logo
'Not my best moment'; Rabada responds in Lord's final

'Not my best moment'; Rabada responds in Lord's final

The Advertiser2 days ago

Months after a self-confessed bad moment, Kagiso Rabada has taken charge on the grandest of stages at Lord's.
In his first Test since serving a one-month ban for testing positive to cocaine, the South Africa spearhead rattled reigning World Test champions Australia with 5-51 in the 2025 final.
It appeared Rabada had a point to prove following his off-field misdemeanour.
"That wasn't my best moment, as I've alluded to," the 30-year-old said about getting caught using cocaine.
"Life moves on.
"I think every game that I play for South Africa, I try to do my best.
"I don't try to give any more, or any less effort than I usually do in all the games that I play for South Africa."
During his 17th five-wicket haul, Rabada overtook the legendary Allan Donald on 330 career scalps to move into fourth overall for South Africa.
Only Dale Steyn, Shaun Pollock, and Makhaya Ntini remain ahead of him.
"To be named in that list of bowlers is special," Rabada said.
"As a player, growing up and representing South Africa, I've been inspired by those who've come before and what they've done on the big stage.
"As a kid, I was inspired to want to do the same thing.
"To be in that list of names is something special. Long may it continue."
Despite South Africa's promising opening day ending with Australia grabbing the advantage, Rabada was still at his dry, self-depreciating best.
When asked why he stood out among this generation of fast bowlers, Rabada took a long pause, before replying: "Lots been making me stand out in recent times..."
Months after a self-confessed bad moment, Kagiso Rabada has taken charge on the grandest of stages at Lord's.
In his first Test since serving a one-month ban for testing positive to cocaine, the South Africa spearhead rattled reigning World Test champions Australia with 5-51 in the 2025 final.
It appeared Rabada had a point to prove following his off-field misdemeanour.
"That wasn't my best moment, as I've alluded to," the 30-year-old said about getting caught using cocaine.
"Life moves on.
"I think every game that I play for South Africa, I try to do my best.
"I don't try to give any more, or any less effort than I usually do in all the games that I play for South Africa."
During his 17th five-wicket haul, Rabada overtook the legendary Allan Donald on 330 career scalps to move into fourth overall for South Africa.
Only Dale Steyn, Shaun Pollock, and Makhaya Ntini remain ahead of him.
"To be named in that list of bowlers is special," Rabada said.
"As a player, growing up and representing South Africa, I've been inspired by those who've come before and what they've done on the big stage.
"As a kid, I was inspired to want to do the same thing.
"To be in that list of names is something special. Long may it continue."
Despite South Africa's promising opening day ending with Australia grabbing the advantage, Rabada was still at his dry, self-depreciating best.
When asked why he stood out among this generation of fast bowlers, Rabada took a long pause, before replying: "Lots been making me stand out in recent times..."
Months after a self-confessed bad moment, Kagiso Rabada has taken charge on the grandest of stages at Lord's.
In his first Test since serving a one-month ban for testing positive to cocaine, the South Africa spearhead rattled reigning World Test champions Australia with 5-51 in the 2025 final.
It appeared Rabada had a point to prove following his off-field misdemeanour.
"That wasn't my best moment, as I've alluded to," the 30-year-old said about getting caught using cocaine.
"Life moves on.
"I think every game that I play for South Africa, I try to do my best.
"I don't try to give any more, or any less effort than I usually do in all the games that I play for South Africa."
During his 17th five-wicket haul, Rabada overtook the legendary Allan Donald on 330 career scalps to move into fourth overall for South Africa.
Only Dale Steyn, Shaun Pollock, and Makhaya Ntini remain ahead of him.
"To be named in that list of bowlers is special," Rabada said.
"As a player, growing up and representing South Africa, I've been inspired by those who've come before and what they've done on the big stage.
"As a kid, I was inspired to want to do the same thing.
"To be in that list of names is something special. Long may it continue."
Despite South Africa's promising opening day ending with Australia grabbing the advantage, Rabada was still at his dry, self-depreciating best.
When asked why he stood out among this generation of fast bowlers, Rabada took a long pause, before replying: "Lots been making me stand out in recent times..."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

World Test Championship final quick hits: Temba Bavuma battles through, Steve Smith busts his finger, Mitchell Starc breaks a drought
World Test Championship final quick hits: Temba Bavuma battles through, Steve Smith busts his finger, Mitchell Starc breaks a drought

ABC News

time4 hours ago

  • ABC News

World Test Championship final quick hits: Temba Bavuma battles through, Steve Smith busts his finger, Mitchell Starc breaks a drought

