CENTURION: Mercurial paceman Kagiso Rabada produced the second-best match figures by a South African to propel his side to a consolation 280-run victory over England in the fourth and final Test on Tuesday.
The hosts needed little more than an hour on the final day to reduce England, who won the series 2-1, from 52 for three to 101 all out – their second lowest score in South Africa – at the SuperSport Park with Rabada returning match figures of 13-144 to confirm his rich potential.
The 20-year-old’s figures are second only to Makhaya Ntini’s 13-132 against West Indies in 2005 and Rabada became the youngest South African to take 10 wickets in a Test match.
Although the series had already been decided, the victory was a welcome one for South Africa after a run of nine games without success stretching back more than a year had caused them to be knocked off the top of the world rankings by India.
“The boys were fired up for this Test and we’ll enjoy the celebrations,” captain A.B. de Villiers said at the presentation ceremony. “We showed a lot of character and hopefully we can build on this now. There is a bright future for us.”
Rabada, in just his sixth Test, was the biggest plus for South Africa in Centurion, bowling with pace and getting seam movement and swing to trouble England in both innings.
Chasing an unlikely victory target of 382 on a wearing wicket, England’s hopes of batting out the day were undone by a combination of rash stroke-making and excellent swing bowling.
James Taylor (24) got a snorter from Morne Morkel (3-36) that brushed his glove and was caught by wicket-keeper Quinton de Kock to kick start a procession of England batsmen.
Joe Root (20), who had already been dropped by De Kock off Dane Piedt, drove wildly at the spinner and was caught at slip by Dean Elgar.
Rabada then got in on the act as he was made to celebrate his record-breaking 10-wicket haul twice – Jonny Bairstow was caught behind prompting a big celebration, only for a TV review to reveal Rabada had overstepped for a no ball. Next delivery, Rabada sent in a ball that shaped away to take an edge and remove Bairstow straight after his reprieve.
Man-of-the-series Ben Stokes (10) was caught at deep midwicket off Morkel as he fell into a short-ball trap, before Rabada cleaned up the tail efficiently for innings figures of 6-32.
“It’s been a disappointing five days with the way we have played,” England skipper Alastair Cook said. “We haven’t quite been on it and had to try hang in there. Credit to South Africa, they played well.” When Rabada had James Anderson lbw for a duck – after a review – England had collapsed to their worst total in South Africa since 92 all out in Cape Town in 1899. England had lasted barely an hour of the fifth day.
As Rabada took wickets on the final morning, Ntini, now a commentator, shouted: “Come on Rabada, get 13!” from the stands.
The teams will now play a five-match One-day International series starting on Feb 3, followed by two Twenty20 games.
Scoreboard
SOUTH AFRICA (1st Innings) 475 (Q. de Kock 129 not out, S.C. Cook 115, H.M. Amla 109; B.A. Stokes 4-86).
ENGLAND (1st Innings) 342 (A.N. Cook 76, J.E. Root 76, Moeen Ali 61; K. Rabada 7-112, M. Morkel 2-73).
SOUTH AFRICA (2nd Innings) 248-5 declared (H.M. Amla 96,
T. Bavuma 78 not out; J.M. Anderson 3-47).
ENGLAND (2nd Innings, overnight 52-3):
A.N. Cook c and b Morkel 5
A.D. Hales lbw b Rabada 1
N.R.D. Compton c de Kock b Rabada 6
J.E. Root c Elgar b Piedt 20
J.W.A. Taylor c de Kock b Morkel 24
B.A. Stokes c Cook b Morkel 10
J.M. Bairstow c de Kock b Rabada 14
Moeen Ali not out 10
C.R. Woakes c de Kock b Rabada 5
S.C.J. Broad c de Villiers b Rabada 2
J.M. Anderson lbw b Rabada 0
EXTRAS (LB-2, W-1, NB-1) 4
TOTAL (all out, 34.4 overs) 101
FALL OF WKTS: 1-2, 2-8, 3-18, 4-58, 5-58, 6-83, 7-83, 8-91, 9-101
BOWLING: Morkel 12-5-36-3; Rabada 10.4-2-32-6 (1nb, 1w); Abbott 2-0-10-0; Piedt 7-2-11-1; Elgar 2-1-8-0; Duminy 1-0-2-0.
RESULT: South Africa won by 280 runs; England win four-match series 2-1.
UMPIRES: H.D.P.K. Dharmasena (Sri Lanka) and C.B. Gaffaney (New Zealand).
TV UMPIRE: R.J. Tucker (Australia).
MATCH REFEREE: R.S. Madugalle (Sri Lanka).
MAN-OF-THE-MATCH: Kagiso Rabada.
MAN-OF-THE-SERIES: Ben Stokes.
FIRST TEST: Durban, England won by 241 runs.
SECOND TEST: Cape Town, match drawn.
THIRD TEST: Johannesburg, England won by seven wickets.
Published in Dawn, January 27th, 2016
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