South Africa v England, 4th Test, Johannesburg

Friedel de Wet struggling for final Test

Andrew McGlashan in Johannesburg

January 9, 2010

Text size: A | A
Friedel de Wet, celebrates dismissing Ian Bell for 2, as his second new-ball spell almost won South Africa the Test, South Africa v England, 1st Test, Centurion, 5th day, December 20, 2009
Friedel de Wet is struggle with a back injury ahead of the final Test against England © Getty Images
Enlarge

Wayne Parnell, the left-arm paceman, is in line for a Test debut against England at the Wanderers with Friedel de Wet struggling to recover from the back injury he picked up at Cape Town.

De Wet had an injection on the fourth day and was only able to bowl eight overs of medium pace on the final day as England survived with nine wickets down. Parnell, who was part of the squad for the first Test before being omitted, is the logical replacement and has impressed during his one-day and Twenty20 career and already has two five-wicket hauls in ODIs

"We don't know how Friedel de Wet will turn out, his chances don't look very good but we will know more by Monday," Mike Procter, the convenor of selectors, told Cricinfo and he added de Wet's injury seriously hampered South Africa in Cape Town. "A crucial moment in the game was the injury to Friedel which he picked up in the first spell he bowled. That held us back a bit."

Parnell's recall also seemingly spells the end of Makhaya Ntini's Test career after he was dropped for the third Test although Procter wouldn't be quite so final. "The door is never shut on anyone," he said. "If he comes back and performs well of course he can get back, but the chances are not great because he hasn't done very well domestically."

Ntini played for his domestic side, the Warriors, on Friday evening but only managed 1 for 41 from six overs in an MTN40 match at Centurion Park and has been widely tipped for a Kolpak deal in county cricket.

Despite South Africa pulling up one wicket short of victory for the second time in the series, Procter was buoyed by the team's improvement following the innings-and-98-run hammering in Durban.

"The performance was tremendous," he said. "We outplayed England, scored a huge amount of runs and were able to declare which says it all. We came very, very close. We have been one ball away from two different results [in the series] and I think we played much better.

"In both games nine wickets down came about very quickly, England collapsed and lost wickets right at the end. It wasn't as though we had a long period to bowl when there were only a few wickets to go."

Andrew McGlashan is assistant editor of Cricinfo

RSS Feeds: Andrew McGlashan

© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

TopTop
Email Feedback Print
Share
E-mail
Feedback
Print
Andrew McGlashanClose
Andrew McGlashan Assistant Editor Andrew arrived at ESPNcricinfo via Manchester and Cape Town, after finding the assistant editor at a weak moment as he watched England's batting collapse in the Newlands Test. Andrew began his cricket writing as a freelance covering Lancashire during 2004 when they were relegated in the County Championship. In fact, they were top of the table when he began reporting on them but things went dramatically downhill. He likes to let people know that he is a supporter of county cricket, a fact his colleagues will testify to and bemoan in equal quantities.
Tour Results
South Africa v England at Johannesburg - Jan 14-17, 2010
South Africa won by an innings and 74 runs
South Africa v England at Cape Town - Jan 3-7, 2010
Match drawn
South Africa v England at Durban - Dec 26-30, 2009
England won by an innings and 98 runs
South Africa v England at Centurion - Dec 16-20, 2009
Match drawn
SAf Invit XI v England XI at East London - Dec 11-12, 2009
Match drawn
More results »
News | Features Last 3 days
News | Features Last 3 days
  • Cricinfo Widgets
Sponsored Links

Access your Indian Rupee earnings from anywhere in the world.

on registering and transfer of USD 250 and above.

At Cricshop.com