The battle of the ABs
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AB de Villiers v AB McDonald
In the battle of the ABs it was de Villiers who came out on top when
he smashed the first four balls from a McDonald over for sixes. The
tension was rising around Newlands as McDonald ran in for the fifth
ball as the fans wondered if they were about to witness the first
times six sixes had been hit in a Test over. de Villiers charged down
the pitch but it wasn't to be; he dug out a yorker and took a single,
and the over ended up costing 25. It was the ever
bowled by an Australian in Test cricket and the greatest number of
runs South Africa had ever picked up from a Test over. Remarkably, it
finished with a wicket when McDonald knocked over Albie Morkel from
the sixth ball.
One extra record
Australia conceded 62 extras and it was the most they had ever given away in a Test innings. Brad Haddin had a tough time and let through 19 byes and there were also 24 leg-byes, 10 no-balls and 9 wides. The
previous Australian record was 52 extras, which they conceded last
year against India in Bangalore, as well as at the Gabba in the 1982-83 Ashes. But they were well short of the all-time record of 76, which India gave away against Pakistan in Bangalore just over a year ago.
Kat chases tail
As South Africa pushed past 400 and then 500 and then 600, onlookers
were wondering how long it would be before Simon Katich was given a
bowl. Katich had wrapped up the tail in Durban but with the specialist
legspinner Bryce McGain in the side - even though he was struggling -
Ponting decided against handing the ball to his left-arm part-timer.
Until the 150th over. And when he did, Katich picked up an lbw
decision in his first over. It was overturned on review but in
Katich's second over he collected two wickets and Australia closed out
the South African innings soon after.
Rook takes bishop
The fanatical fans competition was back at Newlands and after a
disappointing response from the Durban supporters last Test the Cape Town outfits were a cut above. The three finalists included two separate teams dressed up as castles - clearly sucking up to the lager company who sponsored the competition - and a pair of men dressed as
priests and holding a JP Duminy sign (Duminy's surname translates
roughly as priest). In the end it was the castles who took the prize.
Brydon Coverdale is a staff writer at Cricinfo