India fail one-day test too!

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A young South Africa punished a jaded Indian team for its outdated approach, handing it one of the most comprehensive series defeats in recent times with an easy seven-wicket victory in the second ODI here on Friday.

A target of 288 was below-par on a flat track and the seasoned Quinton de Kock (78 off 66 balls) in the company of rising sensation Janneman Malan (91 off 108 balls) added 132 for a match-deciding opening stand. The home team eventually reached the target in 48.1 overs to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in the three-game series.

Jolt for captain Rahul

KL Rahul’s captaincy ambitions and head coach Rahul Dravid’s wish to see him being anointed in the long run, however, suffered a rude jolt following back-to-back defeats in 50-over games on a track, which was more Indian than South African in nature.

SA openers Janneman Malan (left) and Quinton de Kock take a run during the second ODI against India in Paarl yesterday. Pic/AFP

India’s archaic approach, a very ‘90s safety first mind-set, hurt the team as has been the case for a while now in the white-ball format. A tour that started with a great Test win at the Centurion is now in tatters and the Indian contingent would be looking to board the charter flight back home on Monday after the inconsequential third ODI at the Newlands, which would be a spicier track compared to the one at Boland Park.

The batting, save Rishabh Pant’s cavalier style, was too defensive starting with skipper Rahul, whose 55 off 79 balls was an innings of bygone era, which cannot align with the fearless cricket that teams want to associate with now.

The match slipped away from India’s grip during their innings once Pant was gone as the others simply failed to get going when the ball didn’t come on to the bat and it was not a track that offered firm and even bounce.

Batting woes

It’s not a new malaise to plague Indian cricket but what should be worrying is that nothing has been done to address the issues. A veteran like Bhuvneshwar Kumar (8-0-67-0) was swept as well as pulled for sixes by De Kock while Malan would come down the track to hit him through the covers signalling that his early 130 kmph speed, with lack of variations, was simply not working.

For Shardul Thakur (40 not out and 5.1-0-36-0), the quality batting show won’t save him if he doesn’t curtail the number of bad balls that he is bowling. And R Ashwin’s (10-1-68-0) second coming in white ball cricket might end in a whimper.

Brief scores
India 287-6 (R Pant 85, KL Rahul 55, S Thakur 40*; T Shamsi 2-57) lose to South Africa 288-3 in 48.1 overs (J Malan 91, de Kock 78; J Bumrah 1-37, Y Chahal 1-47) by seven wickets

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