Kuldeep Yadav and Jasprit Bumrah’s jugalbandi restricts South Africa on opening day in Guwahati Test

The Indian Express (Sports)

25,Nov,2025

Kuldeep Yadav and Jasprit Bumrah’s jugalbandi restricts South Africa on opening day in Guwahati Test

Between three deliveries on either side of Saturday morning’s chai-break and the fleeting five-over period that followed, the expectant Guwahati crowd witnessed a slice of what Test cricket’s creative peaks looked like, conjured up by two contrasting bowling superstars.

When Jasprit Bumrah customarily bore the brunt of the bowling load, Kuldeep Yadav (3/48) did the easier things to reel in wickets on India’s grinding Guwahati initiation. The masterful duo comfortably led the early resurgence, leaving South Africa six down for 247 before stumps.

While he can turn up trumps practically any time – as he did in a short four-ball notice before the first break – Bumrah’s attacking postures had begun to recede when Kuldeep grew into his and nabbed wickets with a simpler but enticing plan against the South African top order. But it was a largely even morning that put the storylines in place for India’s progressive bowling success.

The muggy weather had eased up, the softer rays of the sun beamed perfectly through before the coin toss soared at 8:30 am. The skies were not moist enough to debilitate the captains. The propensity of heightened suspense around the ACA Stadium’s varied conditions on its maiden Test match morning had quietly vanished.

For the first hour of the day, when they were consigned to Temba Bavuma’s choice to bat first again, Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj had built up ample pressure on the South African openers.

The sting was partially alleviated by a touch of moisture beneath the red soil surface. Bowling from the northern end, Bumrah’s deliveries appeared heavier on the fuller lengths, exuding firm bounce only on the greener tinges outside the channel.

Markram and Rickelton observed no hurry either. Rarely did they chase anything away from the body. The controlled skid off the surface initially meant the only two scoring shots in Bumrah’s first three overs were carefully curated tap and runs to cover by Rickelton. Siraj too backed up the senior talisman, employing an uncharacteristic upright seam first up to test both edges of the left-handed Rickelton.

For the first time in four overs, Bumrah slipped to the shorter length with room, and an assured Markram finally opened his account with a solid punch to the cover boundary. He proceeded to design the near-perfect delivery next ball, the one Markram dreads most on harder wickets. He looks unflappable until that moment arrives perfectly, shaping away late on the full outside the off-stump, the same position from where he thumped the previous delivery for four.

To the collective dismay of Bumrah and the soaring Guwahati crowd, KL Rahul grassed the thickish outside edge that flew from Markram’s careless front-footed stroll at second slip.

Regaining cautiousness, the openers built another stable 50-plus stand thereafter, adding to their impressive first-innings association from Kolkata. The energies had dipped by then, India had ceded their first striking opportunity on a harder wicket. With the returning Nitish Kumar Reddy untroubling their defences and Siraj’s switch to the wobble deliveries incurring inaccuracy, Rickelton too moved off the blocks.

The compactness in strokeplay was briefly tested by Washington Sundar, who magically resumed his bowling duties after having sent down only six balls in Kolkata. With Sai Sudharsan returning to No. 3, Sundar had slid back to No. 8 on the team sheet. He still remains a superior bowler, and it is his subtle array of tricks that first planted doubts in Markram and Rickelton.

As the sun moved overhead midway through the morning session, Sundar began to extract something from a drier strip, turn with the off-break and bounce with the flight.

Unlike the Eden Gardens minefield that encouraged the tweakers to leverage flatter trajectories, the loopy deliveries had a vital role in the narratives here. It was something Kuldeep adjusted to as the afternoon progressed, especially after Rickelton employed a more open stance in the crease to counter him early on.

After Bumrah added the masala to India’s 11 am Tea, castling Markram two balls before the break, Kuldeep returned to spin Rickelton out with a snappy leg-break. Swerving the ball into the southpaw, it didn’t take a prodigious turn to stir the faulty drive to the lively captain, Rishabh Pant, behind the stumps.

With the pitch still retaining hardness, the visitors promoted Tristan Stubbs back up to the volatile No. 3 slot. It had its merit on the wicket with Stubbs’ firm punches and liking to walk down the track, keeping the spinners away from total control in the second session.

Stubbs and Bavuma extended anunhurried response to fend off the spinners over the next 30 overs with a diet of sweeps and smites between square leg and wide long on.

Their attacking lines unyielding, Ravindra Jadeja was the first to return to flighted deliveries outside the off-stump, inviting Bavuma to commit the mistake in his offense, ending with a tame chip to the mid-on fielder. Ushering in a similar ploy away from the batters, Kuldeep claimed Stubbs (49) and Wiaan Mulder in his first spell in the final session.

Seizing 82.5 overs with an hour’s play under the floodlights, India eventually ensured no easy runaways for the visitors. As Siraj’s outswinger claimed the jittery Tony de Zorzi caught-behind a minute before stumps, Northeast’s dipping skies too stood kinder to the hosts, holding up a little longer than usual before breaking for the night.

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