PHILANDER SIX-FOR COMPLETES HISTORIC SERIES WIN FOR SOUTH AFRICA
Vernon Philander career-best six wickets South Africa-Australia 4th Test Day 5 Johannesburg to not only lead his side to a 492-run win over Australia, |
It's always challenging for a captain
to judge when his team has enough runs on the board. Turns out South Africa had
enough about an hour into day two. Led by a brilliant bowling display from
Vernon Philander, South Africa took less than 90 minutes on the final day in
Johannesburg to wrap up victory by 492 runs, sealing their first home series
win against Australia since 1970.
A series full of bad blood and boorish
behaviour, collateral damage and carnage ended with the latter. Australia
started the day on 88 for 3 and lost their remaining seven wickets for 31 runs
inside 17 overs. Philander struck with the first ball of the day, again three
deliveries later, and kept striking even more regularly and resoundingly than
Big Ben. He finished with the remarkable figures of 6 for 21, and match figures
of 9 for 51, and Australia were humbled for 119.
The win was sealed with the retiring
Morne Morkel at the bowling crease, although the wicket was not added to his
career tally of 309. Nathan Lyon drove Morkel away through cover and turned for
a risky second run; Aiden Markram's throw from the outfield was good enough for
Quinton de Kock to whip the bails off and have Lyon run out for 9. Australia
had made only 340 runs for the match; South Africa had that many well before
lunch on day two.
It is hard to believe Australia won
the first Test of this series. It seems an era ago, and in many ways it was.
Since then, Australia's captain and vice-captain have been sacked in disgrace,
the coach has resigned, and Tim Paine, not even part of Tasmania's team at the
start of the summer, is now the skipper. In terms of results, Australia's 1-0
series lead turned into a 3-1 win for South Africa, who dominated throughout
the remainder of the series.
Not only was this Australia's first
series defeat in South Africa since 1970, it was also the first time since that
same tour that they had gone through a series of at least four Tests without a
single batsman scoring a century. Australia's collective batting average of
22.02 was their lowest in a series of at least four Tests since the dark days
of the World Series Cricket era, when an enormously weakened side averaged
19.17 in the Ashes in England.
The final-day carnage began with
Philander nipping one in to Shaun Marsh, whose inside edge ricocheted off his leg
and was taken in the cordon by Temba Bavuma. Three balls later, Philander added
Mitchell Marsh, whose regulation edge was caught behind. Peter Handscomb soon
fell to Philander in almost identical fashion to his first-innings dismissal,
trying to leave but instead playing on to his stumps, this time for 24.
That was all just a warm-up for
Philander, who later managed three wickets in four balls. His fine display of
swing and seam bowling brought three consecutive edges from Paine - an inside
edge, then an outside edge that didn't carry to gully, and then a regulation
chance to the wicketkeeper. Two balls later, Pat Cummins failed to pick the
inswinger and was bowled shouldering arms to Philander, and next delivery Chadd
Sayers edged to third slip.
Philander's hat-trick ball was solidly
defended by Josh Hazlewood, and the match then entered a holding pattern as
Lyon and Hazlewood held off the inevitable for six overs. The only question was
who would get the final wicket - Philander, to complete a ten-wicket match
haul, Morkel to finish his last Test on a high, or someone else. In the end, it
was a run-out, perhaps appropriately effected by Markram, who with 480 was
comfortably the leading run-scorer in the series.
The final scenes of this vituperative
series involved joy and disappointment, but also handshakes and
congratulations, the way Test cricket should be. And, also as it should be, the
best team won.
South
Africa 488 (Markram 152, Bavuma 95*, de Villiers 69, Cummins 5-83, Lyon 3-182)
and 344 for 6 dec (Du Plessis 120, Elgar 81, Cummins 4-58) beat Australia 221
(Paine 62, Khawaja 53, Cummins 50, Philander 3-30, Rabada 3-53, Maharaj 3-92)
and 119 (Burns 42, Philander 6-21) by 492 runs.
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
SOURCE: ESPNCRICINFO
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