Steve Smith and Temba Bavuma both end up in the hands of medical staff, as Mitchell Starc scores his first 50 in six years. Here are five quick hits from the third day of the World Test Championship decider. Things started well for South Africa on day three. In perfect June sunshine, the irresistible Kagiso Rabada wound up, steamed in and had Nathan Lyon trapped plumb in front in the day's third over. But then, all of a sudden, batting was easy for the Australians, with number 11 Josh Hazlewood defending stoutly and Mitchell Starc flicking and chipping his way to an innings-high 58 not out. The demons from days one and two were nowhere to be seen, the ball was soft, and the South Africans failed to create even the hint of an opportunity for the better part of two hours. Starc was determined, brave and took much of the strike during his marathon 136 ball innings, but it was his partner who played the shot of the morning. With a niggling last wicket-stand quickly becoming a catastrophic one for South Africa, Marco Jansen banged one in wide on a good length. Hazlewood stood tall and steadied before gliding a perfectly time uppercut over a leaping cordon. Despite the Bazzing of Balls recently, Starc still has more Test sixes than Joe Root, thanks mostly to his early career as a specialist slog sweeper. But in recent years, since being moved from number eight to nine in the batting order, Starc has transformed into a less explosive tail-ender. It has also made him less prolific, boasting 10 half-centuries from his first 52 Tests and none from the following 44. But early on day three, former England captain Alastair Cook praised him on BBC Test Match Special for being able to play more innings of consequence with his new approach. And so it proved at Lord's as he passed 40 in a World Test Championship final for the second straight time, before carrying on to 50 for the first time since 2019. Starc appeared to have his third wicket of South Africa's run chase when Bavuma edged a shortish ball towards the slips. It raced towards Smith, but one of Australia's greatest slippers couldn't handle the sharp chance, in large part because he was standing incredibly close to the bat on account of the lack of carry throughout the Test. He and Beau Webster had worn helmets for slips practice before play because the slow pitch forced fielders behind the bat to step forward to have a chance of an edge being caught. Unfortunately, when a batter is playing back to someone bowling 140kph, that step forward reduces fielders' reaction time to almost nothing. This time Smith copped the sharply moving ball on the tip of his right pinky, suffering a compound dislocation so severe that he looked nauseous when he ripped his helmet off to examine the injury before promptly leaving the field with a horribly crooked phalange. Not long after being put down by Smith, South Africa's captain was cut down out of nowhere. Scurrying through for a quick single, Bavuma pulled up lame and needed a few minutes of treatment on a restrictive hamstring injury. The diminutive right-hander is no stranger to being hobbled by his hammies, having battled through the 2023 World Cup semifinal and being forced out of a Test against India a few months later. He struggled through to tea but it was assumed that might be it. Instead, he came out after the break and somehow continued to bat on while backing up Aiden Markram with some laboured but determined running between the wickets. In England, batting is generally at its best on the third day of a Test match when the pitch flattens out, the ball loses its sting and, if you're lucky, the sun comes out. With 28 wickets falling over days one and two, and only four falling on the third, rarely has that been proved more true than on day three of the 2025 World Test Championship final. Unfortunately for Australia, it just didn't have enough wickets left to make the most of it in the morning. Starc and Hazlewood battled admirably in a 59-run stand for the 10th wicket, but it was the South Africans who were in pole position to make the most of the suddenly slow, sun-drenched Lord's pitch. And Bavuma and Markram did just that, picking off singles with ease, playing the odd expansive shot and ultimately taking all of the spring from the Australian step.

Steve Smith hurt during big moment in World Test final
Steve Smith hurt during big moment in World Test final

The Advertiser

time8 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Steve Smith hurt during big moment in World Test final

