Cricinfo South Africa



Cricinfo Daily Newsletter

home


Cricinfo 3D

Audio

Stats

Fantasy

Slogout

Video

Help and Feedback



South Africa


News

Features

Photos

Fixtures

Domestic Competitions

Domestic Teams

Domestic History

Players/Officials

Grounds

Records

Daily Newsletter




 





Live Scorecards
Fixtures | Results
3D Animation






England v New Zealand
West Indies v Australia
County Cricket 2008
Indian Premier League

Current and Future Tours



News
Photos | Wallpapers




Cricinfo Magazine








Match/series archive
Records
Statsguru
Players/Officials
Grounds



Women's Cricket
ICC
Rankings/Ratings



The Wisden Cricketer

Wisden Almanack



Games
Fantasy Cricket
Slogout



Daily Newsletter
Desktop Alerts
Toolbar







India v South Africa, 3rd Test, Kanpur, 1st day

'Encouraging signs for our bowlers' - Amla

Sidharth Monga in Kanpur

April 11, 2008


Hashim Amla: "No matter how long you stay at the crease, you are never in" © Getty Images
 

In the year leading up to this tour, South Africa have visited Bangladesh and Pakistan, but nothing would have quite prepared them for this Green Park track. "It was a lot more difficult to stay at the wicket, and there was a lot more turn than in any other wicket on the first day," Hashim Amla, who scored an important 51, said after South Africa posted a competitive total on a track that started crumbling in the first session. "No matter how long you stay at the crease, you are never in."

At the end of an exhilarating day's play, Amla, like everybody else, said he didn't know whether South Africa had achieved a par score. And understandably Amla doesn't know what to expect when they come in to bowl tomorrow. "Whether 265 is good enough or not depends on how well we bowl tomorrow, and how our bowlers respond to the pitch."

Amla was one of the few batsmen who looked comfortable while batting in the middle. In scoring 51, he negotiated the spinners well, playing them as late as possible, and also introducing a few savage shots to his more characteristic wristy flicks. "I don't think there was a conscious effort to score quickly," he said. "The outfield was quick and that helped too."

But once Amla got out to a beauty from Ishant Sharma, it kickstarted a collapse, as a result of which South Africa fell well short of what they would have expected after their confident start. The last nine wickets fell for 113 runs, which robbed them of an opportunity to put the match beyond India on this extremely tough pitch. "We lost too many wickets in the end," Amla said, "and we will have to pick some early wickets when the Indians come out to bat. There is turn in the wicket, but slow turn. We have a game at hand and we need to take early wickets."

South Africa's bowlers carry forward the psychological edge after what happened in Ahmedabad, and Amla indicated they could be a handful on this Green Park pitch. "There were some encouraging signs for our bowlers. The bounce was low and there were cracks and they will open up a lot more on the morrow. I think there will be more variations in bounce too."

Sidharth Monga is a staff writer at Cricinfo

Add to del.icio.us | digg this | Stumble It What's this?

Live scores, results, news, features and more - just a click away
Download the Cricinfo Toolbar
NEW: West Indies v Australia fantasy cricket game
Enter your teams here
Live scores from across the world on your mobile phone
Cricinfo Mobile
Cricinfo home Print this page Email this page to a friend Feedback

Cricket Minute


Related Links



Stories

Matches

Players/Umpires

Series/Tournaments

Teams






Cricinfo Products
Curtly Ambrose exclusive interview
Video on Cricinfo tv
NEW fantasy: WI v Aus
Enter/login here
Get a taste of the
2008 Wisden Almanack
Listen to news of the day in 60 seconds
Cricket Minute (Podcast)

Sponsored Links
Order the 2008 Wisden & get a free Cricinfo Guide
Special offer at Cricshop
ESPN Soccernet - world's site for the world game
Global football coverage
The latest rugby news & scores at Scrum.com
The perfect pitch for rugby



 
Top 5 player searches
Most read stories