• Aussie tail wags to set Proteas tough target

    Mitchell Starc made the Proteas pay for a dropped catch with a vital fifty on Friday as Australia set South Africa 282 to win the World Test Championship final at Lord’s.

    When title-holders Australia resumed on 144-8 in their second innings, already 218 runs ahead, it looked as if the match might finish well inside three days.

    But tailender Starc, dropped in the gully on 14 by Marco Jansen in the last over of Thursday’s play, proved a thorn in the Proteas’ side, making 58*.

    Together with fellow fast bowler Josh Hazlewood (17) he added 59 for the last wicket before the No 11 was dismissed, with Australia all out for 207 in their second innings.

    Proteas fast bowler Kagiso Rabada took 4-59 to finish with nine wickets in the match.

    South Africa, dismissed for just 138 in their first innings, enjoyed an early breakthrough on Friday when Rabada had Nathan Lyon plumb lbw to leave Australia 148-9.

    But Starc and Hazlewood held firm on an increasingly flat pitch.

    With any early moisture in the surface long gone and play taking place beneath sunny skies, conditions for batting were now as good as at any time in the match.

    Proteas captain Temba Bavuma set a largely defensive field in the hope of luring Starc into what appeared to be a hooking trap.

    Jansen tried to deceive the batsman with an attempted yorker, only for for left-hander Starc to jam the leg-stump delivery onto his pad before the ball sped away for four.

    Bavuma turned to left-arm spinner Keshav Maharaj in a bid to break the stubborn stand, only for Starc to square-drive him in textbook fashion.

    And when Jansen dropped short, last-man Hazlewood deliberately uppercut him over the slips for four.

    Starc completed the 11th fifty of his 97-Test career when he slashed Jansen over the cordon for his fourth four in 131 balls faced.

    Part-time spinner Aiden Markram eventually succeeded where the frontline bowlers had failed when Hazlewood tried to slap a dragged-down delivery over cover only for his mistimed shot to be caught at cover by Maharaj.

    While Australia are serial winners of major cricket titles in all formats, the only piece of ICC silverware South Africa have to their credit is the 1998 ICC Knockout, a forerunner of the Champions Trophy.

    Before play started Friday, the teams observed a minute’s silence in memory of those killed when a passenger jet crashed Thursday in the Indian city of Ahmedabad.

    Players and officials also wore black armbands.

    © Agence France-Presse

    Photo: Gareth Copley/Getty Images

    Post by

    Simon Borchardt