Herald on Sunday

NZ frozen out as

Elgar finds his rhythm to run hot in the chilly deep south but rain may have the final say

- By Andrew Alderson at University Oval

Dean Elgar wasn’t quite Captain Lawrence Oates of the ill-fated British 1911-12 South Pole expedition, but he did go outside, and he was some time in Dunedin temperatur­es hovering around 12 degrees on the fourth day of the first test.

Unlike Oates’ dire end, the South African opener returned in rude health to his team’s tent after earning parity against New Zealand.

The Proteas were 224 for six at stumps, a lead of 191 which may be in vain with rain forecast today.

Elgar's 89 complement­ed his first innings of 140.

The 548 balls he faced across the test are the most by any of his countrymen in New Zealand, surpassing Daryll Cullinan’s 490 at Eden Park in February, 1999.

“It has been tough and I think that’s why Dean enjoys it,” South African batting coach Neil McKenzie said. “He’s a gutsy, gritty cricketer and it suits him when he has to work hard for runs. Test cricket is not always about the easy, fluent runs, it’s about the ugly, hard ones.”

It was an autumn atmosphere where full cable-knit sweaters were

de rigueur, hands were embedded in pockets and one could be forgiven for fantasisin­g about piping hot pumpkin soup.

The Black Caps missed a swag of opportunit­ies to steal an advantage in the first session. The Proteas survived two failed reviews, one nonreview that would have earned a wicket, and two dropped catches.

They recovered to earn three for 67 in the final stanza. The guile of Jeetan Patel was the highlight with two for 72 from 36 overs, including his fourth consecutiv­e dismissal of Quinton de Kock in an internatio­nal innings. He bowled 28 straight overs from the northern end.

Left-armers Trent Boult (one for 34) and Neil Wagner (two for 57) worked in metronomic fashion to test the visitors early amid a gloom that felt like an extended solar eclipse.

Boult suffered a sore upper left thigh for his efforts which prevented him bowling with the second new ball. His fitness will be monitored overnight.

Wagner coaxed Hashim Amla (24) into a trap laid at short mid-wicket. A short-of-a-length ball was fended into substitute fielder Tim Southee’s hands. Amla looked vulnerable after getting hit on the fingers by Boult’s first ball of the day.

Elgar and Jean-Paul Duminy (39) then grafted a 74-run third-wicket stand. Faf du Plessis continued his barnacle opener’s battle of attrition to post an unbeaten 56.

New Zealand suffered for their judgement calls on five occasions.

1. A failed review from Boult in the 25th over when a ball hit Duminy’s pad, rather than the bat on the way through to BJ Watling’s gloves. Duminy was on two.

2. Tom Latham dropped a first slip catch off Boult in the 29th over when Duminy was six.

3. No review was taken when Patel hit Duminy (20) on the back leg in the 38th over which, albeit in hindsight, the ball tracker showed hitting the stumps.

4. An lbw review was taken against Duminy (20) in the 40th over when an inside edge hit his pad.

5. Elgar (35) edged Jimmy Neesham in the 41st over, but the ball clipped Watling's outstretch­ed glove.

Neesham had two first slip catches elude him from Elgar off Patel and Mitchell Santner. One fell short; the other squirted to his left.

“We put down couple of chances . . . but the way guys kept fighting was impressive,” Patel said. “A couple of reviews didn’t go our way and we might have to look at how we discuss those going forward. I didn’t realise he [Duminy] had hit the lbw [review] off me. You can get caught up in the emotion, I wanted to get in the game and got fizzed up.”

 ??  ?? South African batsman Dean Elgar was in commanding form for the Proteas.
South African batsman Dean Elgar was in commanding form for the Proteas.

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