Petersen and Bavuma show spark but then fade on pitch that's 'not getting easier to bat on'

There was the prospect of centuries from both, but errors cost them on a cat-and-mouse type of day

Firdose Moonda04-Jan-2022It’s not perfect – and batting in these conditions isn’t supposed to be – but South Africa’s line-up finally showed some of the mettle they have been missing over much of the last two years. You won’t find much proof of that on the scorecard, with no centuries and no partnerships in triple-figures, but you will find it in an analysis of how the runs were scored and who scored them.Keegan Petersen and Temba Bavuma sussed out the situation and adjusted accordingly to provide something of a blueprint for how to approach both the Wanderers surface and the Indian attack. Neither allow batters to hang around and wait for runs. The uneven bounce means you never quite know when you get a ball that has your name on it. The visiting bowlers rarely deliver a bad ball. “You’re never really in,” Petersen confirmed. So, you have to do what you can when you are.When Ottis Gibson was South Africa’s coach between 2017 and 2019 and South Africa embarked on a revenge-pitches approach, the line-up adopted a mantra along the lines of get-runs-before-you-get-out. That was the kind of strategy needed here.Petersen looks like has the technique to do that anywhere; a technique he honed under the watch of his father, Dirk, who played club cricket alongside Marais Erasmus, one of the umpires in this Test. “If you could ask people that I know, they would always see my dad throwing thousands of balls to me in the nets at the time. That’s where I learnt my batting,” he said.