logo
WTC Final: SA pacer Ngidi insists match ‘in balance' even as Cummins, Carey help AUS surge ahead on Day 2

WTC Final: SA pacer Ngidi insists match ‘in balance' even as Cummins, Carey help AUS surge ahead on Day 2

First Post19 hours ago

Pat Cummins produced a sensational spell of four wickets for just one run to finish with figures out 6/28, helping Australia bowl South Africa out for just 138. Alex Carey's fighting 43 then helped the defending champions end Day 2 on 144/8 from 73/7. read more
Australia captain Pat Cummins celebrates after dismissing his South African counterpart Temba Bavuma on Day 2 of the ICC World Test Championship Final at Lord's. Reuters
Australia captain Pat Cummins starred with the ball and Alex Carey made valuable runs following a dramatic collapse as the holders retained the advantage in the World Test Championship final against South Africa on Thursday.
Fast bowler Cummins produced a sensational spell of four wickets for one run, sparking South Africa's collapse to 138 all out on the second day in reply to Australia's first innings total of 212 at Lord's.
Australia collapsed to 73-7 in their second innings, with Kagiso Rabada (3-44) and Lungi Ngidi (3-35) doing the bulk of the damage.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
But Carey (43) and Mitchell Starc (16 not out) shared an eighth-wicket partnership of 61 before the wicketkeeper was lbw to Rabada shortly before the close.
The last over of the day saw Starc dropped on 14 when Marco Jansen shelled a routine catch off Wiaan Mulder.
At stumps Australia were 144-8, a potentially decisive lead of 218 runs.
A remarkable 28 wickets fell in two days on a pitch which, while offering some assistance to the quicks, was by no means unplayable.
But a match scheduled for five days, could now finish before the end of the third.
'In England when it's overcast, the ball seems to do a bit more,' Starc told the BBC.
'Everyone is quick to jump on the batters but you've got to notice the good bowling from both sides.'
Ngidi, meanwhile, insisted South Africa were still in the game.
'It's in the balance right now,' he said. 'Two wickets in hand, if we can knock those over and maybe chase 225, people are going to get their money's worth.'
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Rabada, who had taken 5-51 in the first innings, tormented Australia again with two wickets in the 11th over.
He had Usman Khawaja caught behind for six and, two balls later, removed Cameron Green for a duck following the number three's four in the first innings.
Wickets continued to tumble after tea.
Left-arm quick Jansen had Marnus Labuschagne, in his first Test as an opener, caught behind for 22.
And Australia's 44-3 became 48-4 next over when Beau Webster, who top-scored in Australia's first innings with 72, fell lbw to Ngidi.
'Led from the front'
Australia were reeling at 73-7 after Cummins was bowled off his pad by an excellent Ngidi yorker.
But Carey and Starc led a defiant response that kept their side on course to retain the title.
Earlier, Cummins finished with figures of 6-28 as he reached 300 career Test wickets and secured a coveted place on the Lord's honours board with a five-wicket haul.
'He does it time and time again,' said Starc of Cummins. 'He led from the front before he was captain and now as captain as well.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
'The quality and skills he has in his pocket – I'm thrilled for him to get a bagful. To go to 300 is a special effort.'
South Africa lost their last five wickets for 12 runs as Cummins ripped through the batting order.
Only South Africa captain Temba Bavuma (36) and David Bedingham (45) offered meaningful resistance during a fifth-wicket stand of 64.
After lunch, Cummins struck four times in a mere 17 balls of devastating pace bowling.
South Africa had resumed on Thursday at 43-4, battling to put enough runs on the board.
Bavuma, who faced 37 balls for his overnight three not out, changed gears with a lofted cover-drive for four off left-arm quick Starc before pulling Cummins for six.
Cummins had his revenge, however, when Bavuma's checked drive was brilliantly caught at cover by a diving Labuschagne.
He then dismissed Kyle Verreynne lbw for 13 and, three balls later, held a simple return catch as Jansen fell for a duck.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The Australia skipper ended the innings with his 300th Test wicket, Rabada well caught low down at deep square leg by Webster.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

