logo
Australia learn cricket's oldest lesson as South Africa turn the tables in WTC

Australia learn cricket's oldest lesson as South Africa turn the tables in WTC

Yahooa day ago

Right from the start of the day, there was an inevitability that this match was Australia's. They started 218 runs in front, in the third innings, walking back onto a Lord's field where 28 wickets had fallen in the previous two days. They had the four-star bowling attack, their opponents had the shooting-star batting order, one that had flashed and vanished in its first sighting. Soon this would be compounded by the Temba Bavuma's hamstring injury. The lead as it stood looked a chance to be enough, and first would come the chance to increase it a smidgen more.
Related: Markram and Bavuma steer South Africa to verge of stunning WTC upset against Australia
Advertisement
The sense of inevitability only grew as that smidgen broadened into a big dirty smudge. There is nothing more galling for a cricket team than a long tenth-wicket partnership. Every ball is more annoying than the one before. Things had started right, Kagiso Rabada in his second over of the day trapping Nathan Lyon with only four runs added to the score. On four wickets for the innings, nine for the match, Rabada was ready to complete twin milestones.
Except they didn't come. Not in his third over, nor his fourth. Not his fifth, not his sixth. Not even his seventh. When he was taken off after drinks, fading with fatigue, it must have been galling to the entire side, their champion deserving that last swipe of icing on the cake. Instead, not content with seeing off the major threat, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood just kept batting: 135 balls, 59 runs, to the stroke of lunch.
Starc made a few Test fifties early in his career, including a 99, as slap-and-slash affairs. He hadn't made one in the last six years, but over that time his batting has probably been better. He has made 20s, 30s, 40s, over long periods, in tough situations, when resistance was needed. Look at the previous World Test Championship final, the last Ashes in England, some of the most difficult outings against India. Today's unbeaten 58 was one of his best, by far his slowest score of anywhere near that size, facing 136 balls, more than anyone in the Test to that point.
So a session of frustration, surely a distraction for South Africa as a lead inverted its final numbers from 218 to 281. Then an early wicket for who else but Starc as Ryan Rickelton nicked an outswinger. Starc again, as Wiaan Mulder chipped to cover for 27. Bavuma's hamstrings have always popped like champagne corks on New Year's Eve, and the South African captain did another when he was on 9. It was still inevitable, it seemed. Australia were on their way to win.
Advertisement
Related: Cordon conundrum leaves Australia in trouble and Steve Smith in world of pain | Andy Bull
But there was one wrinkle. For all that the Starc and Hazlewood stand drove South Africans mad, every run they made was also an example to the same team of how much easier run-making had become. The pitch metrics showed that movement had eased through the air and off the surface. The sun was shining brightly. And while it was the fourth innings of the Test, it was also only the third day.
Those who pay attention to county cricket will know there has been a Lord's trend, at least recently, of scores growing bigger as matches goes on, with surfaces easing as chases are made. A month ago, Middlesex spinner Zafar Gohar sealed a chase of 366 at eight wickets down. Most followers of the Australian Test team would find themselves short of the required standard on reaching the Zafar Gohar round of their local pub trivia night, but that is a fact with some bearing on Australian fortunes.
Because over the next session and a half, that inevitability shifted. Bavuma batted on despite the injury, riding some luck with a dropped catch, injuring Steve Smith in the process, then growing into an unbeaten 65. At the other end was Aiden Markram, who had looked like a million dollars from the outset, riding the bounce and diverting the pace of Australia's celebrated quicks, using their gifts to build his score. As the runs went by, South Africa became the team untroubled, Australia the team starting to scramble, and by stumps the pairing remained intact with only 69 more to win. Markram started his career with a fourth-innings hundred against Australia, and has reached that career's peak with another here. The first time he still ended up on the losing side; this time, he mustn't.
Cricket is fond of dishing out the lesson that nothing can truly be known, or in more frank terms, the lesson that you, the one making the assumptions, are an idiot, actually. No matter how many times the lesson is taught, each fresh instance of an opportunity will see some portion of us fail to remember it. Australia were going to win this, it was inevitable, until they weren't. South Africa will win it from here, that too is an inevitability. Which means it might happen. Or it might not.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lightning stops NRL game between Souths and Bulldogs
Lightning stops NRL game between Souths and Bulldogs

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Lightning stops NRL game between Souths and Bulldogs

Lightning has forced South Sydney and Canterbury from the field at Accor Stadium, in the first time weather has stopped an NRL game in more than a decade. Referee Adam Gee ordered South Sydney and Canterbury off around 4:40pm on Sunday afternoon with the Bulldogs leading 18-0 in the 31st minute. Lightning had struck nearby twice before the stoppage, with the second flash prompting audible gasps from the modest crowd. Soon beforehand, security had ordered patrons in lower seating areas to take cover as rain teemed down. Mother nature puts a pause to the game ⛈️📺 Watch #NRLSouthsDogs on ch. 502 or stream on Kayo: BLOG: MATCH CENTRE: — Fox League (@FOXNRL) June 15, 2025 Sideline commentators and ground staff also fled the field with the players. The stadium DJ played the classic rock hit 'Rain' by Dragon, making light of the situation. Two young fans took advantage of the situation and rushed onto the field, prompting a small army of security guards into action on the sodden turf. Soon before 5pm, the referee determined in consultation with venue management and ground staff that play could resume imminently, with players to be afforded two minutes of warm-up time before the resumption. It was the first time since Anzac Day in 2015 that a match had been paused due to weather, with hail forcing St George Illawarra and Sydney Roosters off that day. Before that, the last time weather interrupted a game was in 2009. The Bulldogs dominated the early exchanges of round 15's final game, with Toby Sexton scoring the first try as he fights for his spot in the team's halves.

