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England set for famous victory
Ed Osmond |
August 17, 2003 23:18 IST
South Africa, chasing 202 for victory, had struggled to 63 for five when bad light prematurely ended the fourth day of the third Test against England on Sunday.
The touring side, 1-0 up in the series, gave themselves hope of an unlikely victory by bowling out England for 118 in their second innings, fast bowler Shaun Pollock providing the inspiration with figures of six for 39.
But England's four-pronged seam attack responded to the challenge, removing Graeme Smith, Jacques Rudolph, Herschelle Gibbs, Boeta Dippenaar and Jacques Kallis to leave South Africa in trouble at 50 for five.
Just as in the first innings, however, Neil McKenzie and Mark Boucher proved saviours for their side, digging in for nearly an hour to add 13 runs in the deepening gloom before the umpires offered them the chance to leave the field.
It was another intriguing day of fluctuating fortunes at Trent Bridge.
England, who lost Marcus Trescothick to the first ball of their innings on Saturday, needed a solid start, but Pollock soon produced an unplayable delivery that Michael Vaughan, on five, could only edge to wicketkeeper Boucher.
Nasser Hussain joined Mark Butcher and the two first-innings centurions battled through testing spells by Pollock and Makhaya Ntini.
Pollock's removal from the attack, however, prompted a collapse.
Andrew Hall ripped out Butcher's off stump with his first ball, and the bustling all rounder trapped Ed Smith lbw with his next delivery.
Alec Stewart tamely edged a routine Kallis outswinger to Boucher and Hussain, fresh from scoring his 13th Test century in the first innings, looked fortunate to survive a shout for lbw by Pollock.
HUGE SIX
The former captain battled his way to 30 in just under two hours when he was finally trapped lbw by Pollock, but Flintoff lifted Kallis for a huge six over long-on to raise English spirits.
The big all rounder also fell for 30, though, carving Pollock tamely to Gibbs at backward point.
Ashley Giles played a few defiant strokes but after he fell for 21 Pollock wrapped up the tail, claiming his 299th Test wicket when he ended the innings by getting James Anderson lbw. It was his 15th five-wicket haul in his 73rd Test.
South Africa captain Smith, with 656 runs in the series, was first man out for five, lbw to James Kirtley, who dismissed Rudolph in identical fashion two balls later.
Gibbs made a breezy 28 before he top-edged an attempted pull off Steve Harmison to Giles at mid-on, and Dippenaar completed an unhappy match when he clipped Anderson straight to Ed Smith at mid-wicket to leave South Africa reeling at 41 for four.
Kallis resisted stubbornly for 13 before he was bowled off the inside edge by Anderson, leaving McKenzie and Boucher to survive a number of concerted lbw appeals as they lived to fight another day.
Scoreboard
England (1st innings): 445 (N.Hussain 116, M.Butcher 106, A.Stewart 72, E.Smith 64)
South Africa (1st innings): 362 (N.McKenzie 90, S.Pollock 62; J.Anderson 5-102)
England (2nd innings) (overnight 0-1):
M.Trescothick c Adams b Pollock 0
M.Vaughan c Boucher b Pollock 5
M.Butcher b Hall 8
N.Hussain lbw b Pollock 30
E.Smith lbw b Hall 0
A.Stewart c Boucher b Kallis 5
A.Flintoff c Gibbs b Pollock 30
A.Giles c Boucher b Pollock 21
J.Kirtley c Boucher b Ntini 3
S.Harmison not out 2
J.Anderson lbw b Pollock 2
Extras (b-4 lb-5 nb-3) 12
Total (all out, 46.4 overs) 118
Fall of wickets: 1-0 2-17 3-39 4-39 5-44 6-76 7-91 8-114 9-114
Bowling: Pollock 17.4-4-39-6 (nb-3), Ntini 13-5-28-1, Kallis 10-2-36-1, Hall 6-2-6-2.
South Africa (2nd innings):
G.Smith lbw b Kirtley 5
H.Gibbs c Giles b Harmison 28
J.Rudolph lbw b Kirtley 0
J.Kallis b Anderson 13
B.Dippenaar c Smith b Anderson 1
N.McKenzie not out 6
M.Boucher not out 9
Extras (lb-1) 1
Total (for five wickets, 33 overs) 63
Fall of wickets: 1-22 2-28 3-40 4-41 5-50
Bowling: Kirtley 8-5-13-2, Flintoff 8-3-26-0, Harmison 8-1-16-1, Anderson 9-4-7-2.