PC- Debasis Sen

 Marco Jansen produced one of the great individual performances on Indian soil to leave the hosts reeling on Day 3 of the Guwahati Test and place South Africa within touching distance of a historic series whitewash.Walking in with South Africa already holding a 1-0 lead, a drawn result would have been satisfactory for his team. Instead, Jansen turned the match into his personal highlight reel, first with a brutal 93 from just 91 balls that included seven towering sixes, then a hostile spell of short-pitched bowling that fetched career-best figures of 6-48.

India never recovered after Jansen ripped through the batting order with a barrage of back-of-length deliveries and outright bouncers. Dhruv Jurel, Rishabh Pant, Ravindra Jadeja, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Kuldeep Yadav and Jasprit Bumrah all fell to the tall left-arm bowler, most of them fending uncomfortably or gloving to the cordon.

Jansen’s 6-48 ranks as the third-best innings return by a South African fast bowler in India, bettered only by Lance Klusener’s famous 8-64 in Kolkata in 1996 and Dale Steyn’s 7-51 in Nagpur in 2010. It also eclipsed Steyn’s 5-23 from Ahmedabad in 2008. In doing so, Jansen became just the fourth Proteas quick to claim a five-wicket haul on Indian soil, joining Klusener, Steyn and Kyle Abbott.

More remarkably, he is only the third left-arm pacer since 1988 to take a Test five-for in India, alongside India’s own Zaheer Khan (three times) and Australia’s Mitchell Johnson (Mohali 2010).

His method, predominantly short or back-of-length deliveries, places him in rare company. Since the 2006 English summer, only four seamers have taken six wickets in a Test innings using mostly short-pitched deliveries:

Neil Wagner (NZ v Australia, Christchurch 2016) 

Wagner (NZ v West Indies, Wellington 2017)

Blessing Muzarabani (Zimbabwe v Ireland, Bulawayo 2025)

Marco Jansen (SA v India, Guwahati 2025)

In Asian conditions during the same period, just two other fast bowlers have managed even five wickets primarily with short balls: Yasir Arafat (Pak v India, Bengaluru 2007) and Anrich Nortje (SA v Pakistan, Rawalpindi 2021).

Earlier, Jansen had transformed the Proteas innings with clean, disdainful striking. His seven sixes equalled the record for most maximums hit by a batter in a Test innings against India, a mark previously held solely by Pakistan’s Shahid Afridi (2006).

India remain the only Test side against whom Jansen has a hundred-plus aggregate.

By combining a fifty and a five-wicket haul in the same Test in India, Jansen joined an exclusive list of visiting cricketers to achieve the double since 2000:

Nicky Boje (South Africa): Bengaluru 2000 

Jason Holder (West Indies): Hyderabad 2008

Marco Jansen (South Africa): Guwahati 2025

With at least one more innings to come both with bat and ball, the 25-year-old could yet add further entries to an already swollen record book by the time this Test reaches its conclusion.

 

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