Scoring at one run per hour
The Plays of the day from the fourth day of the third Test between South Africa and Australia in Cape Town
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Mitchell's déjà vu
In Johannesburg, Mitchell Johnson was stranded on 96 as he lost Peter
Siddle and Ben Hilfenhaus in consecutive deliveries and there was a
moment of horror for Johnson as the same thing threatened to happen
again in Cape Town. Johnson was on 95 and at the non-striker's end
when once more two wickets fell in a row. Andrew McDonald and Siddle
were both caught at silly point off inside-edges onto their pads
against Paul Harris and with two balls left in the over and two
batsmen to come, Johnson must have been panicking. But Bryce McGain
did the right thing and blocked out the last two balls and Johnson
brought up his first Test century next over with a six smashed over
midwicket off Dale Steyn.
1rph
One run per hour. That's the rate at which Simon Katich was travelling
at drinks in the morning session. He began the day on 44 and by the
time the first hour was up he had progressed to 45. His only run for
that first hour came when he scampered through for a single when he
was dropped by Harris at gully off the bowling of Steyn and rarely did
Katich look like adding any further runs. He was looking exhausted at
the end of a long tour and with Michael Hussey hardly racing at the
other end, the pair did their best to put the "dead" back in dead
rubber.
Harris gets heated
There has been a distinct lack of on-field nastiness in this series so
it was a surprise to see Harris and Michael Clarke engage in a verbal
stoush as the dead rubber came to a close. Harris has picked up Clarke
four times over these six Tests and the pair exchanged words as Clarke
ticked through the 30s without looking entirely convincing against
Harris. It was the South Africans who ended up on the wrong end of the
banter. At the finish of the over in question, Harris had a loud lbw
shout against McDonald and he talked a clearly unconvinced Jacques
Kallis into asking for the referral. The ball was clearly sliding down
leg and it was impossible not to think that Harris' judgment had been
clouded by the tension leading up to it.
Steyn gets Harris' man
Kamran Akmal is the only man Harris has dismissed more often in Tests
than Clarke but it was another familiar tormentor who finally removed
Clarke for 47. Steyn collected Clarke for the fifth time in the past
few months when Clarke played the ball onto his leg and it trickled
back onto the stumps. It was a successful day for Steyn against some
recognisable foes. No bowler has dismissed Hussey more often than
Steyn, who removed him for the fourth time when he forced a leading
edge that bobbed up to JP Duminy in the gully.
Farewell to a familiar face
Steve Bucknor bowed out of Test cricket today at the end of his 128th
Test match, a world record number of appearances. It's quite an
achievement, considering that when he began his international career
20 years ago the only such record in his sights was the number of
Tests officiated by a West Indian umpire: the 31 that Douglas Sang Hue
stood in from 1962 to 1981. Earlier in the match the ICC presented
Bucknor with a painting of him by Richie Ryall, the former Western
Province wicketkeeper, and today he was given a guard of honour by
both teams as he walked out onto the field after tea, for what would
become his final session of Test cricket. Bucknor now heads home to
the Caribbean to stand in his final two international matches in the
ongoing ODI series between West Indies and England.
Brydon Coverdale is a staff writer at Cricinfo
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