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Centurion Hall puts South Africa in driver’s seat
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            Nov 22, 2004 13:33 IST  
Stopgap opener Andrew Hall scored his maiden Test century and debutant Zander de Bruyn made 83 Sunday to give South Africa a vice-like grip on the second day of the first Test against India at the Green Park Stadium.

Stopgap opener Andrew Hall scored his maiden Test century and debutant Zander de Bruyn made 83 Sunday to give South Africa a vice-like grip on the second day of the first Test against India at the Green Park Stadium.
South Africa finished the day at 459 for seven in 182 overs as India’s three-pronged spin attack looked largely ineffective on a pitch that offered little assistance, turn or bounce, though Anil Kumble completed his 28th five-wicket haul.
Shaun Pollock was batting on 31 (118 balls, 3x4s) and debutant wicketkeeper Thami Tsolekile was on five when play ended under floodlights, which were switched on after the winter fog set in early and made it difficult for the batsmen to sight the ball.


Overall, it was a forgettable day for Sourav Ganguly’s side and, with the advantage of hindsight, the decision to play three spinners and only one pacer, Zaheer Khan, looked questionable to some experts.

The second day’s play also laid to rest all speculation about the pitch assisting spinners in a huge way and the match ending well within five days.

South Africa started the day at 230 for four wickets, with Hall batting on a dogged 78 and Boeta Dippenaar on 46.

Hall, who had got a reprieve on 55 Saturday when Anil Kumble dropped him off Harbhajan Singh, was cautious, dogged and patient.

The right-hander, whose previous best Test score was an unbeaten 99, scored against England at Headingley in August last year, not only scored his first Test hundred but also erased his best career-best first-class effort of 153 against North-West Province at Benoni, South Africa, in 2001-02. In all, he batted for just a shade under 10 hours, faced 454 balls and hit 17 boundaries.

And, to cap it all for him, Hall’s wife Leanie watched him in action at the ground after reaching India early Sunday.

Hall, who a few years ago twice had had a close shave with death after muggers
shot at him several times, and Dippenaar (48, 127 balls, 5x4s) put on 87 runs for fifth wicket even as Ganguly took the second new ball in the very first over of the day.

Then, Hall, who was only Thursday morning told that he was going to open the batting, was associated in a 144-run stand for the sixth wicket with De Bruyn (83, 206 balls, 6x4s, 3x6s), with whom he has played for 12 years since his school days.

Hall was eventually bowled around his legs when Kumble pitched one in the rough spot and it turned viciously as the batsman tried to play it off his pads but misjudged.

Kumble ended the day five for 116, while the other spinners, Harbhajan and Murli Kartik, looked ineffective on a pitch that is offering very slow turn.

Indian bowlers’ old problem of no balls continued and this contributed to the team’s misery.

Zaheer bowled as many eight no balls and one wide, while left-armer Kartik was no-balled seven times, a surprisingly high figure for a spinner.

India have so far conceded a total of 53 extras.

SCORECARD
First Test, India vs. South Africa Green Park, Kanpur, Day 2 (Nov. 20, 21,
2004)

South Africa (1st innings):
G. Smith b Kumble 37
A. Hall b Kumble 163
M. van Jaarsveld lbw b Kumble 2
J. Kallis lbw b Kumble 37
J. Rudolph b Kumble 0
H. Dippenaar c Karthik b Ganguly 48
Z. de Bruyn c Dravid b Harbhajan 83
S. Pollock batting 31
T. Tsolekile batting 5
Extras: (b 9, lb 22, w 1, nb 16, penalty 5) 53
Total: (for seven wickets in 182 overs) 459

Fall of wickets: 1-61 (Smith, 19.6 overs), 2-69 (van Jaarsveld, 23.1), 3-154
(Kallis, 57.5), 4-154 (Rudolph, 57.6), 5-241 (Dippenaar, 98.3), 6-385 (Hall,
144.6), 7-445 (de Bruyn, 175.4)

Bowling:
Zaheer Khan 29 7 59 0 (8nb, 1w)
Sourav Ganguly 12 2 45 1
Anil Kumble 50 13 116 5 (1nb)
Harbhajan Singh 43 9 110 1
Murli Kartik 39 12 57 0 (7nb)
Sachin Tendulkar 9 0 36 0

Umpires: Daryl Harper (Australia) and Simon Taufel (Australia)
TV umpire: A.V. Jayaprakash
Match referee: Jeff Crowe (New Zealand)
Debuts: Zander de Bruyn and Thami Tsolekile (South Africa)

--Indo-Asian News Service
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