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Andrew Strauss and Marcus Trescothick celebrate taking their place in history after an opening stand of 273 at Kingsmead © Getty Images
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"I hope it doesn't get any flatter," was Jacques Kallis's plaintive appeal
to the pitch gods last night, after his wonderful 162 had hoisted South
Africa from a position of promise to one of outright supremacy at the
close of the second day's play. And as if to answer his prayers, Durban
was swiftly deluged by a massive thunderstorm. When England resumed their
second innings this morning, still 163 runs adrift and against a newish
ball, it was from a position of some undoubted peril.
But from the umpteenth time in a fascinating match, the momentum has swung
emphatically in the opposite direction. Kingsmead has already provided
four seasons in one pitch, from the green meanie that England faced up to
on the first morning, via the docile puppy-dog of today's post-lunch
session, to the viper's nest that had Mark Butcher flinching and fencing
in the gathering gloom this evening. And a fifth version may yet be in
store if England can lift their second innings from the merely excellent
to the stratospheric, and set South Africa a testing fifth-day target.
Five days? After England had been bundled out for 139 and South Africa
were 116 for 6 in reply, this match looked destined for a three-day finish
- and an epic one at that. Now, however, it must surely go down to the
wire and, judging by the calculated inevitability with which Marcus
Trescothick and Andrew Strauss went about their business, protecting that
unbeaten record is no longer the primary objective. With two days to go of
an astonishingly far-advanced Test match, victory is back on England's
agenda.
It is remarkable to recall that Trescothick and Strauss's opening
alliance, which has now contributed 1124 runs in nine matches, might never
have been launched had it not been for the freak knee injury that Michael
Vaughan suffered in the nets at Lord's back in May, ahead of the first
Test against New Zealand. But since Strauss was handed that opportunity,
he has not looked back and, more importantly, he has become a focal point
for his team-mates as he streaks off into the distance. Even during an
unusually fretful first innings, he was England's top-scorer (albeit with
a meagre 25), and at the second time of asking, his phlegmatic assurance
has rubbed off on his partner.
Strauss and Trescothick added 152 at Port Elizabeth but, even allowing for
all South Africa's no-balls, Trescothick's contribution was a mere 47,
which told its own story of a man battling his way back to form. Today,
however, he was back to his free-flowing self, punching through the
offside with understated panache, and allowing himself the freedom of
expression that he had refused to embrace earlier on the trip. England
were back to 3.5-an-over cricket - the type of batting they had been used
to all summer - and it was a sight to behold.
Right from the start of play, there was an assurance about the performance
that England had not yet demonstrated on this tour. In the first session
alone, they added a healthy 107 runs, but that included a mere 10
in the last seven before lunch, as Jacques Kallis entered the attack for a
brief foray, and England decided enough was enough for one morning. They
weren't exactly in a position to toy with the attack, but they certainly
played the game on their own terms throughout.
It has been one of the mild ironies of England's record-breaking year,
that until today, the most notable batting record to come tumbling was one
that they would rather not have encountered - namely Brian Lara's 400 not
out at Antigua. At the last possible gasp of the year, however, all that
has turned around, and by adding 273 for the first wicket, Strauss and
Trescothick leapt into the top twenty opening stands of all time,
including the top five Englishmen.
They have taken their places alongside such England legends as Hutton and
Washbrook, Hobbs and Sutcliffe, and Gooch and Atherton - the last England
pair to both to compile a double-century opening partnership (at Melbourne
in 1990-91), and to make two hundreds in a single innings (Old Trafford
1990). And, as if in a tribute to the nature of the pitch, they overhauled
the record opening stand at Kingsmead, as made by Bruce Mitchell and
Pieter van der Bijl, in the Timeless Test of 1938-39.
Strauss himself has moved to within 33 runs of a notable personal landmark
- 1000 runs in a mere nine Tests and 18 innings. But with two days
remaining, England's only objective is to keep on batting for as long as
possible. Indeed, that has been Strauss's only objective ever since he entered the team. At Port Elizabeth, he added just six runs to his overnight 120,
before playing one of only two injudicious strokes all tour. He's in the
form and frame of mind to set this match up for a classic.
Andrew Miller is assistant editor of Cricinfo. He will be following the England team throughout the Test series in South Africa.