Senuran Muthusamy struck his first Test century and Marco Jansen hammered 93 to guide South Africa to a commanding 489 all out on day two of the second match against India on Sunday.
The left-handed Muthusamy made 109 and put on 97 runs for the eighth wicket with Jansen, who was the last wicket to fall in the final session in Guwahati.
“First innings runs in the sub-continent are vital,” Muthusamy told reporters. “So, yeah, it was just really, really awesome experience out there. And it was just a lot of relief when I got to 100.”
Muthusamy praised Jansen’s knock, saying, “Marco was sublime when he came in. He’s a clean striker of the ball and he really, really showed his skills today. So, that was an awesome treat to watch from the other end.”
Janson struck six fours and seven sixes in his 91-ball blitz before he dragged a delivery from Kuldeep Yadav on to his stumps and the innings ended after 151.1 overs.
The hosts reached nine for no loss in 6.1 overs at stumps, trailing South Africa by 480 runs on a pitch still looking good to bat at India’s newest Test venue.
Yashasvi Jaiswal, on seven, and KL Rahul, on two were at the crease when bad light stopped play for the day in the northeastern city where sunsets are early.
The 6ft 8in (2.03m) Jansen frustrated the Indian attack as he hung on with number nine and 10 after he reached his fourth Test half-century and surpassed his previous best of 84 not out in the longer format.
Sixes fesT: Jansen’s seven hits over the fence are the joint-most in a Test innings against India. Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi hit as many during his 103 in Lahore in 2006.
Muthusamy reached his hundred in 192 balls off pace bowler Mohammed Siraj, as he punched the air and raised his bat to a standing ovation from the crowd and the dressing room.
He fell soon after the second break but Jansen, a right-hand batter and left-arm quick, kept up the charge with Simon Harmer (5) and Keshav Maharaj, unbeaten on 12.
Left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja ended a 88-run seventh-wicket stand after a wicketless first session when Kyle Verreynne was stumped for 45 by captain Rishabh Pant.
Kuldeep finished with four wickets with his left-arm wrist spin.
“To be very honest we knew that this is not a track they are not going to roll out very easily and we have to keep disciplined lines and be patient,” said Kuldeep.
“We tried, but as everyone knows Marco Jansen and Muthuswamy batted well.”
The tourists, who won the toss and elected to bat on Saturday, are in the hunt for their first series victory in India in 25 years after they won the opener of the two-match series.
Earlier Muthusamy and Verreynne used their feet to tackle spinners in a sedate first hour of play when only 28 runs were scored, including two fours.
Muthusamy survived a scare on 48 when Jadeja had him given out lbw, but the batsman’s review showed a murmur when the ball passed his glove and the decision was overturned.
Lokesh Rahul to lead India in ODI series: Shubman Gill will miss India’s three-match ODI series against South Africa starting Nov.30, with Lokesh Rahul to lead the side in his place.
Gill suffered a back spasm while batting in the first Test at Kolkata, and missed out on the second Test in Guwahati as well. He is undergoing treatment for a neck injury.
Rahul will stand in for Gill, who had only been named India’s ODI skipper in October for the series in Australia. Vice-captain Shreyas Iyer is also unavailable as he recovers from a spleen injury sustained during the same Australian tour.
Rahul has led India in 12 ODIs in 2022-23 as understudy to then-skipper Rohit Sharma. Sharma and Virat Kohli return for the ODIs to be played in Ranchi (Nov.30), Raipur (Dec.3) and Visakhapatnam (Dec.6). The two star batters are now retired from Tests and T20s.
While Rahul is India’s first-choice keeper-batter in ODIs, Rishabh Pant and Dhruv Jurel are also part of the ODI squad. Pant last played an ODI in August 2024. Yashasvi Jaiswal has also been included as opener in Gill’s absence - he made his ODI debut against England earlier in 2025.
Agencies