Some catchin, lovin, and joggin
Plays of the day for the fifth day of the second Test between South Africa and Australia in Durban
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It's catching
Brad Haddin's gloves haven't been the safest place during this match.
He put down a chance on the fifth morning and fluffed a sitter on the
fourth day, when the Australians were convinced there had been an edge
behind. As tea approached he discovered there was perhaps a better way
to take catches. Morne Morkel inside-edged onto his pad off Simon
Katich and the ball flew low to Haddin, who managed to trap it between
his thighs. As he threw his hands up in a successful appeal, the ball
remained nestled safely between his legs.
Umpire love-in
As the Australian team huddled during the drinks break in the middle
session, planning their afternoon, the umpires had a conference of
their own. Asad Rauf has been active all Test and this time he and
Billy Bowden and the fourth umpire Ian Howell had a big group huddle -
or was it a hug? - before they embarked on the remainder of the game.
The referral system has the ability to turn umpires against each other
if decisions are overturned but in Durban it was all about the love.
Generous Harris
Paul Harris isn't the world's worst lower-order batsman but he appears
to have one specific flaw. When occasional bowlers come on, the skill
that he actually has and the ability that he believes he possesses
drift further apart. At the MCG in December, Harris became the first
man in Test cricket to fall to the gentle medium-pace of Michael
Hussey when he tried to clear long-on and was caught in the deep.
Simon Katich is a more proven bowler than Hussey but rarely trundles
at the top level these days and it took him only two balls on the
final day to entice a similarly adventurous shot from Harris, who
tried to clear mid-on and was taken by Peter Siddle running back with
the flight. For the record, Harris also became part-timer Marcus
North's first Test victim a week ago in Johannesburg.
Just in case...
It's not easy for the public to see what's going on in the Kingsmead
nets, where the players are largely shielded by high walls and
diligent security guards. But it is possible to peer into the nets
from outside the ground and before play on the fifth morning the most
notable activity was a warm-up session for South Africa's captain
Graeme Smith. His right hand was still bandaged and he wasn't getting
padded up but Smith was doing some jogging up and down a vacant pitch
while his team-mates bowled and batted. After his heroic comeback with
a broken hand in Sydney nobody was prepared to write him off in Durban
and he was warming up, just in case. But as the wickets tumbled early
the chances of him batting became slimmer and his green shirt and
shorts remained in place. There was no SCG encore.
Brydon Coverdale is a staff writer at Cricinfo
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