The Herald (South Africa)

Proteas not up to fight against England

- Telford Vice

FOR 53 minutes and 72 balls at The Oval yesterday, South Africa were in with a shout in the third test against England.

Not of winning it, of course. In all the 2 265 tests played previously, no one had yet chased down the 492 they needed.

But a draw was not out of the question when South Africa resumed on the last day.

They were 117/4 with Dean Elgar 72 not out and Temba Bavuma on 16.

The 98th over – the minimum number to be bowled on the day – was far away, and the weather was not going to get in the way.

But, as assistant coach Adrian Birrell had said after stumps on Sunday: “There is hope.”

And there was. For the first 53 minutes and 72 balls.

Ball No 73 was delivered by debutant Toby Roland-Jones to Bavuma. It swung in after pitching, hit him below the roll, and on review was adjudged to be hitting the top of middle.

Bavuma batted for almost two-and-a-half hours and faced 97 balls for his 32, and shared 108 with Elgar.

Vernon Philander shouldered arms to his first ball.

Another inswinger, it also crashed into his pads and pinned him leg-before.

Five balls later, Elgar, marooned at the other end on 97 while those wickets fell, eased Moeen Ali over mid-off for four to reach his eighth century.

Elgar and Chris Morris took South Africa to lunch with little further drama, but the end came swiftly in the 10th over of the second session.

Moeen to Elgar, who drove and was caught at slip.

Perhaps because they knew England were going to win, perhaps because they know and appreciate a fine innings when they see one – and Elgar’s 136 in five-and-a-half hours off 228 balls was exactly that – The Oval crowd stood as one and applauded him all the way back to the dressing room.

Next ball, Kagiso Rabada mirrored Elgar’s fateful stroke and duly suffered the same fate.

Morne Morkel arrived and spent longer taking guard than actually batting – Moeen’s first ball to him nailed his pad plumb in front. Game over. England had won by 239 runs to take a 2-1 lead in the series.

It was the third time a test had been clinched with a hat-trick, and the first time that had happened at this ground.

Not bad for a bowler who needs to be told he is not England’s firstchoic­e spinner.

What did Elgar think of reaching a century and becoming a hat-trick victim all on the same day?

“It’s a freaky game,” he said. “The script is always being written by somebody else.”

Elgar spent much of his time at the crease in pain caused by being hit on the left hand while fielding off his own bowling in England’s second innings. Had he been for an x-ray? “It would be a waste of money,” he said. “As I sit here now, I’m ready to play the next game in Manchester.”

Besides, the bruises tended to focus the mind of a player who is at his best when he is looking at the world from inside a trench.

“I’d prefer not to get hit, but it puts me in a different mindset,” he said. “It’s part of the game – you’ve got to take the blows.”

Faf du Plessis concurred that pain and suffering came standard in test cricket: “Just look at Morne Morkel’s toes. He’ll tell you he bowls with them whatever they look like.”

Bromance aside, South Africa have three days to regroup before the last match of a series they can no longer win.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? HAT-TRICK HERO: England's Moeen Ali, second from left, celebrates the final wicket and victory with teammates on the fifth and final day of the third test match against South Africa at The Oval
Picture: AFP HAT-TRICK HERO: England's Moeen Ali, second from left, celebrates the final wicket and victory with teammates on the fifth and final day of the third test match against South Africa at The Oval
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DEAN ELGAR
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