logo
World Test Championship final hangs in balance as Lungi Ngidi drags Proteas back into match

World Test Championship final hangs in balance as Lungi Ngidi drags Proteas back into match

Daily Maverick20 hours ago

Australia, 212 and 144 for 8 (Alex Carey 43, Lungi Ngidi 3-35, Kagiso Rabada 3-44), lead South Africa, 138 (David Bedingham 45, Temba Bavuma 36, Pat Cummins 6-28), by 218 runs.
The World Test Championship (WTC) final between South Africa and Australia at Lord's in England has been a match of expert bowling and batting collapses.
The Proteas were skittled for 138 after lunch on day two, having gone into the afternoon break on 121 for five. Australia, in their second innings, went into tea on 28 for two before landing on 73 for seven 12 overs later as 14 wickets fell on the second day of play, the same as the first.
Heading into the final session of day two, Australia would have felt completely in control of the match and positive of retaining their WTC crown.
They were 102 runs ahead with eight wickets in hand and their two batters with the highest Test averages at the crease: Marnus Labuschagne and Steve Smith.
But Marco Jansen, Wiaan Mulder and Lungi Ngidi in particular, turned the match on its head, combining for five wickets in eight overs, and conceding 30 runs as Kagiso Rabada's support cast became the main stars for 45 minutes.
Ngidi had struggled for rhythm in the first innings, bowling all eight of his overs from the Pavilion End, with the famous Lord's slope running from left to right.
In the second, he bowled his nine overs on the trot, conceding just 35 runs and picking up three wickets. The difference was that he came from the Nursery End with the slope going from right to left, making it easier for him to exploit his natural away movement to right-handed batters.
Despite the cluster of wickets falling, all of the tracking data — in terms of seam and swing movement — for the match has played as it usually does, and in some areas with less movement than is typical at Lord's.
So what's the reason for 28 wickets falling in two days of cricket?
'I think it's a combination of it being a tricky pitch, but I think when you have six quality seamers on a tricky pitch, it obviously makes batting tough,' said South Africa's highest first innings run-scorer, David Bedingham.
Fight back
Conditions turned overcast quickly after the tea break, affecting the ease of batting, whereas batting had looked uncomplicated before.
Jansen got the first breakthrough after tea, dismissing Labuschagne (22 off 64) exactly as he had in the first innings: caught behind off a full, outswinging delivery outside the off stump.
Ngidi got into the action the next over with his first wicket of the match: trapping Smith (13 off 25) LBW with a ball that pitched on the off stump and held its line before carting into his pad.
Australia's first-innings hero, Beau Webster (nine off 11), was Ngidi's next victim, rapped on the pad right in front of his stumps as well, the first of three wickets to fall in three overs.
Mulder chipped in with his first wicket of the match, striking Travis Head (nine off 11) on his pad before the delivery clattered into his stumps.
Pat Cummins (six off five) gifted Ngidi his third of the innings, missing a leg stump half-volley which ricocheted from his front pad on to the wickets.
Southpaws Alex Carey (43 off 50) and Mitchell Starc (16* off 47) then rebuilt with a gritty 61-run stand, taking Australia — as scorching sunshine replaced the clouds — to 134 and a lead of 208 before Rabada returned to the attack from the same Nursery End and trapped Carey LBW.
The Lord's pitch continued to play lower as the action moved deeper into the day.
Six chances dropped short of fielders behind the wicket after tea for South Africa, which led the slip cordon to inch forward towards the end of the day.
Jansen dropped a catch off the blade of Starc, bowled by Mulder, that flew straight to him at a close gully off the third-last delivery of the day, which would have seen Australia nine down at stumps.
Small margins, big collapse
It's those small margins that could prove costly for South Africa in such a low-scoring match. The bowlers have also been ill-disciplined, despite hitting the right lines and lengths, conceding 19 no-balls across the two innings.
The Proteas fell away spectacularly in their first batting innings earlier in the day.
Before that, they did the first thing they would have spoken about overnight: survive the first hour without any wickets falling. They did that to outstanding effect. Bedingham (45 off 111) and Bavuma (36 off 84) scored 44 in 13 overs before drinks were taken.
Conversely, in the 22 overs bowled to the Proteas on the evening of day one, they scored just 43 runs and lost four wickets.
Bavuma, though, was dismissed by Cummins immediately before lunch. Kyle Verreynne (13 off 39) and Bedingham saw the team through to the first extended break of the day before chaos broke loose.
Cummins went on to get rid of Verreynne and Jansen (nought off three) in one over, as well as Bedingham and Rabada to record six wickets for 28 runs in 18.1 overs. South Africa lost their final five wickets while adding only 12 runs.
South Africa will look to get rid of Australia's final two wickets as quickly as possible tomorrow. Regardless, they will need to record the highest innings score of the match to claim victory and the WTC mace from Australia. DM

