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Saturday April 27, 2024

Sa vs Ind: Day one of Cape Town Test marks most wickets since 1902

Today's record registers fourth-highest tally of wickets in single day of cricket match

By Faizan Lakhani
January 03, 2024
India’s Virat Kohli (left) and South Africa’s Dean Elgar during day one of the Test between India and South Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on January 3, 2024. — X/@ProteasMenCSA
India’s Virat Kohli (left) and South Africa’s Dean Elgar during day one of the Test between India and South Africa in Cape Town, South Africa, on January 3, 2024. — X/@ProteasMenCSA

KARACHI: A staggering 23 wickets fell on the opening day of the Cape Town Test between India and South Africa, marking the highest number of wickets in a single day since 1902.

The most wickets fell on the first day of any Test match was 25 in an England vs Australia match back in 1902. Earlier in 1890, a Test match witnessed 22 wickets  falling on the opening day. 

Today's record marks the fourth-highest tally of wickets in a single day.

In 1888, during the England-Australia match, 27 wickets fell on the second day. In 1896, the second day of the first Test saw 24 wickets fall. Similarly, in 2018, the second day of the India-Afghanistan match in Chennai witnessed 24 wickets taken.

In Cape Town, during the South Africa-Australia Test in 2011, 23 wickets were lost on the second day of the match.

Meanwhile, the first two innings lasted 349 balls, the second-fewest in 147 years of test cricket. The only shorter instance was 287 deliveries between Australia and England in 1902.

Earlier, India's last six wickets in the first innings fell without adding any runs to the scoreboard.

This marks the first instance in Test cricket where six wickets collapsed within a span of just 11 balls, an unprecedented occurrence in the sport's history. Previously, there were only four recorded instances of five wickets falling without a run being scored.

Prior to this, the narrowest run margin during the fall of six wickets stood at just 1 run. Notably, during the Rawalpindi Test in 1965, New Zealand faced a similar situation, losing six wickets with the addition of only one run.

In another record, seven players had a score of 0 - this happened for the first time in Test history

Six Indian players were out for zero, with none of them scoring a run – Yashasvi Jaiswal, Shreyas Iyer, Ravindra Jadeja, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Siraj, and Prasidh Krishna. Mukesh Kumar remained not out without scoring any runs.

India equalled the record for the most ducks in an innings with 6, along with seven instances where seven players were out for zero in an innings before.

On the other hand, the 55 scored by South Africa is the lowest ever total by any team against India in Test history.

This was also the lowest score after choosing to bat at home by South Africa since 1889.

South Africa lost three more wickets in the second innings to finish at 62/3 at stumps on day one. South Africa still trail India by 36 runs