Daily Dispatch

Proteas are in Seventh heaven

Series level 1-all as SA secure victory by 341 runs, and just four days

- By TELFORD VICE

WAS it the reassuranc­e that returned with Faf du Plessis‚ the emotion engendered by the plight of Russell Domingo‚ or the removal from the chain of weak link J P Duminy?

Whatever it was‚ it earned South Africa a crushing victory over England in the second Test at Trent Bridge yesterday.

The visitors were home with more than a day to spare‚ winning by 340 runs. If the weightines­s of the scoreline seems familiar it’s because England won the first Test by 211 runs inside four days at Lord’s last Sunday.

Du Plessis‚ the cricketer most comfortabl­e with captaincy‚ missed that match: he was at home marvelling at his and wife Imari’s firstborn.

Domingo‚ an increasing­ly revered coach in his own dressing-room‚ didn’t see the end of it: his mother‚ who was seriously injured in a car accident last month‚ had taken a turn for the worse and died in the hours after the last wicket fell.

Duminy‚ as selfless a servant as a team could have‚ played what may be his last Test: seven completed innings without reaching 40‚ nevermind 50‚ and only two centuries in his last 16 trips to the crease tipped the selectoria­l scales against him.

Five days after they were laid low at Lord’s‚ South Africa rose from that canvas to fight on at Trent Bridge.

Eight days on‚ they delivered the knockout blow by dismissing England – who were set what would have been a world record target of 474 – for 133.

The innings lasted a touch more than three-and-a-half hours, and no runs were scored as the last three wickets tumbled off four balls.

The home side resumed with a solitary run on the board‚ and lost their first wicket to the 11th ball of the day when Vernon Philander bowled Keaton Jennings through the gate for three.

Philander struck again to trap Gary Ballance in front for four‚ and England were 55/3 when Chris Morris yorked Joe Root for eight with a fine delivery that swerved past the bat and clipped the base of off-stump.

Morris then claimed the key wicket of Alastair Cook in the fourth over before lunch with a bouncer that reared viciously at the batsman’s head.

Cook took desperate defensive action‚ and the looping chance he gloved was stunningly caught onehanded by wicketkeep­er Quinton de Kock diving far to his right.

Opener Cook batted for a minute short of two hours and faced 76 balls for his 42.

The trend continued nine balls after lunch when Jonny Bairstow slapped a delivery from Keshav Maharaj into the hands of mid-on to go for 16.

England’s last serious hopes of delaying the inevitable were Ben Stokes and Moeen Ali‚ but they were dismissed six balls apart for 18 and 27.

Moeen’s rash sweep off Maharaj was caught at square leg and Philander took a fine‚ low return catch in his follow through to send Stokes on his way.

Duanne Olivier ended what was for him a low-key match by having Mark Wood and James Anderson caught at gully and behind the wicket with consecutiv­e bouncers.

Philander and Maharaj took three wickets each‚ and Morris claimed 2/7 in six overs.

The series‚ locked at 1-1‚ resumes at The Oval on July 27. — DDC

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? ON FIRE: South Africa’s Vernon Philander, right, celebrates taking the wicket of England’s Gary Balance, in the second Test played at Trent Bridge in Nottingham this week
Picture: AFP ON FIRE: South Africa’s Vernon Philander, right, celebrates taking the wicket of England’s Gary Balance, in the second Test played at Trent Bridge in Nottingham this week

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