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News

South Africa 'very confident' of chasing down target on challenging pitch

Australia captain Pat Cummins says "trend of the game is the runs are coming down" ahead of likely three-day finish

Nagraj Gollapudi
12-Jun-2025 • 23 hrs ago
South Africa will approach their fourth-innings chase in the World Test Championship (WTC) final at Lord's with "belief" and are "very confident" of their ability to reach whatever target Australia set for them, David Bedingham said at the end of the second day.
The run-chase already looks like it will be a challenging one - Australia are 218 ahead with two wickets left in their second innings.
For the second successive day at Lord's, 14 wickets fell with fast bowlers again dominating play on a seamer-friendly pitch. Pat Cummins followed Kagiso Rabada in etching his name on the honours board, while also entering the 300-wickets club after his 6 for 28 blew South Africa away.
Bedingham, who was the leading scorer for South Africa with a stoic 45 from 111 deliveries, doffed his hat to Cummins, but said that Temba Bavuma's men were ready to grab the opportunity they have. "It's just an amazing chance and we are all very, very excited about the opportunity to win," Bedingham said. "Could go either way, but us as a team we are very, very excited and there's a lot of belief in the dressing room."
South Africa's seamers utilised the overcast conditions mid-afternoon to hurt Australia, who were reeling at 73 for 7 before Alex Carey and Mitchell Starc brought them back into the game. Bedingham said the bowlers' performance certainly would act as a catalyst in pursuit of the victory. "It's an amazing day. When they started batting in the third innings, we would've definitely taken 220 for 8. So we are very confident, there's a massive belief in this team."
Cummins said Australia would have been happier with a few more wickets "in the shed", but he pointed out that batting remained difficult. "The trend of the game is the runs are coming down. It's still pretty difficult out there, so it's set up pretty well for a day-three finish, you'd imagine, tomorrow, but we are going to have to bowl well still in the fourth innings."
Several among Australia's top order are bound to be disappointed for failing for the second time in successive days, though Cummins did not want to focus on that. Instead, he said the Australia had would be difficult to chase down.
"When I walked out, anything over 200, so good to get over that," he said. "But you just want to get as many runs as you can. So, happy we've got 200, hopefully we get another 20 or 30 in the morning. That'd be good. That'd give us a few more options to bowl a few more aggressive fields."
The procession of wickets, and collapses across all three innings, might be seen to tarnish a marquee final. Cummins, though, felt the Lord's pitch had offered a good balance between bat and ball. "I think it's pretty close to 50-50. It's a pretty good Test match. That's the beauty you get [where] all Test matches look a little bit different, but whenever there's a pretty good balance between bat and ball, it's always a pretty good match. This game, some guys have got themselves in and looked pretty comfortable out there and obviously a lot of other guys haven't, so it's been a pretty good balance."
As to why batting has been difficult, Cummins said it was due to the discipline of both fast-bowling attacks. "It's a mixture of the wicket still doing a little bit. It feels like just when it's not doing anything one ball will suddenly seam quite drastically. But both teams bowled really well, really disciplined, haven't bowled too many half-volleys. Both teams are kind of just hanging in that good length area, pretty tight line."
Bedingham agreed with Cummins but was optimistic about batting getter easier on the third day. "When you have six quality seamers on a tricky pitch it obviously makes batting tough. The way the game's going, the wicket's slowed down a bit, so the nicks won't carry," he said. "So in the fourth innings they'll maybe come a bit straighter and that will probably be the danger on that type of wicket, but hopefully we can get those runs."
Knowing the target, Bedingham agreed, would help South Africa to continue batting with intent, something they showed a bit more on the second day compared to the timidity on display late on Wednesday afternoon. "The main thing is just to 100% commit if you are defending or attacking. As soon as you get caught in two minds against these [bowling] attacks, you get found wanting."
June 13 could become a historic day for South African cricket if Bavuma's team can defeat Australia to win the title and claim a first ICC title since the 1998 Knockout Trophy. In the past, they have succumbed to nerves on the big occasions, the latest instance coming in the 2024 T20 World Cup final.

Nagraj Gollapudi is news editor at ESPNcricinfo