The first Test between India and South Africa at the Supersport Park in Centurion will make life difficult for the batters and help the fast bowlers, revealed pitch curator Bryan Bloy. To make things tougher, there is rain threat over the first Test which gets underway on Tuesday (26 December). The Centurion curator believes weather will have a huge role to play in how the pitch works for the first of two Tests. Bloy said there is little possibility of play on the opening day and better part of second day. Due to the heavy rain, there will be drop in temperature and spinners are unlikely to get much help. “Temperature will be super low, like 20 degrees. The temperature is now 34 and it will drop to 20. I don’t know what conditions will be like, whether we will get play on Day 1,” Bloy told news agency PTI on Saturday. “Hopefully we will get some play and it will be cool on Day 3 and I don’t know how much turn will be available.” Bloy said if the pitch remains under cover, batting first will be tough. “I can’t guarantee the forecast but if it remains under cover for the better part of the two days then that might be tricky to bat first, because it has been covered for so long and hasn’t been rolled for so long, we don’t know how long we will have to get the field ready for play in current situation.” “So if it’s a Day-3, 10 am start, it doesn’t give us much time, because it’s in the morning and you start playing at 10 and really three hours of cool weather and early morning will be tricky. If its covered for two days, I would presume bowlers would benefit from it.” For Bloy, the idea is to prepare a typical Centurion wicket. “Our goal is to stick to the characteristics, not do anything different or out of the ordinary. I want it to be typical hard wicket as per Centurion’s conditions. “The wicket is quite green and we have got two more days and its hot, with a bit more rolling, it would lose a bit more colour, but I am happy that there is a thin even coverage of grass. Looks good.” However, there could be bad news for Ravichandran Ashwin as Bloy isn’t sure how much purchase spinners would get in case of rain. “That will be tricky, because you are seeing a forecast on Day 1 and Day 2. It looks awful. The sun is out for four days and so there will be some purchase for spinners, offer turn and bounce, with weather forecast, I don’t know how accurate it will be as there will be lot of rain.” So what’s a typical Centurion track? “A typical Supersport Park wicket is slower on Day 1, little bit softer and as time goes by it gets a bit quicker and it gets variable. “For me, fourth day afternoon finish would always be fantastic but that’s out of my control. We prepare the stage and players will have to come out and put the show,” Bloy replied. In the past, there have been reports of Indian team management’s interference in curator’s work but Bloy, who was a golf course curator never faced such issues. “There is very little communication with the Proteas. You prepare as per characteristics of Supersport wicket and we know what to expect. I don’t get a lot of interference there and I think they just leave us to prepare good wicket,” he said. In Highveld region (Centurion belongs to Gauteng province), there is more clay content (red soil) unlike other parts of South Africa where black soil is used for pitches. “In our part of the world, its mostly black soil but in Highveld region the clay content is higher than coastal region and though its different from Wanderers, these 2 are higher clay content, which ensures more bounce for sure but it also produces more cracks.”
Pitch curator at Centurion believes the first day and large part of the second day could be affected by rain in the first India vs South Africa Test
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