Rain prevented any play on the third day of the first Test between South Africa and India at Newlands on Sunday.
Steady rain fell for most of the morning, although the sky brightened shortly before the scheduled lunch break. The rain was expected to stay away in the afternoon session but the showers were intermittent through out and every time the covers came off, the drizzle was back on. Eventually, play was called off.
It was reported before the Test that Cape Town’s worst drought in decades may take some of the sting out of the Newlands pitch for the first Test. There was some unseasonal light rain last Sunday and Monday – about four-and-half millimetres in total – but not enough to break the prolonged drought.
Locals, of course, did not mind the rain at all.
Western Cape is in grip of 3 year drought. Cape Town needs 500m litres of water per day. Recommended water use is down to 87 litres per person per day. Today it is pouring with rain... #GoodNews pic.twitter.com/mSWacoaUiZ
— Sir Simon McDonald (@SMcDonaldFCO) January 7, 2018
Newlands Test has oceans of time yet for a result, so rejoice in this lovely soaking rain, Capetonians!
— Rob Houwing (@RobHouwing) January 7, 2018
Lovely to see some rain on the way to Newlands and at the ground. I don't think any Capetonian will complain, weather you love cricket or not #SAvIND pic.twitter.com/uywvdibQsE
— Leighton Koopman (@Leighton_K) January 7, 2018
So happy about this rain. It was raining when I slept and it's still raining now that I woke up. Fill our cape town dams, yes.
— Jess Gutuza (@baesic_jessie) January 7, 2018
Yay for the rain!!! #capetown #rainyday #gutters #BucketsEverywhere pic.twitter.com/opH5rj3UhG
— Jemima (@jemimamadsen) January 7, 2018
With the Cape Town shortage, thanks to the rain today we collecting and saving water as much as we can. @ShareCapeTown @lovecapetown @CapeTownBig7 pic.twitter.com/eCR7IXZE7d
— Malifu (@Matshotetsi) January 7, 2018
Showers of blessings on this day. Welcome rain in our region. Not such good news for the Sunfoil International Test at Newlands#proteafire
— Ragenald Moos (@RagenaldMoos) January 7, 2018
@NatalieGermanos @KassNaidoo @Mohamed_Karani @nazlyg @wagamat @OfficialCSA @justproteas this is the one year that a rain delay is welcome at Newlands #ProteaFire
— Max Ebrahim (@MaxEbrahim) January 7, 2018
There were sympathisers among Indian cricket followers as well.
Feels idiotic to complain when rain comes to a place reeling under severe drought conditions, so I’ll keep my disappointment unvoiced. Interesting bit is what this means for the bowlers — pitch sweating under covers, moisture refreshing it...
— Prem Panicker (@prempanicker) January 7, 2018
Anyway, don't mind if it rains heavily all day until 8am tomorrow morning. So much time left in this match. Drought is a bigger problem. Locals talk of 'Day Zero' in April when they will have to line up to collect water under police regulation. #SAvInd
— Chetan Narula (@chetannarula) January 7, 2018
Cape Town desperately needs the rain. Definitely more than it needs the cricket. Perhaps this was the answer to the drought? Schedule a Test match and … #SAvIND
— Anand Vasu (@anandvasu) January 7, 2018
There are times when cricket has to take a back seat and this surely was one of them.