1 for 1 and stunned.
Gambhir was perhaps lucky on 1, when a ripsnorter from Morkel rose from a length and sped towards his face. Gambhir began to sway and then fended helplessly. The ball appeared to kiss the glove and was pouched by Mark Boucher, but umpire Steve Davis shook his head. Morkel had touched speeds of 150kph during his first spell and was perhaps just too quick.
The reprieve cost South Africa only four runs, perhaps the hardest runs Gambhir has made. Morkel pounded in from round the wicket, pitched the ball short of a length, angled it into the left-hander, targeting the body and sometimes the head. Pinned to the crease without room outside off, Gambhir ducked and defended in discomfort.
There was no respite against Steyn either. Following a brief exchange of words, Steyn let rip. Gambhir took his eyes off the bouncer and took the ball on his back. The next ball was fuller, moved away from the left-hander, and beat the tentative poke outside off stump. Gambhir was soon put out of his misery, though, and it was the follow-up ball to the bouncer that got him. Having been cornered by the short-pitched attack from Morkel, he drove at a fuller one with poor footwork, and edged to first slip.
Dravid had appeared the most comfortable, relatively speaking, taking his bottom hand off the bat to fend off rising deliveries, careful to leave anything outside off, and compact while playing deliveries aimed at his body. Morkel then got one to jag sharply into him from outside off. Dravid was caught on the crease, hit on the pad and Morkel was celebrating his 100th Test wicket, having reduced India to 27 for 3.
The smattering of rain-resistant spectators gave Sachin Tendulkar a warm reception and he responded to adversity by taking on the less-threatening Lonwabo Tsotsobe. Tendulkar pulled him twice for fours from outside off stump, drove fluently through cover and guided to third man. Neither Tendulkar nor VVS Laxman was tested much by South Africa's support act, but their respite was fleeting and ended soon after the break for tea.
Tendulkar continued to attack Steyn, edging past his stumps before driving through extra cover and cutting past point - all for boundaries. Steyn responded with two similar deliveries, on a good length, straight and fast. The first beat Laxman's flick from the crease and uprooted middle stump. The second beat Tendulkar's flick from the crease and hit the pad, otherwise it too would have uprooted middle stump. Between those dismissals Suresh Raina, who appeared brittle as a leaf in a thunderstorm, had edged Jacques Kallis to third slip. India, at 71 for 6, were being cooked on a braai.
Harbhajan Singh fought, as he usually does, but a trigger movement towards leg as the fast bowlers attacked him betrayed nervousness. He hit the day's first six, clouting Tsotsobe over long-on, before losing his grip on the bat while attempting a third to be run out. The tailenders had no chance against the barrage, and only Dhoni, with his awkward movements, threw a few counterpunches.
Rain had threatened to ruin the opening day of the series, the terrific efforts of the groundstaff had ensured it wasn't washed out, and similar efforts from South Africa's fearsome new-ball attack ensured that lost time was made up.

George Binoy is an assistant editor at Cricinfo

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