logo
South Africa bowlers leave Australia reeling at start of WTC final

South Africa bowlers leave Australia reeling at start of WTC final

Reutersa day ago

LONDON, June 11 (Reuters) - South Africa seamers Kagiso Rabada and Marco Jansen made early inroads into Australia's batting order as sharp catching had the defending champions reeling on 67-4 at lunch on the opening day of the World Test Championship at Lord's on Wednesday.
Rabada, returning from a one-month ban after a drugs test earlier this year caught him using cocaine, took two wickets in four balls after cloudy conditions overhead prompted South Africa captain Temba Bavuma to put Australia in to bat.
Marco Jansen snagged the other wickets to vindicate a risky decision by Bavuma on a ground where the team winning the toss usually elects to bat first.
The 30-year-old Rabada made his breakthrough in the seventh over thanks to sharp catches in the slips, with Usman Khawaja first to go off after lasting 20 balls without scoring before edging to David Bedingham who caught a rising ball.
Cameron Green, returning to the test side after back surgery, was the next out. He immediately got off the mark with a boundary but was out after three balls as he edged Rabada to second slip, where Aiden Markram took a low catch despite Wiaan Mulder driving across him.
Rabada conceded only nine runs off his six overs in a menacing spell befitting a bowler second in the test rankings.
Marnus Labuschagne had been moved up the Australia batting order to accommodate Green at No. 3 and made 17 runs off 56 balls before edging Jansen's full delivery outside the wicket behind to wicketkeeper Kyle Verreynne.
A spectacular diving catch from Verreynne then saw Travis Head dismissed for 11 in the last over before lunch, leaving Steve Smith unbeaten on 26 after the first session, where the floodlights were on throughout as the cloud failed to clear.
Head played some aggressive shots in his brief stint while Smith survived a review when he missed a full ball from Jansen some 10 minutes before lunch.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Australia collapse to leave World Test Championship wide open
Australia collapse to leave World Test Championship wide open

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Australia collapse to leave World Test Championship wide open

World Test Championship final, Lord's (day two of five)Australia 212: Webster 72; Rabada 5-51 & 144-8: Carey 43; Ngidi 3-35South Africa 138: Bedingham 45; Cummins 6-28 Australia lead by 218 runsScorecard Australia suffered a dramatic second-innings batting collapse to leave the World Test Championship final hanging in the balance after another topsy-turvy day dominated by the bowlers at Lord' Africa had resumed their first innings on 43-4 and managed to reach 121-5 by the lunch break with skipper Temba Bavuma, who made 36, the only wicket to fall in the the relative serenity of those first couple of hours gave way to unbridled chaos as 13 wickets fell across the next two captain Pat Cummins claimed 6-28 to play the leading hand after lunch with the last five South African wickets costing just 12 Bedingham top-scored for the Proteas with 45, one of four players in their side who made it into double figures in their total of side appeared to be in the driving seat, only for South Africa's bowling attack to blow the match wide open as they ran through Australia's top order during a frenzied period after Labuschagne and Steve Smith were the only Australian batters in the top six to make double figures as South Africa's attack turned up the Ngidi and Kagiso Rabada picked up 3-35 and 3-44 respectively while Marco Jansen and Wiaan Mulder also claimed one wicketkeeper Alex Carey had counter-attacked with 43 off 50 balls but it felt a huge moment in the context of the match when he was trapped lbw by Rabada late Starc and Josh Hazlewood survived a nervous couple of overs before stumps - Jansen dropped Starc at gully off Mulder - to leave Australia on 144-8 at the close and 218 runs in front. Lord's gripped by Australia capitulation The steward at the bottom of the steps in front of the Lord's pavilion must be in danger of suffering from repetitive strain time he settled back into his chair after lifting the latch to open and close the gate to allow an Australian batter out to the middle he was soon repeating it to welcome him back again not long had reached 28 without loss just before tea when their tormentor from the first day, Rabada, lit the blue-touch he dismissed Usman Khawaja in a similar vein to the first innings, inducing a nick to the wicketkeeper from the left-hander with a delivery which squared him two balls later Cameron Green departed after a defensive prod flew to Mulder at third majority of the English 'neutrals' in the crowd are supporting South Africa, and they were whipped into a frenzy by the Australian capitulation which followed in the was guilty of poor shot selection when he edged a loose drive off Jansen to the diving Kyle were 48-4 when Ngidi lulled Smith into stepping across his stumps and was struck on the pad, the crowd erupting when Bavuma's review overturned the original decision of not was given out without the need for DRS after a nip-backer from Ngidi before Mulder thudded one into Head's off stump from round the wicket.A yorker from Ngidi into Cummins' pads deflected on to the stumps and Australia were in tatters at with tickets for fourth day of this contest would be well advised to start making alternative plans if the first two days of this match are anything to go any interjections from the weather it would be a minor miracle if this contest now stretches through until three, however, could be a nerve-shredding humdinger.

