Kolkata minefield: Bavuma stands tall, Washington stands longer

A treacherous pitch made runs scarce, but Washington’s serene control at No.3 quietly outshone the chaos around him

Karthik Krishnaswamy17-Nov-20251:07

What’s the verdict on Washington Sundar at No. 3?

Temba Bavuma played the pivotal innings of the Kolkata Test between India and South Africa, but was he the best batter across the two teams?It sounds like an absurd question when Bavuma scored the only half-century of a low-scoring dogfight, but we like throwing philosophical debates at our readers, angering some of them in the process.The answer is, maybe, he quite possibly was, but he quite possibly wasn’t, judging by two measures.Related

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On a pitch as treacherous as this one at Eden Gardens, control percentage, with a few caveats, is a good way to separate batters who happened to spend good amounts of time at the crease from batters who demonstrated a method of staying in over a good amount of time.And on a pitch as treacherous as this one, batters had a trade-off to make between control and run-scoring, and take on certain risks to keep the scoreboard moving, so they weren’t just hanging in before the inevitable wicket ball arrived. In-control strike rate, then, gives us an idea of how efficiently these batters created run-scoring opportunities.By both these measures, Bavuma ranks fairly low among the 11 batters who faced at least 50 balls across both innings – the second-lowest control percentage (76.19), and the fifth-lowest in-control strike rate (37.50).