Cape Town:Rishabh Pant was fearless without being careless during a brilliant hundred in the most adverse circumstances but South Africa were on course for a memorable series win against India on a day when visiting skipper Virat Kohli was left fuming due to a contentious DRS decision in the third and final Test here.
Pant's (100 not out off 139 balls) fourth Test hundred constituted for more than 50 per cent of India's shoddy second innings total of 198 with Kohli's 29 off 143 balls being the second highest individual score.
With an easy target of 212 to chase, South Africa were 101 for 2 at stumps as their dogged skipper Dean Elgar (30) was finally out tickling down the leg side giving India some breathing space going into the fourth and probably the final day of the series.
Read: 8 more boxers test positive, NIS COVID count rises to 26 but national camp continues
With 111 runs left, the match is expected to end early on Friday either way but at this moment Proteas look way ahead.
With eight batters failing to reach even double figures, no amount of excuses would be enough for India when they analyse the below par show along with the new team management's decision to carry over-the-hill out of form seniors, which only compounded problems. It's up to the bowlers now.
This was the first Test match in 145-year-history where all 20 batters of one team were caught.
Contentious DRS and Kohli losing cool
It was in the 21st over that R Ashwin flighted one that straightened enough after pitching as Elgar was beaten trying to play a forward defensive stroke. Straight umpire Marais Erasmus gave it leg before but Elgar went for DRS, which surprisingly ruled that the ball would miss the leg stump.
It seemed a howler and more so a technical one rather than umpiring which left the Indian team very angry.
Funnily enough Elgar, after seeing that he was beaten, had started walking before he came back. An angry Kohli kicked the ground in disgust and then used the stump microphone to good effect.
One of the players (not confirmed) even said: "Whole country is against eleven players."
Another one chimed in to say, "broadcasters are here to make money boys".
For some time, the bowlers lost focus before getting Elgar at the fag end of the day.