"Yamal will learn tonight. He was completely anonymous. He will have to think of ways of doing this," said Spanish football journalist Guillem Balague.
After pulling down the shutters on day one, Bavuma showed more attacking intent before he drove Cummins on the up and Labuschagne pulled off a spectacular full-length diving catch at cover.Nevertheless, South Africa would have been happy with their position heading into the interval only to be blown away like a house of cards in a hurricane.
Rabada had provided a template for Cummins as he etched his name on the Lord's honours board in the home dressing room with 5-51 in the first innings.According to CricViz, the consistency of the Aussie skipper's lengths (7.21m) were almost identical to Rabada's (7.25) from the first innings which showed an acute ability to put theory into action.Cummins had Kyle Verreynne trapped lbw attempting to work the ball to leg - given out on review - then three balls later took a simple return catch to dismiss Marco Jansen.
Bedingham was Cummins' fifth when he nicked off to delivery he had to play at before Rabada slogged him deep into the hands of Webster, who picked up the ball late but readjusted to dive forward to claim the catch.South Africa had been polished off in the space of an hour as Cummins became the eighth Australian bowler to reach the milestone of 300 Test wickets.
He also became the first Test captain to take a five-for at Lord's since Daniel Vettori's 5-69 for New Zealand against England in 2008.
While South Africa have all the momentum, they must come up with a way to counter Cummins in their second innings to chase down whatever total they are set.India, home to 27% of the world's tuberculosis cases, sees two TB-related deaths every three minutes. India's TB burden has long been tied to poor case detection, underfunding and erratic drug supply.
Despite this grim reality, the country has set an ambitious goal. It aims to eliminate TB by the end of 2025, five years ahead of the global target set by the World Health Organization (WHO) and United Nations member states.Elimination, as defined by the WHO, means cutting new TB cases by 80% and deaths by 90% compared with 2015 levels.
But visits to TB centres in Delhi and the eastern state of Odisha revealed troubling gaps in the government's TB programme.In Odisha's Khordha district, around 30km (18.6 miles) from state capital Bhubaneshwar, 32-year-old day-labourer Kanhucharan Sahu is struggling to continue his two-year-old daughter's TB treatment, with government medicines unavailable for three months and private ones costing 1,500 rupees a month - an unbearable burden.