Australia and South Africa wickets tumble to leave WTC final on a knife-edge
Australia and South Africa wickets tumble to leave WTC final on a knife-edge

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Australia and South Africa wickets tumble to leave WTC final on a knife-edge

This final has been dubbed 'The Ultimate Test' and though almost certainly the product of a W1A-style ideas splurge back in Dubai, this tagline scarcely felt more appropriate watching the wickets tumble for a second successive day. It had looked for all money like Pat Cummins had sealed the fate of the World Test Championship mace. Thundering in from the Nursery End, a four-wicket burst after lunch had seen him claim six for 28 and with South Africa all out for 138 in 57.1 overs – 74 behind – all it needed was a further top-up of runs. Instead, with help from a beige surface that has still delivered a bat's width of nibble throughout, South Africa delivered a stirring fightback of their own. At stumps Australia were 144 for eight – a lead of 218 runs – and the spectators who witnessed the carnage unfold could finally draw breath. Some of them were probably querying the pitch on the way out. But 28 wickets falling in the space of six sessions may say as much about how bowlers can adjust quicker to a one-off showpiece. After a rusty first day, Lungi Ngidi was the last of them to get up to speed, his cheap removals of Steve Smith and Beau Webster amid figures of three for 35 dragging South Africa back into contention. Their heads could easily have dropped after the onslaught from Cummins that took him to 300 Test wickets. There could also have been a few envious glances cast by Kagiso Rabada, star of the first innings. As unrelenting as he was, Australia's captain had profited from a collective asphyxiation that, among the frontliners, saw only Mitchell Starc go at more than two runs per over. But after once again making early inroads – Usman Khawaja and Cameron Green nicking off cheaply once again – the South African cavalry arrived. And in the space of 25 dizzying overs Australia were suddenly 73 for seven. By the close the defending champions were grateful to Alex Carey for a nuggety 43 that, along with support from Starc, meant the chase would require the highest total of the match. South Africa will be hoping the top order that crumbled to 43 for four on the first evening can find their feet second time around. A bit like the World Cup semi-final in Kolkata 18 months ago, their initial effort had felt like a Chinese finger trap, every wriggle making things tighter. There was some defiance, Temba Bavuma and David Bedingham throwing the odd counter punch, but the task was arduous. Having shut down Bavuma for 36 via a loose shot to cover, Cummins simply came into his own after the lunch interval. Smashing the surface with remorseless accuracy, a spell of four overs, four for three – closed off by a wonderful diving catch by Webster in the deep – felt utterly game-breaking at the time. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion It had started with a scene straight from Super Rugby, Cummins appealing for an lbw against Kyle Verreynne and summarily flattened as his mark attempted a single. Cummins cared only for the review, however, and when three reds appeared on the big screen, he was suddenly in a scrum of jubilant teammates. This was the first of five wickets to fall for just 12 runs, as well as the first of two in the over courtesy of a return catch from Jansen, but most critical was that of Bedingham. Though typically a dasher for Durham, the right-hander had ground his way to 45 only to be undone on the backfoot by a classical edge behind. More to follow

Captain Pat Cummins answers Australia's call before South Africa roar back in rollercoaster final
Captain Pat Cummins answers Australia's call before South Africa roar back in rollercoaster final

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Captain Pat Cummins answers Australia's call before South Africa roar back in rollercoaster final

