AB de Villiers, right, returns to the South Africa line-up looking to turn his team’s fortunes around against India. Aijaz Rahi / AP Photo
AB de Villiers, right, returns to the South Africa line-up looking to turn his team’s fortunes around against India. Aijaz Rahi / AP Photo

AB de Villiers hopes his return to line-up revives South Africa attack against India



Bangalore // AB de Villiers makes his 100th Test appearance on Saturday hoping to inspire his South African teammates to a series-levelling victory over India at the second Test in Bangalore.

The top-ranked tourists crashed to a 108-run defeat inside three days in the low-scoring first Test at Mohali as they found the Indian spinners unplayable on a dry, dusty pitch.

It was the fourth successive time a Test had ended in three days on Indian soil, but there could be some respite for the Proteas when they take the field at the Chinnaswamy Stadium.

With wet weather around in the southern city – rain has been predicted on at least three of the five days of the match – the moisture-laden pitch may not be a rank turner.

De Villiers, the world’s No 1 Test batsman, plays his milestone match at a venue he knows well as a member of the Royal Challengers Bangalore in the Indian Premier League.

A crowd favourite in Bangalore, De Villers and captain Hashim Amla hold the key to a batting revival against the spinners led by Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja.

De Villiers top-scored with 63 in the first innings at Mohali and 16 in the second, but was outfoxed by leg-spinner Amit Mishra both times and found his stumps shattered.

Amla made 43 and 16, a far cry from his amazing record in India where in six previous Tests he scored 823 runs at an average of 102.87 with four centuries.

De Villiers and Amla have hit 44 Test centuries between them, more than what the entire young India team under Virat Kohli have managed in their short careers so far.

De Villiers, 31, who will become the seventh South African to play 100 Tests, said the tourists were confident of bouncing back in the four-match series.

“Nobody can say the first Test was boring or uneventful, but we were obviously very disappointed to lose inside three days,” he said. “But we remain optimistic because, in adverse circumstances, we competed well in Mohali and showed we have the firepower to compete.”

As many as 15 of the 20 Indian wickets were shared by three slow bowlers: off-spinner Simon Harmer, leggie Imran Tahir and part-time left-armer Dean Elgar.

India’s spinners, in contrast, picked up 19 wickets with Ashwin and man-of-the-match Jadeja claiming eight wickets each.

India will be boosted by the return of premier fast bowler Ishant Sharma, who missed the Mohali match to serve out a one-Test ban for misconduct.

But the tourists are sweating over the fitness of pace spearhead Dale Steyn who suffered a groin strain in Mohali and sat out the entire Indian second innings.

Steyn said he was desperate to play the Test to celebrate his close friend De Villiers’s big day.

“We are all lucky to have someone like AB,” Steyn said. “I have been very lucky to make my debut at the same time as him and we have been on this journey together for all these years.

“Hopefully, there are still a few more memories that we can share together.”

All-rounder JP Duminy and fast bowler Morne Morkel are back in contention after missing the opener due to injury.

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If you go
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If you go

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