JOHANNESBURG: Pakistan paceman Faheem Ashraf (R) watches South African batsman Quinton de Kock punches the air in delight after reaching  his century in the third and final  Test at the Wanderers on Sunday.—AFP
JOHANNESBURG: Pakistan paceman Faheem Ashraf (R) watches South African batsman Quinton de Kock punches the air in delight after reaching his century in the third and final Test at the Wanderers on Sunday.—AFP

JOHANNESBURG: A century by Quinton de Kock and a double strike by Dale Steyn kept South Africa on course to complete a series clean sweep on the third day of the third and final Test against Pakistan at the Wanderers on Sunday.

Set to make a daunting 381 to win, Pakistan were 153 for three at the close, needing another 228 runs. Imam-ul-Haq and Shan Masood got Pakistan off to their best start of the series, putting on 67 for the first wicket.

Both left-handers looked comfortable on a pitch which played easier on Sunday than the first two days as they batted with a positive intent.

But a change of ends brought immediate results for Steyn. Bowling from the southern, Corlett Drive end for the first time in the match, he had Imam caught behind for 35 with a superb delivery which moved away from the batsman just enough to find the edge.

Four overs later Steyn claimed the wicket of Shan after umpire Joel Wilson originally gave him not out. A successful review by South Africa showed a faint inside edge onto Shan’s thigh pad before the ball carried through to wicket-keeper de Kock.

Duanne Olivier, who grabbed 5-51 in the first innings for his third five-for in the series, then dismissed the out-of-form Azhar Ali for the fourth time in the series when the batsman gloved a bouncer to de Kock.

Asad Shafiq (48) and Babar Azam (17) however saw Pakistan through to the close with an unbeaten stand of 49.

Earlier de Kock made an imperious 129, equalling his highest Test score, before South Africa were bowled out for 303.

De Kock, whose knock was the best score on either side in this series, and Hashim Amla were mainly responsible for South Africa posting a target likely to be beyond Pakistan’s reach. They came together on Saturday when their side was in shambles at 93 for five, at which stage their lead was a modest 170.

While Amla patiently compiled an innings of 71 off 144 balls, the left-handed de Kock played fluently as the pair put on 102 for the sixth wicket. De Kock also shared an eighth wicket stand of 79 with Kagiso Rabada.

De Kock reached his fifty off 49 balls and his fourth Test century off 121 deliveries. He was finally caught in the deep, trying for a second successive six off leg-spinner Shadab Khan, after facing 138 balls and hitting 18 fours and a six.

Shadab finished with three for 41 while medium-pacer Faheem Ashraf took three for 42.

Captain Sarfraz Ahmed set a record for a Pakistan wicket-keeper by taking five catches in each innings. His total of 10 dismissals in the match was one better than the record previously shared by Rashid Latif and Kamran Akmal.

Pakistan only made one total over 200 in their first five innings in the series and had not batted for longer than 70.4 overs.

Steyn’s two wickets took his total in Tests to 433, bringing him level with Sri Lanka’s Rangana Herath and Stuart Broad of England in joint eighth place on the all-time Test wicket-takers list.

Olivier, meanwhile, is now three wickets off equalling South Africa’s 117-year-old record for the most wickets in a three-Test series.

Scoreboard

SOUTH AFRICA (1st Innings) 262 (A.K. Markram 90, T.B.M. du Bruyn 49, H.M. Amla 41, Zubayr Hamza 41; Faheem Ashraf 3-57).

PAKISTAN (1st Innings) 185 (Sarfraz Ahmed 50, Babar Azam 49, Imam-ul-Haq 43; D. Olivier 5-51, V.D. Philander 3-43).

SOUTH AFRICA (2nd Innings, overnight 135-5):

D. Elgar c Sarfraz b Amir 5
A.K. Markram c Sarfraz b Abbas 21
H.M. Amla c Sarfraz b Hasan 71
T.B.M. de Bruyn c Asad b Faheem 7
Zubayr Hamza lbw b Faheem 0
T. Bavuma c Sarfraz b Shadab 23
Q. de Kock c Hasan b Shadab 129
V.D. Philander lbw b Amir 14
K. Rabada c Shadab b Faheem 21
D.W. Steyn not out 0
D. Olivier c Sarfraz b Shadab 1

EXTRAS (B-2, LB-6, W-1, NB-1) 11

TOTAL (all out, 80.3 overs) 303

FALL OF WKTS: 1-24, 2-29, 3-45, 4-45, 5-93, 6-195, 7-223, 8-302, 9-302.

BOWLING: Mohammad Amir 20-2-56-2; Mohammad Abbas 18-3-73-1 (1w); Hasan Ali 17-1-83-1; Faheem Ashraf 14-3-42-3 (2nb); Shadab Khan 11.3-0-41-3.

PAKISTAN (2nd Innings):

Imam-ul-Haq c de Kock b Steyn 35
Shan Masood c de Kock b Steyn 37
Azhar Ali c de Kock b Olivier 15
Asad Shafiq not out 48
Babar Azam not out 17

EXTRAS (LB-1) 1

TOTAL (for three wkts, 40 overs) 153

FALL OF WKTS: 1-67, 2-74, 3-104.

BOWLING (to-date): Steyn 12-1-37-2; Philander 10-3-28-0; Olivier 8-2-41-1; Rabada 10-1-46-0.

Published in Dawn, January 14th, 2019

Opinion

Editorial

By-election trends
Updated 23 Apr, 2024

By-election trends

Unless the culture of violence and rigging is rooted out, the credibility of the electoral process in Pakistan will continue to remain under a cloud.
Privatising PIA
23 Apr, 2024

Privatising PIA

FINANCE Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb’s reaffirmation that the process of disinvestment of the loss-making national...
Suffering in captivity
23 Apr, 2024

Suffering in captivity

YET another animal — a lioness — is critically ill at the Karachi Zoo. The feline, emaciated and barely able to...
Not without reform
Updated 22 Apr, 2024

Not without reform

The problem with us is that our ruling elite is still trying to find a way around the tough reforms that will hit their privileges.
Raisi’s visit
22 Apr, 2024

Raisi’s visit

IRANIAN President Ebrahim Raisi, who begins his three-day trip to Pakistan today, will be visiting the country ...
Janus-faced
22 Apr, 2024

Janus-faced

THE US has done it again. While officially insisting it is committed to a peaceful resolution to the...