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MA Atherton: no prospect of a repeat of his epic unbeaten 185 at Johannesburg in 1995-96
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It was a given at some stage of the series. Midway through the afternoon session, the television producers got in all of a twitter about a certain MA Atherton, former England captain and opening batsman turned Sunday
newspaper correspondent. The cameras found him sat self-consciously in the
front row of the media centre, and the ground buzzed with the possibility
of a repeat of his epic rearguard at Johannesburg in 1995-96.
Comparisons are odious, but entertaining nonetheless. On that occasion,
England had been lavishly outplayed throughout the game, and a delayed
declaration had left them needing to chase the small matter of 478 for
victory, or more accurately, to survive for a shade over five sessions.
Atherton duly scored 185 not out in more than 10 hours of attrition, and
the rest passed into Test folklore.
The context was similar, at least. Here, England's requirements are
fractionally stiffer - 501 for victory, or an extra eight scheduled overs
for survival - but on current form and unflappability, the team of 2005 at
least had the man for the Atherton role in Andrew Strauss
(Johannesburg-born, spookily enough). Plus, for those who truly believe in
the concept of lightning striking twice, England managed much more than
501 in their last second innings of the tour - a meagre 570 for 7 declared
at Durban.
It was all bunk of course. It's not for nothing that Atherton's innings
has entered the stonewaller's pantheon, and sometime tomorrow, probably
after lunch, England will lose this match and square a series that last
week they thought they had all but wrapped up. It is a cruel twist of
fate, but one that South Africa has fully deserved for their relentless
determination in this game, and their willingness to learn with every
passing day of the series.
They remain a naïve side at times (although that is preferable to
arrogant), and that was never better showcased than during a ludicrous
first hour of the day, when Boeta Dippenaar and Jacques Kallis resumed
their overnight stand in pursuit of quick runs. If that sounds like an
oxymoron, then so it proved, as Dippenaar clipped his second ball to
midwicket to begin a harum-scarum half-session in which five wickets fell
for the addition of a meagre 38 runs.
It was something of a role reversal - accurate efforts from England's
bowlers being met by comically inept batting - but in fact wickets were
the last thing that England actually wanted. With Kallis dead-set on
scoring his second hundred of the match, the best policy would have been
to keep him in the field as long as humanly possible, just as Atherton's
side, in fact, had done with Brian McMillan all those years earlier. They
started in the right vein, bowling as wide as legally possible, but then
ruined the effect by running him out for 66.
Shortly afterwards, the second-ball dismissal of Marcus Trescothick
scotched any hopes of another 273-run opening stand, although while
Strauss remained, hope sprung ephemerally, if not quite eternally. He had
top-scored in England's first five innings of the series, and for a while
he seemed set to join yet more rarified company in his dizzying ascent up
the batting charts.
Only one man has ever achieved the feat six innings running, and seeing as
that man was George Headley, otherwise known as "Atlas" for the manner in
which he carried West Indies' batting in the 1930s, that's a measure of
Strauss's current influence. But his tight lbw decision ended that
particular prospect, and consequently England's hopes. By the close, they
were teetering on the brink at 151 for 5, with Andrew Flintoff the last man out, courtesy of an absolute beauty from Shaun Pollock. Not even Graham Thorpe, a
Johannesburg survivor and their modern-day man for a crisis, looks likely
to salvage the situation.
Andrew Miller is assistant editor of Cricinfo. He will be following England on their tour of South Africa