Anshuman made a 80 at Chepauk in 1975 played some gutsy innings taking lot of body hits in Caribbean tours. In test no. 962 at Jullundhur in Sept 1983, he grinded Pak attack to a patient 201 playing 671 minutes facing 436 deliveries.
At Ferozshah Kotla today, South Africa in the final innings of a long and wretched series displayed unyielding stubbornness, responding with dour defence chasing mammoth 481 were 72 for 2 in 72 overs, yes ! India declared half an hour from lunch, after Ajinkya Rahane became the fifth Indian batsman to score twin tons in a Test match. This is a test where draw is a result and South Africa were batting time, runs were simply not on their minds.
At stumps, Amla was batting on 23 off 207 balls and with him was AB de Villiers, on 11 off 91. Their third-wicket partnership was worth 23 off 29.2 overs. Before that, Amla and Temba Bavuma had put on 44 in 38.4 overs. As of now, Amla’s innings tops the list of slowest. Russel in 1995 at Johannesburg against SA [29 off 235]; Chris Tavare at Chennai in 1982 [35 off 240 balls] and AB de Villiers at Adelaide in 2012 [33 off 220] are the ones following.
For India, the slowest is Manoj Prabhakar’s 41 off 220 deliveries against New Zealand again at Chennai in Oct 1995. Shivlal Yadav made 43 off 213 at Auckland in 1981
Innings like these test the patience of spectators and are not the best advertisement for brand Cricket ~ yet, South Africa have reason !!!
With regards – S. Sampathkumar 6th Dec 2015.
Photo credit : bcci.tv
