This story is from December 31, 2023
Indian pacers' creativity will be tested in Cape Town: Allan Donald
CAPE TOWN: The Indian pace bowlers were not patient on a good bowling surface during the opening Test against South Africa, a virtue they will need in abundance on a batting paradise at Newlands, where spinners will have little role to play, reckoned legendary Allan Donald.
India lost the first Test by an innings and 32 runs after conceding 408 in the first innings on a spicy Centurion track that offered steep bounce and enough lateral movement.
"I know South Africa probably got the better of the conditions, no questions about that. They pitched the ball in a 5 and 5.5 meter area and gave it a chance to do something off the deck.
But what they did better than India…they were more patient in that area and even they used the short ball a little bit more in the second innings," Donald, a fearsome pacer of his generation, decoded India's defeat in an exclusive interview to PTI.
The 57-year-old, who took 330 wickets in just 72 Tests, feels Indians were waiting for things to happen.
"For India, there was one debutant (Prasidh Krishna). I thought (Jasprit) Bumrah, but Indian bowlers searched too much for things to happen.
They quickly reverted to shorter balls and then lost their length a bit on the shorter side and then got opened up on either side - square leg, off side and SA batters capitalized."
"Come Cape Town, it will be hard work and there will be a lot more energy from both teams. Cape Town will be hard work and it will bring honesty out of both the attacks," the 'White Lightening' said.
What is it that makes Cape Town way more difficult than Centurion?
"You need to be more creative in Cape Town as wickets are a lot more flatter and partnerships will stretch and that's traditionally as someone who knows it will be tougher Tests," he added.
Donald says if India envisage any chance of restoring parity, they need to use the new ball judiciously.
"The massive emphasis is on the new ball because traditionally if there's a South westerly wind blowing across Newlands, then you know that is going to dry the pitch up.
But not in any way or form I think the pitch will turn."
That assessment of Donald isn't great news for veteran off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, who is all set to be benched.
"There might be some little bit (assistance) available for spinners later on but it's not going to happen. India in South Africa, there's no way that will bring Indian spinners into it. So, you can forget that part.
"But your first innings bowling could reward you, if you pitch the new ball a bit fuller and try to swing it for the first 25 to 30 overs. And then start mixing your pace," he noted.
Once the Kookaburra ball gets old, then India would need what Donald calls a "battering ram" or a "bully" who will ramp it up with short balls.
"When the partnership stretches longer, you need to have two guys who need to bowl short and full. Your spinner will keep one side nice and tight while seamers operate from one end. As the game goes long and the partnership stretches, reverse swing comes into effect."
'Tendulkar aced SA conditions'
India, as a batting unit, haven't had a lot of success in the 'Rainbow Nation' but Sachin Tendulkar is one batter, who has scored four Test centuries in five tours to the country.
"It's not an easy place to combat. We see that daily in South Africa, the ball does nip around more than it does in Australia or England. If your footwork isn't 100 percent then you are in trouble," Donald cited.
Then he explained why Tendulkar was a huge success individually.
"Only person I know who played us well was Tendulkar, who triggered (had a trigger movement) while batting in South Africa rather than stand on middle-stump. He pressed forward and left the ball amazingly well," Donald explained.
For the visiting team batters, Donald has a pro-tip.
"If you leave the ball well here, you can score runs. You got to get bowlers to come to you and search a little bit more. They start coming to you, the opportunities of scoring get better.
It's an interesting phenomenon as it's tough to bat. In Cape Town though, it will be a very good Test pitch. It will flatten out quickly, so you need to work very hard."
In SA, hit-the-deck works more than swing
The Kookaburra ball doesn't swing after the first 20-25 overs and hence South Africa for generations produced bowlers, who could hit the deck and get enough off the surface.
"We often talked in SA for generations about looking after the ball really well. We used to know that we don't have a long time for the ball to swing. So, looking after the ball is absolutely paramount. To give guys like Fannie de Villiers, Brian McMillan, Brett Schultz a bit more time to swing the ball.
"If you had guys like Schultz, Donald, De Villiers and Pollock who came a bit later on, McMillan etc were guys who hit the deck. I say we are all different and bring those guys who could generate pace off the wicket. My job was to hit lengths really hard at a high pace.
"Any kookaburra around the world would swing for a little bit but the red ball here, if you look after the ball, you get rewarded. So even if you are a bowler who hits the deck, your role changes."
Get the latest ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 updates, including the full schedule, teams, live scores, points table, and key series stats such as top run-scorers and wicket-takers.
"I know South Africa probably got the better of the conditions, no questions about that. They pitched the ball in a 5 and 5.5 meter area and gave it a chance to do something off the deck.
But what they did better than India…they were more patient in that area and even they used the short ball a little bit more in the second innings," Donald, a fearsome pacer of his generation, decoded India's defeat in an exclusive interview to PTI.
The 57-year-old, who took 330 wickets in just 72 Tests, feels Indians were waiting for things to happen.
"For India, there was one debutant (Prasidh Krishna). I thought (Jasprit) Bumrah, but Indian bowlers searched too much for things to happen.
They quickly reverted to shorter balls and then lost their length a bit on the shorter side and then got opened up on either side - square leg, off side and SA batters capitalized."
What is it that makes Cape Town way more difficult than Centurion?
"You need to be more creative in Cape Town as wickets are a lot more flatter and partnerships will stretch and that's traditionally as someone who knows it will be tougher Tests," he added.
Donald says if India envisage any chance of restoring parity, they need to use the new ball judiciously.
"The massive emphasis is on the new ball because traditionally if there's a South westerly wind blowing across Newlands, then you know that is going to dry the pitch up.
But not in any way or form I think the pitch will turn."