The rollercoaster ride continues at Lord's, this World Test Championship final swinging sharply one way and then t'other. The dignitaries and distinguished guests planning a weekend at the Home of Cricket will surely have to find alternative entertainment; this vehicle is careering towards a Friday finish, motoring along under the steam of an engine of fast bowlers firing on all cylinders. It still appears likely that Pat Cummins will soon be clutching the Test mace for a second time after taking control of the contest with a captain's spell in the afternoon but South Africa refuse simply to be quelled. A requirement of 218 and counting looks mightily steep given the regularity with which wickets continue to fall yet Temba Bavuma 's men, and the contest, remain very much alive. There will surely be more twists and turns to come, though. A rollicking, rip-roaring contest will not please the ICC money-men and women hoping to squeeze their showpiece to five days but has so far provided the exhilarating entertainment befitting the occasion. 14 wickets on the first day were matched by 14 more on the second, the only period of smooth sailing amid stormy seas coming in a morning session where Australia largely toiled. Yet cometh the hour, cometh Cummins, seemingly always the man to answer the call. Across 4.1 overs, Australia's captain wrought a tempest to capsize the South African innings with a spell of four wickets for four runs that may yet prove pivotal in the retention of their Test title. Cummins has been the respectable face of a quiet cultural evolution, his strong moral compass provoking strange criticism from certain corners of his country but his advocacy, particularly for environmental causes, to be applauded. The circumstances in which he took over the team can be forgotten, consecutive captains resigning in tears after scandals on the pitch (Steve Smith) and off it (Tim Paine). There is a sense that his Australia team now get the balance right between firm and fair where others have faltered previously. And boy can he bowl. In temporarily cementing Australia's ascendancy, their captain moved to 300 Test wickets, just the eighth from his nation to the milestone. Beneath the matinee idol looks and smooth public persona are the steel and spike that are prerequisites of an elite quick bowler. Only Imran Khan (12) now has more Test five-fors as captain than Cummins' nine – a statistic that speaks to the relative rarity of bowling skippers and also the Australian's excellence. As captain, his average has dropped by about a run and a half but still sits beneath 23. The great Wallabies lock John Eales was known by a certain sobriquet hinting at his perfection; a nickname of 'Nobody' is not inappropriate for another Australian skipper, too. It's a good job he was at their disposal for otherwise this might well have been South Africa's day. The chaos of day one was replaced by a sense of serenity as Thursday dawned, Bavuma and David Bedingham poking anxious heads out of their shells and beginning to bite back against the Australian bowlers. The South African skipper had tentatively tiptoed to three from 37 balls but showed much more intent almost immediately. A hare did not totally take the place of the tortoise yet glorious lofts over cover off Starc and Hazlewood were followed by a huge hooked six from Cummins to get the innings going. An attempt to play proactively again off his opposing skipper brought about his downfall. A drive on the up was sweetly struck yet swallowed just as tastefully by a diving Marnus Labuschagne in the covers. A pleasant morning of 78 runs for the loss of that single wicket threatened to create a more compelling contest but Cummins, as is his habit, intervened, Ol' Blue Eyes hitting the right notes to turn the final his way. Inside three overs after a rain-delayed resumption, Kyle Verreynne was rapped on the pads having shuffled across his stumps. Such was the strength of the bowler's appeal that he backpedalled right into the South African keeper-batter, taking a tumble. But his vociferance came with good reason – the LBW was overturned once the captain had bounced back to his feet to signal for a review. Marco Jansen was rather friendlier to Cummins than Verreynne had been, a tame tap back to the bowler providing his second in the over in the spell to turn the match. Bedingham soon perished for a resolute 45, before Australia's captain showed his snarlier side to rough up Rabada. After Keshav Maharaj ran himself out, the left-hander hooked Cummins to Beau Webster on the midwicket boundary and that was that with South Africa 74 in arrears. And so it was back to work for South Africa's star seamer, Rabada removing Usman Khawaja and Cameron Green in the same over for the second time in the match as each fell cheaply again. It has not been a great Test for Australia's remodelled top order, with Marnus Labuschagne making only 22 before once more nicking Jansen through to the keeper. The key wicket of Smith furthered the fightback. Lungi Ngidi was the provider, nipping one up the slope to account for the Australia captain thanks to a shrewd review. Beau Webster befell the same fate before Travis Head heard the death rattle as Wiaan Mulder burst one past his loose-limbed drive, Ngidi cleaned up Cummins to continue the charge. An invaluable counter-punching 43 from Alex Carey ensured Australia will have more than 200 to defend. It will not be many more, though, as two near misses from the edge of Mitchell Starc's bat in the final over showed. This helter-skelter may not go on for too much longer but one can be sure it will be fun while it lasts.

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