Australia's best batter Steve Smith has dropped a crucial chance and injured his finger during South Africa's run chase of 282 in the World Test Championship final at Lord's. Wearing a helmet while standing closer in slips than normal, the former Australia captain put down a regulation chance off Mitchell Starc that would have dismissed Proteas captain Temba Bavuma for only two on Friday. South Africa went to tea on day three at 2-94, still requiring 188 to win, with Bavuma (11no) and opener Aiden Markram (49no) pressing the Proteas' claims of securing their first ICC trophy since 1998. Bavuma himself needed medical attention on his hamstring before the end of the session after he'd got hurt sprinting a quick single, but batted on with a concerning limp. Smith immediately left the field grimacing after injuring the little finger of his right hand while spilling the catch that would have put Australia in the box seat to claim back-to-back WTC titles. Several edges during this Test - for both teams - have dropped well short of the slip cordon, forcing Smith to move forward. Evergreen quick Starc (2-37) had claimed both of South Africa's second-innings scalps, backing up a potentially match-winning knock on Friday morning, before Smith's dropped catch. Starting day three of their second innings 8-144, Australia's plucky lower-order batted for 119 minutes and added another 78 during a Test in which bowlers dominated the first two days. No.11 Josh Hazlewood (17) hung in there for 53 balls and was the last player out on the stroke of lunch, caught in the deep to give part-time spinner Aiden Markram his second wicket of the Test. Starc (58no), batting at No.9, finished as Australia's top-scorer of the innings ahead of wicketkeeper Alex Carey (43). He faced more balls (136) than any other batter during an innings in this Test, even more than Steve Smith's 112 for his 66 on day one. It was the 11th half-century of Starc's 97-Test career, but could be his most significant innings. If the match goes down to the wire, South Africa will be left to rue bowling 20 no balls during the Test. Star Proteas quick Kagiso Rabada (4-59) finished with match figures of 9-110 after he destroyed Australia with 5-51 in the first innings to put his name on the Lord's honour board for a second time. He took a five-for against England at the home of cricket back in 2022. "It would have been nice to get a 10-for, but I'd rather a win than a 10-for," Rabada said at lunch. South Africa need to pull off the equal second-highest successful chase in a Test at Lord's, with England running down 282 against New Zealand back in 2004. Back in 1984, West Indies, in their pomp, successfully chased 342 against England at the famous ground. Australia, inspired by six wickets from Pat Cummins, rolled South Africa for 138 on Thursday. But the reigning champions fell into deep trouble in their second innings when they collapsed with 5-29 during a frantic 45-minute period. Victory in only the third edition of the WTC final would ensure Australia have landed four ICC trophies since November 2021. Fourteen wickets tumbled on Thursday, after 14 had already fallen on a dramatic opening day. This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final. Australia's best batter Steve Smith has dropped a crucial chance and injured his finger during South Africa's run chase of 282 in the World Test Championship final at Lord's. Wearing a helmet while standing closer in slips than normal, the former Australia captain put down a regulation chance off Mitchell Starc that would have dismissed Proteas captain Temba Bavuma for only two on Friday. South Africa went to tea on day three at 2-94, still requiring 188 to win, with Bavuma (11no) and opener Aiden Markram (49no) pressing the Proteas' claims of securing their first ICC trophy since 1998. Bavuma himself needed medical attention on his hamstring before the end of the session after he'd got hurt sprinting a quick single, but batted on with a concerning limp. Smith immediately left the field grimacing after injuring the little finger of his right hand while spilling the catch that would have put Australia in the box seat to claim back-to-back WTC titles. Several edges during this Test - for both teams - have dropped well short of the slip cordon, forcing Smith to move forward. Evergreen quick Starc (2-37) had claimed both of South Africa's second-innings scalps, backing up a potentially match-winning knock on Friday morning, before Smith's dropped catch. Starting day three of their second innings 8-144, Australia's plucky lower-order batted for 119 minutes and added another 78 during a Test in which bowlers dominated the first two days. No.11 Josh Hazlewood (17) hung in there for 53 balls and was the last player out on the stroke of lunch, caught in the deep to give part-time spinner Aiden Markram his second wicket of the Test. Starc (58no), batting at No.9, finished as Australia's top-scorer of the innings ahead of wicketkeeper Alex Carey (43). He faced more balls (136) than any other batter during an innings in this Test, even more than Steve Smith's 112 for his 66 on day one. It was the 11th half-century of Starc's 97-Test career, but could be his most significant innings. If the match goes down to the wire, South Africa will be left to rue bowling 20 no balls during the Test. Star Proteas quick Kagiso Rabada (4-59) finished with match figures of 9-110 after he destroyed Australia with 5-51 in the first innings to put his name on the Lord's honour board for a second time. He took a five-for against England at the home of cricket back in 2022. "It would have been nice to get a 10-for, but I'd rather a win than a 10-for," Rabada said at lunch. South Africa need to pull off the equal second-highest successful chase in a Test at Lord's, with England running down 282 against New Zealand back in 2004. Back in 1984, West Indies, in their pomp, successfully chased 342 against England at the famous ground. Australia, inspired by six wickets from Pat Cummins, rolled South Africa for 138 on Thursday. But the reigning champions fell into deep trouble in their second innings when they collapsed with 5-29 during a frantic 45-minute period. Victory in only the third edition of the WTC final would ensure Australia have landed four ICC trophies since November 2021. Fourteen wickets tumbled on Thursday, after 14 had already fallen on a dramatic opening day. This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final. Australia's best batter Steve Smith has dropped a crucial chance and injured his finger during South Africa's run chase of 282 in the World Test Championship final at Lord's. Wearing a helmet while standing closer in slips than normal, the former Australia captain put down a regulation chance off Mitchell Starc that would have dismissed Proteas captain Temba Bavuma for only two on Friday. South Africa went to tea on day three at 2-94, still requiring 188 to win, with Bavuma (11no) and opener Aiden Markram (49no) pressing the Proteas' claims of securing their first ICC trophy since 1998. Bavuma himself needed medical attention on his hamstring before the end of the session after he'd got hurt sprinting a quick single, but batted on with a concerning limp. Smith immediately left the field grimacing after injuring the little finger of his right hand while spilling the catch that would have put Australia in the box seat to claim back-to-back WTC titles. Several edges during this Test - for both teams - have dropped well short of the slip cordon, forcing Smith to move forward. Evergreen quick Starc (2-37) had claimed both of South Africa's second-innings scalps, backing up a potentially match-winning knock on Friday morning, before Smith's dropped catch. Starting day three of their second innings 8-144, Australia's plucky lower-order batted for 119 minutes and added another 78 during a Test in which bowlers dominated the first two days. No.11 Josh Hazlewood (17) hung in there for 53 balls and was the last player out on the stroke of lunch, caught in the deep to give part-time spinner Aiden Markram his second wicket of the Test. Starc (58no), batting at No.9, finished as Australia's top-scorer of the innings ahead of wicketkeeper Alex Carey (43). He faced more balls (136) than any other batter during an innings in this Test, even more than Steve Smith's 112 for his 66 on day one. It was the 11th half-century of Starc's 97-Test career, but could be his most significant innings. If the match goes down to the wire, South Africa will be left to rue bowling 20 no balls during the Test. Star Proteas quick Kagiso Rabada (4-59) finished with match figures of 9-110 after he destroyed Australia with 5-51 in the first innings to put his name on the Lord's honour board for a second time. He took a five-for against England at the home of cricket back in 2022. "It would have been nice to get a 10-for, but I'd rather a win than a 10-for," Rabada said at lunch. South Africa need to pull off the equal second-highest successful chase in a Test at Lord's, with England running down 282 against New Zealand back in 2004. Back in 1984, West Indies, in their pomp, successfully chased 342 against England at the famous ground. Australia, inspired by six wickets from Pat Cummins, rolled South Africa for 138 on Thursday. But the reigning champions fell into deep trouble in their second innings when they collapsed with 5-29 during a frantic 45-minute period. Victory in only the third edition of the WTC final would ensure Australia have landed four ICC trophies since November 2021. Fourteen wickets tumbled on Thursday, after 14 had already fallen on a dramatic opening day. This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final.

