
South Africa 94/2 at tea, need 188 to win WTC final
London, Jun 13 (UNI) The ICC World Test Championship Final at Lord's is finely poised as South Africa reached 94 for 2 at tea on the third day, needing 188 more runs to defeat Australia and claim their maiden WTC title.
Chasing a target of 288, the Proteas made a cautious start but were pegged back early when Mitchell Starc removed Ryan Rickelton cheaply for six with the new ball. Despite the early setback, Aiden Markram and Wiaan Mulder responded with positive strokeplay, stitching together a fluent half-century stand.
However, just as the partnership was gaining momentum, Starc struck again to dismiss Mulder for 27, a soft dismissal that gave Australia a much-needed breakthrough. Temba Bavuma, the South African skipper, joined Markram and had a shaky start, surviving a chance on 2 and needing on-field treatment for a hamstring niggle. He remained unbeaten at the break.
Markram looked solid at the other end, playing some crisp strokes en route to an unbeaten 49. The pitch, while appearing benign for most part, has shown occasional variable bounce, keeping the Australian bowlers interested.
Earlier in the day, Starc's counterattacking half-century lifted Australia to 207 in their second innings. Coming in with the lead under 230, the left-arm pacer remained unbeaten on 58 and added 59 crucial runs with Josh Hazlewood (17) for the 10th wicket, frustrating the South African bowlers. Kagiso Rabada was the standout performer with the ball, finishing with nine wickets in the match.
South Africa now require another 188 runs with eight wickets in hand to claim victory, while Australia will look to their experienced pace attack to close out the match and secure a second consecutive WTC crown.
As the final session of Day 3 approaches, the game hangs in the balance — setting the stage for a thrilling finish to the WTC cycle. UNI BDN SSP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
15 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Aiden Markram shares a drink with fan after WTC Final heroics, turns out he's a friend from school
Aiden Markram is a freshly-minted South African hero, scoring 136 in a remarkable chase at Lord's in one of the most famous fourth-innings batting performances in recent history to seal the World Test Championship with a victory over Australia. Following a determined, powerful display of batting, which earned him the man-of-the-match award, Markram was spotted by camera crews accepting a beer from some South African fans in the boisterous Lord's crowd — maybe one of the most well-deserved beers any person has ever had. Reflecting on the moment afterwards in the press conference, having led South Africa to a first ICC trophy in 27 years and first major tournament win in their history, Markram revealed that the veer was offered by an old friend of his, of which he took full advantage in order to kick off celebrations after a tense match that capped off a two-year long journey. "Yeah that was cool. That was one of my mates from school. He wanted me to come over and I said, 'Flip man, I can't, it's too busy, it's chaos.' And then he was like, 'Oh, here's a beer.' And I was like, 'OK, I'm in,'' said Markram of the moment in the press conference, receiving a round of laughter for his honesty. A post shared by ICC (@icc) The video of the moment shows Markram making his way over from the edge of the boundary, where the South African players were enjoying a lap of honour around the home of cricket, over to a group of fans. He then proceeded to embrace his friend, before chugging the beer — a picture that truly got the party started for the Proteas and all their fans who had arrived in droves to London to support their team. 'So, I've had my first one for today and I'm pretty sure there'll be a few more,' said the man without whom this party would never have found solid footing. South Africa's cause for celebration was guided home by Markram, captain Temba Bavuma, and a 9-fer by Kagiso Rabada, three of the more experienced and senior members of a unit who have now gone on a true hotstreak of winning Test matches. Once the raucous celebrations from this historic moment calm down, attention will turn to defending their WTC title, with an eye on many more ICC trophies in the years to come.


