The Scotsman

No reversal of fortune for captain Root as England under-deliver in Cape Town

● Stokes threatens to turn the tide before succumbing to tame dismissal

- By CLIVE WELLINGTON

England slumped to an underwhelm­ing 262 for nine on day one of the second Test against South Africa, another disappoint­ing entry in a tour that is lurching from bad to worse.

After a heavy defeat in the series opener at Centurion and two injury blows in the last 24 hours, captain Joe Root must have hoped his luck was turning when he won the toss and opted to bat on a friendlier looking surface.

England have talked tirelessly about the importance of big first-innings runs but under-delivered once again in Cape Town, with Ollie Pope’s unbeaten 56 the high point of an otherwise unimpressi­ve showing.

If losing pace spearhead Jofra Archer to an elbow problem goes down as bad luck and Rory Burns’ football injury represents a self-inflicted wound, the opening day at a packed Newlands was a simple case of being outplayed.

Anrich Nortje was the pick of the bowlers, sending back Root (35) with a brute of a bouncer and drawing a tame dismissal from Ben Stokes (47) at the site of his career-best 258 four years ago.

Root was always likely to bat first, burned by the opposite decision last week and presented with a more benign surface, but a rookie opening partnershi­p of Dom Sibley and Zak Crawley, the latter deputising for Burns, always looked vulnerable.

Vernon Philander needed only two overs with a fresh Kookaburra ball to knock off Crawley, who nicked the latest in a sequence of delicious away-cutters with only four to his name.

Sibley and Joe Denly responded with a battling partnershi­p of 55 – a survivalis­t’s stand that would have raised English spirits had Sibley not edged Kagiso Rabada just before the break to make it 67 for two at lunch.

Root, who was hit in the chest with the third ball of his innings, scored briskly at the start of the second session, overtaking Denly, who was marooned on 21 for 48 deliveries.

Nortje was the man to drag it back for South Africa, cracking Denly on the back of the helmet then taking Root’s outside edge on 31.

Rassie Van Der Dussen parried the head-high chance for

SOUTH AFRICA V ENGLAND,

ENGLAND First innings close four but two balls later Nortje flung down a 90mph bouncer that thumped the glove and looped to Quinton De Kock, Root having left his top hand in harm’s way as he crouched to avoid contact.

Denly was next to go for 38, losing his off stump to Keshav Maharaj after leaving a yawning gap in his defence. England needed a major partnershi­p if they were to transfer any kind of meaningful pressure back on to the hosts and in Stokes and Pope they at least had batsmen with enough range to oblige.

Pope got going with a couple of pleasing blows, one through cover then another eased beyond midwicket, before Stokes asserted his “alpha” credential­s.

After showing Maharaj plenty of respect he found a delivery to his liking and launched a towering six. When Nortje attempted to put Stokes back in his box, surprising him with a lifter from round the wicket, the all-rounder promptly readjusted and punched to the extra-cover ropes.

But, just as it seemed Stokes was in the mood to take hold of proceeding­s, just as quickly he was gone. Nortje landed the prize with a ball that should have been too full and too wide to cause grief, but Stokes only half-committed as he pinged to Dean Elgar at cover.

Stokes covered his eyes as he departed, shielding himself from either the South African celebratio­ns or the big screen replays. Jos Buttler’s entertaini­ng 29 offered brief respite before his positionin­g let him down, and the next three wickets fell in a heap around Pope.

Sam Curran left a Dwaine Pretorius ball that sent his off stump flying, Dom Bess bagged a golden duck on his Test recall and Stuart Broad accidental­ly jammed bat against pad to be cleaned up by Rabada.

James Anderson hung around long enough to see Pope past 50, with England’s innings continuing into a second day only after the latter was caught off a Rabada no-ball late on.

 ??  ?? 0 South Africa fast bowler Kagiso Rabada celebrates the wicket of England batsman Dom Sibley, during day one of the second Test.
0 South Africa fast bowler Kagiso Rabada celebrates the wicket of England batsman Dom Sibley, during day one of the second Test.

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