Bavuma's brave team make giant leap for South African Test cricket
Bavuma's brave team make giant leap for South African Test cricket

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Bavuma's brave team make giant leap for South African Test cricket

South Africa lost their shot at winning this World Test Championship in 2022, when their board announced the team were going to play 28 games in the next four years. They lost it for a second time during the spring of last year, when they packed their reserve team off to play a series against New Zealand because their centrally contracted players had to stay back and play in a franchise tournament. They lost it a third time when the team were bowled out for 138 on Thursday morning and they lost it a fourth when they let Australia's tail put on 134 runs for the last four wickets, leaving them needing 282 to win. Finally, after they had just about run out of ways to lose, they won. Advertisement Related: Markram steers South Africa to historic World Test Championship final triumph The last runs came hard and the winning ones seemed to be the most difficult of all. It was chaos on the outside of the old brick walls that surround Lord's on Saturday morning. It seemed every South African in the city seemed to be piling in to see their team win the World Test Championship and five minutes before the start of play the queues ran down and around Wellington Road, where the rush of latecomers forced the traffic wide to the other side of the street. But inside, the scoreboard moved like a stopped clock. 'We were trying to get it over and done with,' said Aiden Markram, 'but it just wasn't easy.' 'Even when we got it down to 10 runs,' Temba Bavuma said. 'You were on the edge, thinking anything can happen. I mean the belief was there, but it was pretty hard to accept that we were so close to winning something.' South Africa have blown too many big games to feel sure of scoring even the bare handful they needed here. Kyle Verreynne got himself in a hell of mess trying to pick off the very last they needed after the scores were tied. He ought to have been given out caught behind after he gloved the ball while he was trying to hit a ramp for four, but Australia had used up all their reviews. Besides, by that point even they seemed to have decided they ought to just let South Africa have it. After everything they have been through across the years, even Australians were not going to begrudge them this victory. Advertisement South Africa are not a great team, but they have just beaten one. Markram is not a great batter, but he played like one. Bavuma is not a great captain, but he has won a great victory, one which may turn out to be the most consequential in the team's history. After all those defeats in other International Cricket Council tournaments across the years, the consequences of losing this final were unthinkable. Now, the implications of winning could be incalculable. Bavuma drew an explicit comparison with the success of the Springboks, whose back-to-back World Cup wins under Siya Kolisi have done so much. Related: 'Chokers? This win squashes that': Bavuma hopes WTC victory can unite South Africa Bavuma is the first Black man to captain the cricket team and if previous generations fought against one strain of discrimination, he has had to confront another form of it by dealing with the lingering stigma attached to Black players in an era when so many white players have quit because they feel racial quotas are discriminatory. Advertisement 'For me to be recognised more than just as a Black African cricketer, but to be seen as somebody who has achieved something that the country wanted so much, that's something which will make me walk around with my chest out, and I just hope that it will inspire the country,' Bavuma said. And beyond. Bavuma spoke about how it was a victory for all the 'small' teams in Test cricket, which, these days, includes all nine Test playing nations apart from India, Australia and England. South African Test cricket is the canary in the mine and 18 months ago it had just about keeled over. Since then, they have found a way to win eight games in a row, a run that culminated in this famous victory. Bavuma and Markram both said they want to play more Test cricket. South Africa do not have a home series scheduled for another 15 months, when they will play Australia, again. 'What's important is to keep Test cricket as No 1 in South Africa,' said Markram. 'We understand all the dynamics in the cricket world, but for young players coming through, it has to be about wearing this baggy Test cap for South Africa.'

Housby heroics not enough as Vixens shoot to fourth
Housby heroics not enough as Vixens shoot to fourth

Yahoo

time36 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Housby heroics not enough as Vixens shoot to fourth

The Melbourne Vixens have defied a "lethal" Helen Housby to topple the ladder-leading NSW Swifts and move into Super Netball's top four. Sophie Garbin powered the Vixens' 70-68 win while player-of-the-match Jo Weston dominated defensively to inflict a second-straight defeat on the Swifts. It was party time on Sunday at John Cain Arena when Weston's long-range assist in the third quarter swelled the lead to 11 goals. Centimetre perfect 🤌🏼Watch every game live on Kayo Sports, Foxtel and Binge. — Suncorp Super Netball (@SuperNetball) June 15, 2025 But English star Housby was dealing in pairs, the veteran nailing eight-of-nine super shots to drag her side off the canvas. Her sixth got the margin back to four goals with three minutes to play, Housby then nailing two more on successive plays to make it a two-goal game in the final 30 seconds. From the restart Weston was then called for a held ball, but Swifts replacement shooter Sophie Fawns missed a super shot that would have levelled the game. "I'm happy we got that in the end ... the super-shot shooting from Helen and Sophie is just lethal," Weston said. "It was a real team effort and I was proud of our attack, they were really smart and worked the ball, drew penalties when they needed to and finished it off." A fourth-straight Vixens (6-4) win allowed them jump the Thunderbirds (5-5) into fourth with four regular-season games to play. "Just being really chaotic and having fun out there," Weston said of their intent. "We've been trying to emphasis the work rate and decision making … we weren't seeing the option because we weren't working for each other." Earlier, Garbin (47-of-49 attempts) and Austin (17-of-19 with 26 assists from 28 feeds) had spearheaded the Vixens' charge, the hosts forging clear after scores had been locked at 20-20 early in the second quarter. While assured of a finals berth, the Swifts' (8-2) loss came a week after Jhaniele Fowler-Nembhard's 71 goals for the West Coast Fever ended their eight-game winning start to the season.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store