That assessment of Donald isn't great news for veteran off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, who is all set to be benched.
"There might be some little bit (assistance) available for spinners later on but it's not going to happen. India in South Africa, there's no way that will bring Indian spinners into it. So, you can forget that part.
"But your first innings bowling could reward you, if you pitch the new ball a bit fuller and try to swing it for the first 25 to 30 overs. And then start mixing your pace," he noted.
Once the Kookaburra ball gets old, then India would need what Donald calls a "battering ram" or a "bully" who will ramp it up with short balls.
"When the partnership stretches longer, you need to have two guys who need to bowl short and full. Your spinner will keep one side nice and tight while seamers operate from one end. As the game goes long and the partnership stretches, reverse swing comes into effect."
'Tendulkar aced SA conditions'
India, as a batting unit, haven't had a lot of success in the 'Rainbow Nation' but Sachin Tendulkar is one batter, who has scored four Test centuries in five tours to the country.
"It's not an easy place to combat. We see that daily in South Africa, the ball does nip around more than it does in Australia or England. If your footwork isn't 100 percent then you are in trouble," Donald cited.
Then he explained why Tendulkar was a huge success individually.
"Only person I know who played us well was Tendulkar, who triggered (had a trigger movement) while batting in South Africa rather than stand on middle-stump. He pressed forward and left the ball amazingly well," Donald explained.
For the visiting team batters, Donald has a pro-tip.
"If you leave the ball well here, you can score runs. You got to get bowlers to come to you and search a little bit more. They start coming to you, the opportunities of scoring get better.
It's an interesting phenomenon as it's tough to bat. In Cape Town though, it will be a very good Test pitch. It will flatten out quickly, so you need to work very hard."
In SA, hit-the-deck works more than swing
The Kookaburra ball doesn't swing after the first 20-25 overs and hence South Africa for generations produced bowlers, who could hit the deck and get enough off the surface.
"We often talked in SA for generations about looking after the ball really well. We used to know that we don't have a long time for the ball to swing. So, looking after the ball is absolutely paramount. To give guys like Fannie de Villiers, Brian McMillan, Brett Schultz a bit more time to swing the ball.
"If you had guys like Schultz, Donald, De Villiers and Pollock who came a bit later on, McMillan etc were guys who hit the deck. I say we are all different and bring those guys who could generate pace off the wicket. My job was to hit lengths really hard at a high pace.
"Any kookaburra around the world would swing for a little bit but the red ball here, if you look after the ball, you get rewarded. So even if you are a bowler who hits the deck, your role changes."
Get the latest ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 updates, including the full schedule, teams, live scores, points table, and key series stats such as top run-scorers and wicket-takers.
Top Comment
J
Jai Hind
777 days ago
India must go with 5 pace bowlersRead allPost comment
Popular from Sports
- T20 World Cup: How Pakistan created history despite losing match against India
- India vs Pakistan: Another World Cup match, another victory, Ishan se
- 'This is for India': Suryakumar Yadav's fiery words after smashing Pakistan
- No handshake after India outplay Pakistan in 61 run statement win
- ‘India rocked it’: Sachin Tendulkar leads chorus as Virender Sehwag says ‘full kambal kuttai’ after Pakistan demolition
end of article
Featured in sports
- How Pakistan can crash out of T20 World Cup after India defeat
10:16 ‘We don’t see rivalry’: Axar Patel’s cold verdict after India thrash Pakistan- India vs Pakistan: When hate didn't get a complimentary match pass
- Watch: Pandya lashes out at Kuldeep during India's win over Pakistan
- ‘India rocked it’: Sachin leads chorus as Sehwag says ‘full kambal kuttai’ after Pak demolition
- India vs Pakistan: Another World Cup match, another victory, Ishan se
International Sports
- Ex-NFL star Tre Johnson dies at 54, Cause of death, family reactions, achievements, and more
- Seahawks’ ruthless move sends Klint Kubiak packing, replacing him with rival coach after Super Bowl LX win
- Are New England Patriots preparing to move on as Stefon Diggs faces legal storm and massive cap hit?
- Travis Kelce’s golf outing turns awkward after errant shot hits woman, rushes to check injured fan
- Chloe Kim’s Olympic silver celebration turns into $100K Valentine’s surprise from Myles Garrett
Trending Stories
- JEE Main 2026 Result Date & Time Live Updates: Session 1 result expected to be released tomorrow, check latest updates here
- JEE Main 2026 session 1 expected to be declared today: Check details here
- NTA JEE Main 2026 result: Official vs unofficial website
- JEE Main result 2026: How and where to check scorecards
03:39 DOJ's Gupta charges point to an amateur plot: Spooks- T20 World Cup: How Pakistan created history despite losing match against India
- Massive crackdown: Saudi Arabia arrests over 21,000 for residency and labour law violations in one week
Photostories
- 5 ways infrastructure projects raise nearby property values
- 7 vegetables which are perfect to sow in February
- 10 powerful baby names that mean 'shining like the sun'
- 70% of Indian women face gynecological problems: Doctor shares 7 ways to protect your health
- 8 Indian dishes that were once considered “poor man’s food” but are now premium
- Apple TV’s five must-watch sitcoms: 'Bad Sisters,' 'Shrinking' and more
- What is a convertible car? Features, types and 5 key facts every buyer should know
- Shahid Kapoor, Shah Rukh Khan, Varun Dhawan: Actors who turned grey on screen and left audiences stunned
- From Ram Kapoor to Sakshi Tanwar, Ronit Roy and more – TV celebrities who own lavish properties
- Mumbai’s Bandra east skywalk opens: 680m elevated link to BKC, western express highway
Up Next