Starc adds crucial runs to frustrate Proteas in WTC
Starc adds crucial runs to frustrate Proteas in WTC

Perth Now

time12 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Starc adds crucial runs to frustrate Proteas in WTC

Australia have frustrated South Africa by batting through the first session of day three, setting the Proteas 282 to win the World Test Championship final at Lord's. Starting day three of their second innings 8-144, Australia's plucky lower-order batted for 119 minutes and added another 78 runs during a Test where the bowlers have dominated. No.11 Josh Hazlewood (17) hung in there for 53 balls and was the last player out on the stroke of lunch, caught in the deep to give part-time spinner Aiden Markram his second wicket of the Test. Star quick Mitchell Starc (58 not out), batting at No.9, finished as Australia's top-scorer of the innings ahead of wicketkeeper Alex Carey (43). Starc faced more balls than any other batter during an innings in this Test, even more than Steve Smith's 112 for his 66 on day one. It was the 11th fifty of Starc's 97-Test career, but could be his most significant innings. If the match goes down to the wire, South Africa will be left to rue bowling 20 no-balls during the Test. Star Proteas quick Kagsio Rabada (4-59) finished with match figures of 9-110 after he destroyed Australia with 5-51 in the first innings to put his name on the Lord's honour board for a second time. "It would have been nice to get a 10-for, but I'd rather a win than a 10-for," Rabada said at lunch. To win their first ICC title since 1998, South Africa would need to post the highest total of the Test. They would need to pull off the equal second-highest successful chase in a Test at Lord's, with England running down 282 against New Zealand back in 2004. Back in 1984, West Indies in their prime successfully chased 342 against England at the famous ground. Australia, inspired by six wickets from Pat Cummins, rolled South Africa for 138 on Thursday. But the reigning champions fell into deep trouble in their second innings when they collapsed with 5-29 during a frantic 45-minute period. Victory in only the third edition of the WTC final would ensure Australia have landed four ICC trophies since November 2021. Fourteen wickets tumbled on Thursday, after 14 had already fallen on a dramatic opening day. Australia will back in their fearsome, experienced pace battery after Cummins, Starc and Hazlewood. While Cummins grabbed most of the wickets in the first innings, Starc and Hazlewood were relentless with their line and length.

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