LONDON: South Africa moved to within one victory of becoming the No.
1 Test team in the world after trouncing England by an innings and 12
runs yesterday led by Dale Steyn's five-wicket haul.
Steyn finished with 5-56 and was supported by legspinner Imran
Tahir's 3-63 as England slumped from 203-5 to all out for 240 during the
afternoon session on the last day of the first Test at The Oval.
South Africa leads 1-0 in the three-match series and will replace
England at the top of the ICC world rankings if they win the second
Test, which starts on August 2 at Headingley in Leeds.
Ian Bell and Matt Prior had given England hope of saving the match
with a stand of 86 after Ravi Bopara (22) was the first batsman out
yesterday with 15 added to the overnight total of 102-4.
But England collapsed after Prior fell for 40, caught in the slips by Jacques Kallis trying to sweep Tahir.
Seven runs later, Steyn claimed the key wicket of Bell, who made 55 from 220 balls with six fours.
It was a bruising defeat for England, which had enjoyed the better of
the first day to reach 267-3. South Africa dominated from then,
however, led by an epic 311 not out by Hashim Amla, an unbeaten 182 from
Jacques Kallis and 131 from captain Graeme Smith to give the visitors a
daunting 637-2 declared.
England realistically needed to bat through at least two sessions
Monday to save the match, but poor shot selection contributed to its
first Test defeat at home since going down to Pakistan at this venue in
2010.
Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Strauss had already gifted South Africa
their wickets on Sunday with needlessly extravagant shots, and Bopara
followed suit just 30 minutes into the morning session. Bopara flashed
at a delivery from Steyn that he could have ignored, dragging the ball
onto middle stump.
Wicketkeeper AB de Villiers then dropped Bell, who was on 20, after he nicked a delivery from Tahir that he was trying to block.
Bell narrowly avoided being run out in the 62nd over when a direct
hit from JP Duminy would have left him stranded by a foot, but he and
Matt Prior otherwise batted with discipline to survive 90 minutes to the
end of the session.
England whittled away South Africa's lead after lunch until Prior,
having batted sensibly for 132 minutes, tried to sweep Tahir and was
caught at slip by Jacques Kallis for 40.
The game appeared to be up for England when Steyn removed Bell with
his second delivery with the new ball. Bell opened the face of his bat
and tried to run the ball to third man, but merely guided it to Kallis
at slip.
Stuart Broad was caught behind for 0 off Steyn on referral, while
Graeme Swann launched a doomed counterattack and was caught for 7 by
Alviro Petersen off Steyn.
The victory was sealed when James Anderson was trapped lbw to Tahir for 4.
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