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The Wisden Bulletin by Martin Williamson
August 25, 2003
South Africa 342 and 365 beat England 307 and 209 (Butcher 61, Flintoff 50, Kallis 6-54) by 191 runs
Scorecard
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Man of the morning: Jacques Kallis leads South Africa off after blowing England away with 6 for 54 |
A large and enthusiastic crowd gathered to witness what they hoped would be a couple of sessions of morale-restoring resolve. They greeted the arrival of the not-out batsmen, Mark Butcher and Andrew Flintoff, with a roar which would not have shamed nearby Elland Road. Within two balls the hopes of a last-day miracle had all but evaporated. Butcher lofted the first delivery from Kallis airily over square leg; the next ball was angled across him, he edged it, and Andrew Hall at first slip took a simple catch to his left. Butcher was out for 61 (169 for 6).
The crowd rallied and did all they can to get behind England. In Kallis's next over Flintoff smashed a short and wide ball over the covers to bring up his fifty. The Western Terrace erupted, but their euphoria was short lived. The next delivery from Kallis left Flintoff, turned him square, and the outside-edge gave Hall his second solid catch of the day at first slip (182 for 7). Martin Bicknell aimed a few lusty blows - and took one or two on the body for his troubles - but on 15 he got the thinnest of edges to Kallis and Mark Boucher did the rest (189 for 8).
That was almost that. Kabir Ali (9) briefly attempted a counterattack before becoming Kallis's sixth wicket of the innings, when a quite horrible slog across the line ballooned to Gary Kirsten at widish mid-on (206 for 9). Fittingly, the game ended in the next over with a superb gully catch from Man of the Match Kirsten when he held James Kirtley's slash at Hall.
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On top of the world: Mark Boucher and Graeme Smith celebrate victory |
England have ten days to regroup before the series finale at The Oval. They will take a little solace from the fact that they had chances in this match to drive home the advantage they obtained from winning at Nottingham. Duncan Fletcher and Michael Vaughan will have to work out quite how they let South Africa off the hook so spectacularly, and then handed the game to them on a plate with such an abysmal second-innings bowling performance.
Meanwhile South Africa travel south relieved that Dewald Pretorius had such a miserable game. If he hadn't, then they would have had some serious problems deciding who they should drop to make way for the returning Shaun Pollock.
Wisden Verdict: Outbatted, outbowled ... and out-thought
Executive editor Martin Williamson joined the Wisden website in its planning stages in 2001 after failing to make his millions in the internet boom when managing editor of Sportal. Before that he was in charge of Sky Sports Online and helped launch and run Sky News Online. With a preference for all things old (except his wife and children), he has recently confounded colleagues by displaying an uncharacteristic fondness for Twenty20 cricket. His enthusiasm for the game is sadly not matched by his ability, but he remains convinced that he might be a late developer and perseveres in the hope of an England call-up with his middle-order batting and non-spinning offbreaks. He is now managing editor of ESPN EMEA Digital Group as well as his Cricinfo responsibilities.
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