Four years after impressing India captain Virat Kohli as a net bowler, Marco Jansen produced a destructive spell of bowling for South Africa on the first day of the second Test at the Wanderers, writes COLIN BRYDEN.
Jansen (21), a tall left-arm fast bowler, took 4-31 as India were bowled out for 202 after winning the toss.
South Africa were 35-1 at the close.
Kohli was one of Jansen’s five wickets on debut in the first Test in Centurion, which India won by 113 runs but was absent on Monday because of an upper-back spasm.
Stand-in captain KL Rahul top-scored with a patient 50, while Ravichandran Ashwin made a hard-hit 46.
Jansen, who towers above most of his teammates at 2.03 metres, made the most of the steep bounce on offer at the Wanderers, troubling most of the batters with his pace and bounce.
When he dismissed Rahul, Jansen had the remarkable figures of 2-9 in 9.5 overs. His figures were spoilt slightly by Ashwin, who, almost alone of the Indian batters, decided attack was the best form of defence. But he played one shot too many to be Jansen’s fourth victim.
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Jansen and his twin brother Duan, who also went on to play first-class cricket, bowled to the Indians on their 2017-18 tour and attracted the attention of Kohli.
Jansen made his IPL debut for the Mumbai Indians last year before gaining his first Test cap in Centurion.
Duanne Olivier, returning to the South African team after spending three years as a Kolpak player with English county Yorkshire, took 3-64, the same figures as Kagiso Rabada.
Rassie van der Dussen take a bow ?
He plucks it out the air with one hand to give Rabada his first wicket of the match.
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Jansen made the first breakthrough, having Mayank Agarwal caught behind after Agarwal and Rahul put on 36 in the first hour.
Olivier plunged India into trouble from which they never fully emerged by dismissing Cheteshwar Pujara and Ajinkya Rahane off successive balls with the total on 49.
South Africa again made a poor start, with Aiden Markram falling lbw to Mohammed Shami for seven in the fourth over.
Proteas captain Dean Elgar (11*) and Keegan Petersen (14*) survived to the close, although Petersen was dropped by wicketkeeper Risabh Pant off Jasprit Bumrah when he had 12.
There was a scare for the Indians when Mohammed Siraj left the field clutching his right hamstring after bowling the fifth ball of the penultimate over of the day.
© Agence France-Presse