da aposte e ganhe: Rain remained the main concern for both teams as they headed into the opening game of the five-match one-day series on Sunday
Preview by Dileep Premachandran in Johannesburg18-Nov-2006
Harbhajan Singh walks into the side… but for his bowling © Getty Images
The sporadic downpours that have made the skies over Johannesburg greyremained the main concern for both teams as they headed into the openinggame of the five-match one-day series on Sunday. With rain lashing thecity in the morning, practice plans had to be altered, with South Africagoing up the road to SuperSport Park in Centurion and India opting for theindoor nets in the basement at the Wanderers.India, who have won only three matches here from 16 encounters againstSouth Africa dating back to 1992-93, go into the game on the back of adefeat against Rest of South Africa, but as Rahul Dravid pointed out atthe pre-match press conference, they aren’t the first team to start anaway tour indifferently.The fact that Virender Sehwag has recovered from his hand injury wellenough to come through a full batting session will no doubt encourage theside. Sehwag’s recent form hasn’t been the best, but he if needs anyinspiration he need only to replay tapes of that breakthrough innings onTest debut at Bloemfontein.Dravid suggested that India needed to be brave, and the team is almostcertain to play three pace bowlers and Irfan Pathan in addition toHarbhajan Singh. With Mahendra Singh Dhoni expected to move into the No.5slot vacated by Yuvraj Singh, Suresh Raina and Dinesh Mongia will tusslefor the last batting place. Despite a catalogue of woe that dates back tothe West Indies tour, Raina is likely to be given fresh licence to go outand express himself.For Graeme Smith, there are few selection issues to deal with. LootsBosman did little wrong in his one Champions Trophy outing, and theinclement weather conditions should mean that either Charl Langeveldt orAndrew Hall get the nod ahead of Robin Peterson. Smith will be the loneslow-bowling option, though his offspin is hardly likely to terrorise theIndians.The surface to be used for Sunday’s game bears more than a littleresemblance to that on which South Africa and Australia combined for anincredible 872 runs in March, but with thunderstorms forecast for the day,the cloud cover should ensure that no bowler meets with the fate thatbefell Mick Lewis, whose 10 overs that day went for the small matter of113.The last time India played here, Ricky Ponting and Damien Martyneviscerated their World Cup dream with some of the finest batting everseen on the limited-overs stage. For some of the old boys, it was a red-letterday that went horribly wrong. The new ones, many of whom weren’t even inthe selection picture three years ago, have no such trauma to deal with,and it could be their ability to adapt, or not, that decides the fate ofthis series.South Africa (likely): 1 Graeme Smith (capt), 2 Loots Bosman, 3Herschelle Gibbs, 4 Jacques Kallis, 5 AB de Villiers, 6 Mark Boucher (wk),7 Justin Kemp, 8 Shaun Pollock, 9 Andre Nel, 10 Charl Langeveldt, 11Makhaya Ntini.India (likely): 1 Virender Sehwag, 2 Sachin Tendulkar, 3 MohammadKaif, 4 Rahul Dravid (capt), 5 Mahendra Singh Dhoni (wk), 6 Suresh Raina, 7 IrfanPathan, 8 Ajit Agarkar, 9 Harbhajan Singh, 10 Zaheer Khan, 11 Munaf Patel.