Ranchi Test: Rohit, Rahane put pressure right back on SA

Ajinkya Rahane, left, and Rohit Sharma steadied the Indian innings. AFP

New Delhi: Rohit Sharma smashed his third century of the series and combined with Ajinkya Rahane to lift India to 224/3 before bad light forced an early end to the opening day's proceedings in the third and final Test against South Africa at Ranchi on Saturday.

The unbeaten Mumbai duo have added 185 runs for the fourth wicket to rescue the hosts who looked in dire straits at 39/3 in the morning session after opting to bat.

Rohit's typically fluent 117 not out included four sixes and 14 fours while Rahane hit one six and 11 fours in his unbeaten 83 as they batted through the second session without getting separated.

Earlier, touring captain Faf du Plessis turned up with teammate Temba Bavuma as proxy skipper for flipping of the coin, but South Africa still lost their 10th toss in a row in India.

The visitors dominated the first session though with Kagiso Rabada making the most of the morning conditions, generating enough swing to trouble the batsmen. One of those drew Mayank Agarwal out to edge to slip where Dean Elgar took a low catch to dismiss the in-form opener.

Rabada trapped Cheteshwar Pujara lbw for a duck after coaxing du Plessis to challenge the original not-out decision which was overturned.

Rabada was celebrating his third success of the morning when Rohit was adjudged lbw but the opener immediately reviewed the decision which was reversed after replays confirmed an inside edge.

Anrich Nortje, playing his second Test, struck a body blow when he trapped Kohli leg before for 12, but Rohit and Rahane returned after the lunch break to rebuild the innings with brisk accumulation.

Rohit, playing his first series as a Test opener, was particularly aggressive against the spinners and the elegant right-hander brought up his century with his third six off spinner Dane Piedt.

Kagiso Rabada exults after snaring Cheteshwar Pujara. AFP

Spinner Shahbaz Nadeem made his Test debut for India while stumper Heinrich Klaasen and left-arm spinner George Linde also earned their maiden Test caps for South Africa.

The comments posted here/below/in the given space are not on behalf of Onmanorama. The person posting the comment will be in sole ownership of its responsibility. According to the central government's IT rules, obscene or offensive statement made against a person, religion, community or nation is a punishable offense, and legal action would be taken against people who indulge in such activities.