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Moeen Ali sends South Africa spinning to first defeat. |
Moeen Ali took six wickets as England beat
South Africa by 211 runs to win the first Test at Lord’s with more than a day
to spare on Sunday. The Proteas, set 331 to win, collapsed to 119 all out
inside 37 overs. The result meant Joe Root, who made 190 in the hosts’ first
innings 458, enjoyed a resounding victory in his first Test as England captain,
with his side now 1-0 up in this four-match series. Off-spinner Ali, the
man-of-the-match, finished with Test-best figures of six for 53 in 15 overs -
including a burst of five for 20 in 25 balls - on a pitch offering sharp turn.
No South Africa batsman made more in the innings than Temba Bavuma’s 21.
The
day started well for South Africa as England, who resumed on 119 for one in
their second innings, lost seven wickets before lunch in a dramatic collapse.
But in the midst of the clatter of wickets, Vernon Philander dropped a routine
catch at long-off when Jonny Bairstow, mistiming a drive off left-arm spinner
Keshav Maharaj, was on seven. Bairstow punished the Proteas by making 51 before
he was last man out in a total of 233, stumped by opposing wicket-keeper
Quinton de Kock off Maharaj. The scale of South Africa’s task could be seen
from the fact that only once, when the West Indies posted 344 for one against
England in 1984, had a side made more than 300 in the fourth innings to win a
Lord’s Test. Bairstow, the son of late former England wicket-keeper David
Bairstow, has often been criticised for the quality of his glovework.
But he held a brilliant
one-handed catch, diving low down the legside, to give England their first
wicket Sunday when Test debutant Heino Kuhn (one) glanced James Anderson. South
Africa’s 12 for one became 12 for two when stand-in skipper Dean Elgar (two)
drilled a return catch to Ali. JP Duminy then hammered a pull off Wood and Ali
held a good catch at midwicket to leave South Africa 25 for three on the stroke
of tea. If the Proteas were to now pull off an improbable win they needed a
major innings from Hashim Amla. But the star batsman fell for his interval
score of 11 when, beaten on the outside edged by an excellent delivery from
left-arm spinner Liam Dawson he was lbw.
There was a brief pause
before Ali transformed South Africa’s 61 for four into 82 for eight. De Kock
(18) and Bavuma were both bowled aiming across the line, with Theunis de Bruyn,
Keshav Maharaj and Kagiso Rabada also falling to Worcestershire’s Ali.
Maharaj’s exit gave Ali a 10th wicket of a match where he had earlier completed
the all-rounder’s Test double of 2,000 runs and 100 wickets and made 87 in
England’s first innings. Dawson ended the match when Morne Morkel holed out to
South Africa-born Keaton Jennings in the deep.
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