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Markram shows good form as Proteas make solid start in pursuit of 282
Markram shows good form as Proteas make solid start in pursuit of 282

TimesLIVE

time3 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

Markram shows good form as Proteas make solid start in pursuit of 282

The Proteas lost two wickets in pursuit of a target of 282 during the middle session of the third day of the World Test Championship at Lord's. South Africa reached 94/2 at tea and still require 188 runs to win with opener Aiden Markram not out on 49, while a hobbling Temba Bavuma was on 11. Worryingly for the South African captain he had to receive treatment for a left hamstring injury, after pulling up short while taking a quick single. The Proteas management confirmed he would be treated and assessed at tea. Led by Markram, the Proteas showed greater intent with the bat than was the case in the first innings. They were helped somewhat by Australia setting attacking fields initially, while the quality of the their bowling was quite up to the same standard as it was in South Africa's first innings. As importantly, with the sun shining brightly, conditions for batting are the best they've been for the match. Markram drove elegantly to lead South Africa's pursuit, and they batted comfortably at above four runs an over throughout the session. The two wickets they lost were disappointing however. Ryan Rickelton, who'd clipped a neat boundary through midwicket off Mitchell Starc, chased a wide, full delivery from the left-arm seamer that he edged to wicketkeeper Alex Carey. Rickelton, who scored six, was reluctant to leave and took the intervention of TV umpire Richard Kettleborough to confirm his dismissal. Wiaan Mulder's was a soft dismissal, a casual drive, that sent the ball straight to Marnus Labuschagne at cover. The Australians were stunned at the ease of it, and Mulder was crestfallen, having played so well for his 27, he trudged from the field shaking his head. His partnership with Markram was worth 61 runs. More drama followed with Bavuma, keen on showing the same level of intent as he did on the second morning, lifted the second ball he faced over the covers to get off the mark. He was then lucky that an inside edge against Lyon went past his stumps. The biggest slice of fortune came when he was dropped by Steve Smith at first slip on two off Starc. The former Australia captain was standing much closer to the stumps than is normal — wearing a helmet for protection — and the ball blasted through his fingers. He left the field in agony, with what appeared to be a dislocated finger on his right hand. A number of edges have fallen short of slips in the last two days, leading to both sides moving their respective cordons closer to the stumps. Like Smith, Markram also wore a helmet on Thursday night and again on Friday morning as he stood close against the quick bowlers. It was the main reason Marco Jansen, standing at gully, dropped Starc when he had 14, three balls before the close of play on the second evening. It was a costly miss, with Starc going to make an unbeaten 58 in Australia's second innings.

Proteas need 282 runs to win World Test Championship
Proteas need 282 runs to win World Test Championship

The Herald

time3 hours ago

  • The Herald

Proteas need 282 runs to win World Test Championship

It ended a partnership of 59 of the 10th wicket between Hazlewood and fellow fast bowler Mitchell Starc, who finished the innings unbeaten on 58. Australia's captain Pat Cummins said on Thursday night another '30 to 40 runs' on top of the 144/8 his side had overnight would allow him to set attacking fields when SA batted for the final time. Kagiso Rabada picked up his ninth wicket of the match in the third over of the morning trapping, Nathan Lyon lbw for two. But try as he — and every other Proteas bowler — might thereafter, there was no breaching the defences of Starc and Hazlewood. Starc, dropped by Marco Jansen in the last over on Thursday night when he had 14, had shared a vital partnership of 61 for the eight wicket with Alex Carey on Friday. His 11th Test fifty, brought up with a thick edge that flew over the slips for four, also took Australia's second innings total past 200.

Proteas need 282 runs to win World Test Championship
Proteas need 282 runs to win World Test Championship

TimesLIVE

time6 hours ago

  • TimesLIVE

Proteas need 282 runs to win World Test Championship

The opening session of the third day of the World Test Championship final did not go according to plan for South Africa. The Proteas were hoping to knock over the last two Australian wickets in the first 30 minutes of play, giving themselves a fourth innings target of less than 250. Instead it was the Australians who got what they wanted, and more, adding 73 runs to their overnight total. With the prospect of an extended session, Aiden Markram eventually picked up the wicket of Australia's No 11 Josh Hazlewood, having him caught in the covers by Keshav Maharaj, for 17. That left the Proteas with a target of 282 to win the World Test Championship. It ended a partnership of 59 of the 10th wicket between Hazlewood and fellow fast bowler Mitchell Starc, who finished the innings unbeaten on 58.

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