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Durban Test: England defeat S Africa by an innings | England's cricketers needed just 18 overs on Wednesday to win the Durban (Kingsmead) Test against South Africa by
a thumping innings and 98 runs. The second Test saw South Africa's tail crumbling
under the sheer weight of scoreboard pressure following the team's desperate performance
on the fourth evening. Graeme Swann and Stuart Broad were once again the stand
out performers, as they shared nine of the ten wickets in the innings, with Swann
claiming the spoils with 5 for 54 in 21 overs. South Africa resumed their fight
on 76 for 6, with Mark Boucher and Morne Morkel entrenched in a 26-run stand for
the seventh wicket, and though Morkel pulled Broad with some confidence through
midwicket for the first boundary of the day, he was unable to deal with the wiles
of Swann, who continued once again his extraordinary penchant for striking early
in a spell. In total, Morkel faced three deliveries from Swann, and might have
been dismissed by the lot. The first was tossed up from round the wicket and spun
sharply past his edge. The second was snicked to slip, where Andrew Strauss couldn't
get a hand on the chance. The third was fuller, flatter, and faster and Morkel
was declared lbw for 15. Paul Harris was the next man in, and he received a rough
reception from Broad in particular, who sensed a vulnerability to the short ball,
and tested it to the max with a barrage of lifters that struck him variously on
the chest, ribs and armpit. But he did his best to endure as he anchored himself
on the back foot, and each of his first three fours came from steers through point
off Broad, only one of which was genuinely involuntary. The real body blow for
South Africa's faint hopes occurred at the other end, when Boucher was caught
behind of Broad for 29. Umpire Aleem Dar initially turned down the appeal, but
Strauss and his teammates were convinced, and the referred decision showed a clear
deflection off the glove. Harris was deceived by Anderson's late swing from a
full length, and Broad - though denied a shot at a five-wicket haul - nevertheless
made good ground at mid-off to scoop a low catch. The honour of the five-for went
to Swann, after he had Dale Steyn lbw for three. The England victory was their
first in South Africa since 1964. They now set off to Cape Town with their spirits
soaring and the series seemingly theirs to lose. Scorecard: England 574 for 9
declared (Bell 140, Cook 118) beat South Africa 343 (Kallis 75, Smith 75) and
133 (Swann 5-54) by an innings and 98 runs. |
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