The Scotsman

Red faces for England as collapse hands Proteas 340-run victory in just four days

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England collapsed to a 340run defeat well inside four days as their batting failed embarrassi­ngly once again in the second Investec Test against South Africa at Trent Bridge.

Set a world-record target of 474 in a match dominated by the tourists from the start of day two, England never got going despite perfect conditions under cloudless skies – and were bowled out before tea for a flaky 133.

After falling well short by their own admission of required standards in the first innings, too, Joe Root’s team had lost all 20 wickets in 96.1 overs as South Africa emphatical­ly levelled the four-match series at 1-1.

Vernon Philander (three for 24) made two early breakthrou­ghs and, after Chris Morris then removed both captain Root and his predecesso­r Alastair Cook, realistic hopes of seriously extending South Africa were already fading fast on 79 for four at lunch.

Their descent to defeat was in unstoppabl­e mode, but it was still mildly surprising that they continued to subside so quickly in an error-strewn afternoon as Keshav Maharaj (three for 42) took his match haul to six wickets.

England’s two out-of-form left-handers Keaton Jennings and Gary Ballance had proved no match for Philander, who saw them off with the new ball for a combined seven runs.

Jennings left a big gap between bat and pad, pushing

0 England’s Keaton Jennings is bowled for just three runs by South African seamer Vernon Philander as the Proteas won the 2nd Test. forward, and lost his offstump; then Ballance succumbed lbw when Philander’s review, after an initial not-out decision, demonstrat­ed the ball pitched on leg-stump and straighten­ed enough off the pitch to hit it.

Cook, who had to overturn an lbw decision the previous evening to avoid a golden duck to the first ball of the innings, took 22 balls to get off the mark and a fair bit longer to locate the middle of the bat.

But he appeared in no mood to go quietly – even after England’s prospects had taken a huge dent at the other end when Root lost his off-stump to an unstoppabl­e, outswingin­g yorker from Morris.

South Africa celebrated like a team who knew already they had victory in their sights.

Cussed Cook stood in their way, but Morris had a delivery to do for him, too. A brilliant bouncer had the normally unflappabl­e opener in a proper tangle – and, as he bailed out of an involuntar­y hook, he gloved the ball fine down the leg-side, where wicketkeep­er Quinton de Kock completed a high-class dismissal with wonderful reactions to take a diving catch.

Jonny Bairstow’s departure straight after lunch was less hard-won, England’s wicketkeep­erchoosing­anacceptab­le attacking option – up the pitch to try to hit Keshav Maharaj over mid-on – but making a hash of it and planting the ball into the hands of the fielder.

Moeen Ali’s similar intent brought only brief success before he mistimed a sweep at Maharaj to square-leg – one of several men waiting for his mistake on that specific shot – and when Philander pulled off a neat caught-and-bowled to see off Ben Stokes in the next over, it was merely a matter of how long the England tail could delay the inevitable.

There turned out to be precious little by way of late defiance, the last five wickets falling in a heap for only 11 runs – and the previously unsuccessf­ul Duanne Olivier finishing with numbers 10 and 11 in successive balls.

That confirmed the downward spiral but had no further relevance becausethe­damage had long been done, not just in a whimpering second innings but in the misplaced adventure of the first, too, against a pedigree touring attack that will surely demand significan­t respect for the remainder of the series.

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