World Test Championship final: Markram's century, Bavuma's grit put South Africa on brink of historic win over Australia
World Test Championship final: Markram's century, Bavuma's grit put South Africa on brink of historic win over Australia

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

World Test Championship final: Markram's century, Bavuma's grit put South Africa on brink of historic win over Australia

Hobbling captain Temba Bavuma and hundred-hitter Aiden Markram pushed South Africa to the brink of a sensational victory over Australia in a gripping World Test Championship final at Lord's on Friday. Bavuma, elevating the drama with a strained left hamstring, and opener Markram capitalized on ideal batting conditions. They partnered for an unbroken 143 runs against one of Australia's greatest bowling attacks to have South Africa 69 runs from an historic triumph. Chasing 282 to win, the Proteas were 213-2 at stumps on day three in a stirring bid to win a first ICC trophy in 27 years. Bavuma was 65 not out from 121 balls, his running restricted but not his batting technique, and Markram was 102 not out from 159, easily the highest individual score of the final. Defending champion Australia bombarded them with four of its top-10 all-time test wicket-takers — more than 1,500 wickets in total — but they couldn't part the Proteas pair, and hardly troubled them. In South Africa's huge favour, the day three pitch flattened, offered the bowlers little and was far easier paced than the first two chaotic days, when 14 wickets fell on each. Only four wickets were taken on Friday, and none after tea. South Africa won't go to bed entirely comfortably, though. The men's team has a heartbreaking history in ICC tournaments of blowing winning positions. It is the reason its only ICC trophy is the ICC Knock Out in 1998. 'This would be massive for our country,' Proteas batting coach Ashwell Prince said. "Both in terms of what we want to do in test match cricket and what we want to achieve going forward. We've fallen short in some white-ball competitions with teams that have been favorites at times. History says we haven't done it yet, so we have to knuckle down. 'Not sure how I'm going to sleep tonight. Whether I can fall into a deep sleep, I'm not sure!' It's certain serial champion Australia still believes, too. 'In the morning we've got to come back and try and form a plan,' Beau Webster said. 'The boys will be looking at any advantage we can get. Strange things happen in this game. 'We tried some new things with the bowling attack but they were just too good in the end ... and both of them were chanceless so complete credit to them." The odds were in Australia's favour when South Africa's chase began straight after lunch. To win, a work-in-progress batting lineup needed to equal England's most successful ever run chase at Lord's from 2004. By the time pacer Mitchell Starc removed Ryan Rickelton and Wiaan Mulder, South Africa was 70-2 but flying. There was positive intent missing from the first innings, and the strike was rotated constantly. Australia managed only three maidens in 56 overs, all by spinner Nathan Lyon. Starc could have reduced South Africa to 76-3 when Bavuma, on 2, thick-edged to first slip. But a helmeted Steve Smith, standing closer than usual to the wickets because the ball hasn't been carrying to the cordon all game, couldn't hold Starc's 138 kph delivery and broke his right pinkie finger. He immediately left for a hospital, was out of the final and probably the following three-test tour of the West Indies. Given life, Bavuma was on 9 when he hurt his hamstring 10 minutes before tea. Prince said he was adamant about continuing but noticeably limping. The captain soothed his dressing room with pulls and sweeps and hobbled runs, each one rousing the South Africa fans. Bavuma reached his 50 off 83 balls. Meanwhile, Markram was cutting and driving to 50 off 69 balls. The best of his 11 boundaries was a late cut off Starc expertly sliced between two fielders. His reaction to his eighth test century five minutes from stumps was muted. He had enough strength to raise his bat to all sides and receive applause and a hug from his captain. South Africa's celebratory end to Friday the 13th contrasted starkly to the deflating start to the day. The Proteas would have expected to begin the chase by bowling out Australia, resuming on 144-8, half an hour after the start of play. Lyon was dismissed early and gave Kagiso Rabada his ninth wicket of the match but tailenders Starc and Josh Hazlewood resisted for almost two hours. Starc achieved his 11th test fifty, and first in six years. He and Hazlewood's third 50-plus partnership for the 10th wicket tied the all-time test record. The stand ended on 59, Hazlewood out for 17 to part-timer Markram. Starc was not out on 58 from 136 balls. He'd entered at 73-7, when Australia led by 147, and combined mainly with Alex Carey and Hazlewood to conjure 134 more runs. Those runs and South Africa's 20 no balls appeared to put Australia beyond reach. But Bavuma and Markram had the confidence and the pitch to defy nearly all expectations.