Time of India
22 minutes ago
- Time of India
WTC final: Australia head coach backs Usman Khawaja and Marnus Labuschagne after Lord's heartbreak
Australia's Marnus Labuschagne, right, and batting partner Usman Khawaja react as they walk past each other during the World Test Championship final between South Africa and Australia at Lord's cricket ground in London, Wednesday, June 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth) Australia head coach, Andrew McDonald , has backed old guard Usman Khawaja and out of form Marnus Labuschagne after they failed to defend their World Test Championship (WTC) at Lord's against South Africa. Labuschagne opened in the WTC final against South Africa and scored 17 and 22 in both the innings. 'He's a big part of the future of the team. Anyone that averages 45 or 46 in Test cricket at that age is important,' McDonald was quoted by Fox Cricket. 'We've got older players who are closer to the end than the start. We've got some younger players that are coming in, and you definitely want those guys that have, I think, 60-odd Test matches. 'Couldn't have dreamt it better': Aiden Markram 'If he can get his game in good order for the next four or five years, he can underpin that batting order. But at the moment, he'd be disappointed with the returns. 'He's missed out on big scores. He threatened at the MCG (when he) got a pair of 70s, and, you know, if they had been a pair of hundreds, the conversation shifts as well. 'But we're confident that he could return to his best and hence (that is) why we keep picking him. It is at what point do we stop picking him?' Lobo Predicted It, Again: South Africa's Historic WTC Win vs Australia On 39-year-old Khawaja, McDonald said: "He's on contract, he's an important player." by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Switch to UnionBank Rewards Card UnionBank Credit Card Apply Now Undo "He gives us stability at his best at the top. And we like to look at our players at their best. "No doubt, a couple of failures here and people then start to talk about maybe it's the end. I don't see an end date with the way he's training, the way he's preparing, the way he's moving. He went back to Shield cricket, got 100 last [season]. So I think he's got plenty of runs left in him. It'll come down to his inner drive and the way he prepares. "It was a bit the same with Davey as well. The way he moved, we saw some positives in that. We knew that the runs were around the corner. We feel as though Usman's got a big part to play."


Indian Express
34 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Grok's straight-faced answer to a query under a Bavuma, Jansen picture: ‘Who is taller?'
Amidst the merriment at Lord's after South Africa won their first ICC trophy of the century, and heartfelt messages and apologies to Temba Bavuma for underestimating him, came the queries to Grok about the sporting fairytale. Some were bizarre like Americans wondering what the fuss was all about, but Grok, an Artificial intelligence tool, was bombarded with a few posers with bleedingly obvious answers. One such concerned a dressing room snap of Temba Bavuma and Marco Jansen, posing with the Test mace, prize for all the efforts in ringing in South Africa's biggest ever cricket trophy. Like their world winning rugby team, the Springboks, the Proteas too have a wide variety of frames, and none more than the photographer's delight of the tallest and shortest of their freshly minted world winners, Temba Bavuma and Marco Jansen. While lines like 'the long and shirt of it is that South Africa are WTC champions' had run their course on Saturday, a viral picture of Bavuma and Jansen standing side by side, invited a query that might have stumped (or lbw'd at least) Grok, if it was a real human with eyes and a tongue to utter words. The Twitter account @Whhyz that claims to be from Italy and calls itself a crypto degenerate, asked the machine-taught Grok, under the Bavuma-Jansen pic, 'Who is taller?' To anyone that could see, even if they had never heard of cricket, the answer would be obvious. Grok, considered a marvel of prompt engineering, after a time lapse of 2 minutes, answered with a straight face: 'Marco Jansen is taller than Temba Bavuma. Based on available information, Jansen stands at approximately 2.06 meters, while Bavuma is around 1.62 meters. This height difference is evident in their joint appearances and aligns with cricket profiles and fan discussions.' While the contrast between the beanpole all-rounder and the 5'4 Bavuma makes for an iconic picture, the South African captain has faced cruel trolling and body shaming over his stature and height in the past. For South Africans, an evolved sporting nation that is a consecutive World Cup winner at rugby, varied bodytypes are nothing new, given Springboks have always had skilled athletes of various dimensions. RG Snyman (6 feet-9) and Cheslin Kolbe (5 feet-7) of the World champ Springboks team, are massive stars back in South Africa, and their specific skill sets plenty admired. The WTC triumph has given cricket its world winning equivalents, and elevated Bavuma's leadership credentials to widespread acceptance, making the former memes look silly and quite brainless. The captain played two crucial knocks in both innings in the WTC win, and has been the highest run getter for South Africa over the last WTC cycle.