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Andrew Strauss didn't duck the issue: he scored 44 on the third day at Centurion
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At the start of play there was a widespread belief that, with a day lost
to the weather already, Graeme Smith would declare on South Africa's
overnight 247 for 9 and get stuck straight into England's batsmen. As
things turned out, their innings lasted just two more balls anyway, but
the manner of the final dismissal - Andrew Hall caught slashing
aggressively to third man - spoke volumes about their approach. When you are
going for broke - which is how South Africa must now play the remainder of
this truncated match - it can be a strangely liberating experience.
They are trailing 2-1 in the series and only one result will do so,
ironically, South Africa's best chance of victory came in the manner of
their first-innings capitulation. Had they strung their performance out to
a neither-here-nor-there score of 300 to 350, they would have eaten so far
into today's play that England's nervy response would have come too late
to register. Instead, South Africa have runs on the board - no matter how
few - and, weather permitting, the rest all comes down to desperation.
It was certainly a desperate response from England. Marcus Trescothick's
opening salvoes ought to have been the reassurance they needed on a pitch
that had displayed fewer demons than anticipated on the first day's play,
but when he was needlessly run out, South Africa steamed through the
breach. By the close, the match was heading for a single-innings showdown,
and that will suit the hell-for-leather South Africans just fine.
A stop-start day was never going to be good for England's concentration,
but South Africa made their own luck and took it as well. Robert Key's
dismissal was unfortunate, but Michael Vaughan's was plain careless. His
first duck of the series was also the first time he had failed to reach
double figures and, ironically, it had everything to do with his return to
form at The Wanderers, for he was at last fuelled with some long-overdue
confidence. At least when he was scratching around like a dog without his
bone, he had attempted to get himself in before unfurling his big
risk-taking strokes.
South Africa's bowlers were in the proverbial last-chance saloon, and it
showed as well. Pollock was just Pollock - like the Rock of Ages, his
approach alters for no situation - but the real spark in their attack was
Andre Nel. From the moment he entered the fray, he was all "bluster and
bullshit", as Mike Atherton once wrote of Merv Hughes, and like Hughes,
his barrage of bouncers, glares, curses and general in-your-facedness
eventually bagged the big prize.
If there can be one criticism of Andrew Strauss's incredible series, it
has to be his habit of getting out at precisely the wrong moment. In
mitigation, a player who has top-scored in seven out of nine innings is
bound to be missed the moment he leaves the crease. But his first two
hundreds at Port Elizabeth and Durban ended shortly after the resumption
of play the following morning, and the third at Johannesburg was cut short
just before the close.
Today's dismissal, with lightning striking all around and a curtailment
only moments away, was similar to his untimely exits at Cape Town and
Durban (first innings). It meant that the out-of-form Andrew Flintoff was
exposed, albeit briefly, and it left England praying that the foul weather
lingers for longer. But, by that stage, Strauss had played his part and
more in an 85-run partnership, and had more than atoned for the error that
led to Trescothick's run-out.
England's true hero, however, was Graham Thorpe. He is getting too long in
the tooth to bother turning up for anything less than an absolute crisis,
and today's effort was just typical of the man and his strangely mottled
series. But never mind his inconsequential non-appearances at PE and
Jo'burg, and recall instead his counterpunching century at Durban, which
rescued England from probable defeat, en route to setting up a shot at a
miraculous victory.
Today, imminent defeat was a long way off, but England were still 29 for 3
against a fired-up attack, and a quick strike or two from a major crisis.
So Thorpe played himself in for the obligatory 30-odd balls, before easing
into his trademark nudges and measured cover-drives. Between them, he and
Strauss put defeat almost beyond the realms of possibility, and brought
the prospect of a first series win in South Africa for 40 years into
greater focus.
Almost, but not quite. If the weather is set fair tomorrow morning, which
is not out of the question in these parts, South Africa have the means and
the desperation to throw everything into one last gamble. They have to go
for broke, and it can only make for compelling viewing.
Andrew Miller is assistant editor of Cricinfo. He has been following England's tour of South Africa.