WTC Final: Markram's unbeaten 102, Bavuma's half-century put South Africa on cusp of championship glory
WTC Final: Markram's unbeaten 102, Bavuma's half-century put South Africa on cusp of championship glory

Economic Times

time2 hours ago

  • Economic Times

WTC Final: Markram's unbeaten 102, Bavuma's half-century put South Africa on cusp of championship glory

Live Events Brief scores: (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel A magnificent hundred by Aiden Markram and a patient half-century by the South African skipper Temba Bavuma have put the Proteas in the driving seat in the ICC World Test Championship Final being played at Lord's in England's capital city, London, on rose to the occasion and scored 102 not out, taking South Africa within 69 runs of a historic triumph in the ICC World Test Championship. South Africa ended the third day's play at 213/2 in 56 overs in the finalAfter Australia's second innings ended at 207, posting a target of 282 for Temba Bavuma's side to chase, Mitchell Starc made early inroads in the South African batting lineup, picking up two early hiccups in the second innings, the Proteas fought back with Markram and Bavuma showing poise and stitching an unbroken 143-run stand for the third conditions being the best for batting, right-handed batter Markram looked rock solid throughout the innings, slamming his eighth Test century off 156 deliveries in the fag end of the the other hand, skipper Temba Bavuma scored 65 not out off 121 balls, despite tweaking his left hamstring and hobbling to complete his runs before the tea Markram and Bavuma showing poise, precision, and authority in amassing runs while complementing each other, the duo have ensured that South Africa are on the cusp of glory on day in the day, as the play resumed on Day 3, Starc, who was dropped on 14 in the final over of day two's play, was at his resolute best to take the lead past 280 while sharing a 59-run last-wicket partnership with an equally solid Josh South Africa, who bowled 22 extras, including 10 no-balls, Kagiso Rabada picked 4-59, while Lungi Ngidi returned with figures of 3-38. Resuming day three from 144/8, Rabada struck by trapping Nathan Lyon lbw, with the ball tracking showing the ball would hit the top of the leg and Hazlewood were largely untroubled by pacers. The duo getting four quick boundaries meant Australia's lead went past 250. The Starc-Hazlewood duo managed to put on the highest tenth-wicket partnership for any team in a men's ICC championship then got his 11th Test fifty in the 64th over by flashing at one outside off-stump from Marco Jansen and got a streaky boundary, which also brought up Australia's 200 as well. SouthStarc struck early by swinging one away from Ryan Rickelton, who tried to drive through cover, but he could only nick behind to Alex left-arm pacer delivered another breakthrough for Australia by coming from around the wicket and forcing Mulder to hit straight to Marnus Labuschagne at cover, who grabbed a good, low catch. The pacer could have gotten Bavuma in the 20th over when the South African skipper was squared up and the ball flew to Steve Smith at wide first slip. But Smith couldn't grab the catch and was left in pain. After the drop there was no looking back for Markram and Bavuma, as the duo managed to build a partnership for the third boundaries flowing off Markram's bat and Bavuma also chipping in with some drives, it meant there was no stopping South Africa, as the South African skipper brought up his 29th Test fifty in 83 balls. Markram continued to be pristine by punching Nathan Lyon, dabbing late off Beau Webster, and unfurling a beautiful straight drive off Hazlewood. Markram reached a century by flicking Hazlewood through mid-wicket, and the crowd cheered for 212 and 207 in 65 overs (Mitchell Starc 58, Alex Carey 43; Kagiso Rabada 4-59, Lungi Ngidi 3-38) lead South Africa 138 and 213/2 in 56 overs (Aiden Markram 102 not out, Temba Bavuma 65 not out; Mitchell Starc 2-53) by 69 runs.

