Dean Elgar leads by example as South Africa level series with India

Captain makes unbeaten 96 as home side secure first Test win over India at the Wanderers

South Africa’s Temba Bavuma (left) shakes hands with Dean Elgar after completing the win over India in the second Test against India at the Wanderers Stadium in Johannesburg. Photograph: Phill Magakoe/AFP via Getty Images

Day 4 of 5: India 202 (KL Rahul 50; M Jansen 4-31) & 266 (A Rahane 58, C Pujara 53) v South Africa 229 (K Petersen 62, T Bavuma 51; S N Thakur 7-61) & 243-3 (D Elgar 96no). South Africa beat India by 7 wkts

South Africa captain Dean Elgar produced a heroic unbeaten innings of 96 runs to lead his team to a seven-wicket victory over India in the second Test at the Wanderers in Johannesburg on Thursday.

Elgar defied a hostile Indian attack and body blows from balls that struck him on a difficult pitch to deliver a match-winning performance as he led a successful 240-run chase, fittingly hitting a boundary to secure the victory.

South Africa reached 243 for three near the end of a rain-restricted fourth day to level the series after India had won the first Test in Pretoria by 113 runs, with the deciding match to come in Cape Town, starting on Tuesday.

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The home team were 118 for two overnight but had to wait as the first two sessions on Thursday were washed out by rain.

Elgar and Rassie van der Dussen eventually resumed their run chase at 3.45pm local time under cloudy skies with the outcome still in the balance as the pitch was expected to favour the formidable India attack.

But the two batsmen continued their partnership and added 57 more runs in the first hour's play as they took on the tourists' bowling, before Van der Dussen edged Mohammed Shami to first slip and was out for 40.

South Africa still needed 65 to win when the wicket went down and might have quickly spiralled into trouble had Shardul Thakur held onto a catch when new batsmen Temba Bavuma hit the second ball he faced straight back at the bowler.

Thakur was unable to hold onto a stinging shot, and Bavuma went on to make full use of his good fortune to finish 23 not out.

But Elgar was the hero, showing a dogged fighting spirit and leading by example to hand his young team an important and morale-boosting win. He faced 188 balls, hitting 10 boundaries, and was deserving of a century.

It was the first time South Africa had beaten India at the Wanderers and keeps alive their hopes of denying the world’s top-ranked team a first-ever series victory in South Africa.