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PHOTOS: India vs South Africa, 4th Test, Day Five

Last updated on: December 07, 2015 16:25 IST

Faf Du Plessis

IMAGE: Wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha watches anxiously as South Africa's Faf du Plessis blocks a delivery on Day 5 of the fourth Test at the Feroz Shah Kotla, in Delhi, on Monday. Photograph: BCCI

India overcame stubborn resistance to beat South Africa by 337 runs in the fourth and final Test and win the four-Test series 3-0, at the Feroz Shah Kotla, in Delhi, on Monday.

Scorecard

Chasing a target of 481 for victory, the Proteas folded for 143 after tea on the final day despite AB de Villiers grinding out 43 runs off 297 balls.

Umesh Yadav

IMAGE: India's Umesh Yadav celebrates the wicket of Dane Vilas. Photograph: BCCI

AB de Villiers batted for about six hours, much of it with a swollen thumb, for his 43 to fuel South Africa's faint hopes of salvaging a draw after extraordinary stonewalling from the visitors in their remarkably dour second innings.

Ravichandran Ashwin

IMAGE: India's Ravichandran Ashwin reacts after an unsuccessful appeal for the wicket of AB de Villiers. Photograph: BCCI

India struck back in the final session, claiming five wickets as South Africa were shot out for 143 runs in 143.1 overs, to seal victory and vault into the second place in world Test rankings.

South Africa's AB de Villiers

IMAGE: South Africa's AB de Villiers, left, and Hashim Amla react. Photograph: BCCI

Resuming on 72-2 on a hazy morning on Day 5, South Africa employed the same ultra-defensive strategy that marked their batting on Sunday.

Determined to eke out a draw, captain Hashim Amla and de Villiers continued frustrating the Indian bowlers with resolute stonewalling.

Ravindra Jadeja

IMAGE: India's Ravindra Jadeja celebrates the wicket of South Africa's Hashim Amla. Photograph: BCCI

The number of bowlers Virat Kohli employed rose to eight, including the India skipper himself, as he grew desperate to try and separate Amla and de Villiers.

Kohli surrounded the batsmen with up to six close-in fielders for his spinners but success eluded the hosts until the 13th over of the day.

Hashim Amla

IMAGE: South Africa's Hashim Amla departs. Photograph: BCCI

Left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja earned the breakthrough in the fifth over after the hosts had taken the new ball, spinning one past Amla's tentative bat to hit the top of the off-stump before embarking on a celebratory run.

Amla departed after nearly five hours of dour defending, scoring 25 painstaking runs from 244 balls in what was the slowest ever Test inning of 200 or more balls.

Umesh Yadav

IMAGE: India's Umesh Yadav celebrates the wicket of Kyle Abbott. Photograph: BCCI

The 27 runs he added with de Villiers in 253 balls was also the slowest test partnership of 175 balls or more.

New man in Faf du Plessis displayed the same obduracy with the bat and took 53 balls -- seven more than skipper Amla -- to get off the mark.

AB de Villiers

IMAGE: AB de Villiers reacts after being hit on the glove by a delivery from India's Umesh Yadav. Photograph: BCCI

Jadeja, who sent down 17 consecutive maiden overs in the second innings, struck again after the lunch break, trapping du Plessis leg before for 10, ending the batsman's two-hour vigil.

Faf Du Plessis

IMAGE: South Africa’s Faf du Plessis walks off the field. Photograph: BCCI

Ravichandran Ashwin (5-61) dismissed the scoreless JP Duminy but de Villiers and Dane Vilas (13) joined hands to thwart the Indians to ensure the test spills into its final session.

JP Duminy of South Africa

IMAGE: South Africa's JP Duminy is dismissed. Photograph: BCCI

The hosts struck immediately after tea with Yadav sending back Vilas before Ashwin dealt the biggest blow, ending de Villiers's marathon 297-ball stay with Jadeja taking the catch at leg slip.

It was one of the slowest innings by de Villiers, who holds the record for the fastest 50, 100 and 150 in one-day cricket, made more remarkable by the fact that he had been hit on the thumb by an Umesh Yadav delivery.

Once de Villiers departed, South Africa came completely unstuck and lost their last five wickets for seven runs in the space of five overs.