WTC Final: Markram's unbeaten 102, Bavuma's half-century put South Africa on cusp of championship glory
WTC Final: Markram's unbeaten 102, Bavuma's half-century put South Africa on cusp of championship glory

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • Time of India

WTC Final: Markram's unbeaten 102, Bavuma's half-century put South Africa on cusp of championship glory

Aiden Markram's brilliant century and Temba Bavuma's resilient half-century have propelled South Africa to a commanding position in the ICC World Test Championship Final at Lord's. Chasing 282, the Proteas recovered from early setbacks, courtesy of an unbroken 143-run partnership between Markram and Bavuma, leaving them just 69 runs away from a historic victory against Australia. South Africa's Aiden Markram, right, celebrates with batting partner Temba Bavuma after scoring a century on day three of the World Test Championship final (Image via AP /Kirsty Wigglesworth) Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Brief scores: A magnificent hundred by Aiden Markram and a patient half-century by the South African skipper Temba Bavuma have put the Proteas in the driving seat in the ICC World Test Championship Final being played at Lord's in England's capital city, London, on rose to the occasion and scored 102 not out, taking South Africa within 69 runs of a historic triumph in the ICC World Test Championship. South Africa ended the third day's play at 213/2 in 56 overs in the finalAfter Australia's second innings ended at 207, posting a target of 282 for Temba Bavuma's side to chase, Mitchell Starc made early inroads in the South African batting lineup, picking up two early hiccups in the second innings, the Proteas fought back with Markram and Bavuma showing poise and stitching an unbroken 143-run stand for the third conditions being the best for batting, right-handed batter Markram looked rock solid throughout the innings, slamming his eighth Test century off 156 deliveries in the fag end of the the other hand, skipper Temba Bavuma scored 65 not out off 121 balls, despite tweaking his left hamstring and hobbling to complete his runs before the tea Markram and Bavuma showing poise, precision, and authority in amassing runs while complementing each other, the duo have ensured that South Africa are on the cusp of glory on day in the day, as the play resumed on Day 3, Starc, who was dropped on 14 in the final over of day two's play, was at his resolute best to take the lead past 280 while sharing a 59-run last-wicket partnership with an equally solid Josh South Africa, who bowled 22 extras, including 10 no-balls, Kagiso Rabada picked 4-59, while Lungi Ngidi returned with figures of 3-38. Resuming day three from 144/8, Rabada struck by trapping Nathan Lyon lbw, with the ball tracking showing the ball would hit the top of the leg and Hazlewood were largely untroubled by pacers. The duo getting four quick boundaries meant Australia's lead went past 250. The Starc-Hazlewood duo managed to put on the highest tenth-wicket partnership for any team in a men's ICC championship then got his 11th Test fifty in the 64th over by flashing at one outside off-stump from Marco Jansen and got a streaky boundary, which also brought up Australia's 200 as well. SouthStarc struck early by swinging one away from Ryan Rickelton, who tried to drive through cover, but he could only nick behind to Alex left-arm pacer delivered another breakthrough for Australia by coming from around the wicket and forcing Mulder to hit straight to Marnus Labuschagne at cover, who grabbed a good, low catch. The pacer could have gotten Bavuma in the 20th over when the South African skipper was squared up and the ball flew to Steve Smith at wide first slip. But Smith couldn't grab the catch and was left in pain. After the drop there was no looking back for Markram and Bavuma, as the duo managed to build a partnership for the third boundaries flowing off Markram's bat and Bavuma also chipping in with some drives, it meant there was no stopping South Africa, as the South African skipper brought up his 29th Test fifty in 83 balls. Markram continued to be pristine by punching Nathan Lyon, dabbing late off Beau Webster, and unfurling a beautiful straight drive off Hazlewood. Markram reached a century by flicking Hazlewood through mid-wicket, and the crowd cheered for 212 and 207 in 65 overs (Mitchell Starc 58, Alex Carey 43; Kagiso Rabada 4-59, Lungi Ngidi 3-38) lead South Africa 138 and 213/2 in 56 overs (Aiden Markram 102 not out, Temba Bavuma 65 not out; Mitchell Starc 2-53) by 69 runs.

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