SA pacemen seal Test series sweep over Pakistan

Published January 15, 2019
JOHANNESBURG: South African paceman Duanne Olivier (R) celebrates after cleaning up Pakistan captain Sarfraz Ahmed during the third Test at the Wanderers on Monday.—AP
JOHANNESBURG: South African paceman Duanne Olivier (R) celebrates after cleaning up Pakistan captain Sarfraz Ahmed during the third Test at the Wanderers on Monday.—AP

JOHANNESBURG: South Africa’s fast bowlers delivered another quick victory over Pakistan on Monday, a 107-run win early on the fourth day of the final Test that sealed a 3-0 series whitewash.

South Africa collected the seven wickets they needed before lunch at the Wanderers as the tourists crashed from 153-3 overnight to 273 all out and well short of their target of 381.

The final nail for Pakistan a run out came just after midday as the lunch break was delayed with the home team on the verge of wrapping it up.

That series-ending wicket, when Pakistan No. 11 Mohammad Abbas was run out for 9, was the only one of the 60 wickets for South Africa in the series that didn’t fall to one of their four fast bowlers.

Abbas was stranded after a mix-up with Shadab Khan, ending their last-wicket partnership of 31 and Pakistan’s last stand.

“A 3-0 series win is right up there,” said stand-in South Africa captain Dean Elgar, leading the Proteas with Faf du Plessis serving a one-match suspension for over-rate offences. “That’s what we asked the guys for out of this series and we got it. It’s a good way to start the year. We have set our goals and are halfway there with one more Test series against Sri Lanka to come.”

Duanne Olivier was Pakistan’s chief destroyer, finishing with 3-74 in the final innings and a series-leading 24 wickets in the three Tests, just one wicket short of the South African record for a three-match series held by Buck Llewellyn against Australia in 1902.

Olivier was adjudged man-of-the-series and yet only played because fellow fast bowler Lungi Ngidi was ruled out with injury.

Olivier found a hostile edge to his game on his return to Test cricket after being out of the team for more than a year. He bowled short and fast throughout to bombard the Pakistan batsmen and give South Africa a new weapon in an already-strong fast-bowling arsenal.

Olivier had top-ranked Test bowler Kagiso Rabada, No. 4-ranked Vernon Philander and leading South African wicket-taker Dale Steyn to back him up, a fearsome foursome that South Africa hope could take them to No. 1 in the world.

The four-pronged pace attack saw South Africa to a seventh consecutive series victory at home, a ninth win in their last 11 series anywhere, and up to No. 2 in the Test rankings behind India.

“Each bowler brings something different,” Olivier said. “Vernon has tremendous skill, KG [Rabada] has raw pace, and Dale’s record speaks for itself. For me it was just trying to bring something different to the team and I got rewarded for that. It obviously worked quite well.”

Pakistan lost a second straight series after their defeat in UAE to New Zealand, but followed top-ranked India and Australia in failing against the Proteas pacemen and losing a series in South Africa in the last 12 months.

“Definitely it’s very hard to take,” Pakistan captain Sarfraz Ahmed said. “We lost 3-0 but the South African bowlers, they bowled really well.

“We were in a nice position after the first day [having bowled South Africa out for 262], but could not capitalise on that with our batting.

“Shan Masood played really well [with the bat] and Babar showed his class. Shan and Babar were the positives from the series.”

Pakistan showed fight late on Day 3 on Sunday but any hopes of a dramatic comeback were snuffed out in two rapid deliveries from Olivier on Monday morning.

Charging in for his second over of the day, and South Africa’s third, Olivier sent a short ball throat-high to Babar Azam, who gloved a catch to wicket-keeper Quinton de Kock. Olivier knocked over Sarfraz’s off stump next ball and Pakistan were suddenly 162-5 and in trouble.

Asad Shafiq made 65 to top-score in the second innings but no Pakistan batsman made a century the entire series. Shadab Khan finished 47 not out and smiled ruefully after contributing to the run out of Abbas that ended the series with another one-sided result.

South Africa won the first Test by six wickets in three days, the second by nine wickets on the fourth morning, and again needed just over three days at the Wanderers for a whitewash.

The final run out came four balls into the first over of spin from Elgar.

Those four balls were the only slow bowling from South Africa in the last two Tests and might have been the only time they veered away from their fast-bowling attack the entire series if Philander hadn’t been injured for the opening match.

“They’re awesome to work with,” Elgar said of South Africa’s fast bowlers. “We’re quite fortunate.”

Scoreboard

SOUTH AFRICA (1st Innings) 262 (A.K. Markram 90, T.B. 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) 303 (Q. de Kock 129, H.M. Amla 71; Shadab Khan 3-41, Faheem Ashraf 3-42).
PAKISTAN (2nd Innings, overnight 153-3): 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 c Elgar b Philander 65
Babar Azam c de Kock b Olivier 21
Sarfraz Ahmed b Olivier 0
Shadab Khan not out 47
Faheem Ashraf c Markram b Rabada 15
M. Amir c Markram b Rabada 4
Hasan Ali c and b Rabada 22
Mohammad Abbas run out 9
EXTRAS (LB-2, NB-1) 3
TOTAL (all out, 65.4 overs) 273
FALL OF WKTS: 1-67, 2-74, 3-104, 4-162, 5-162, 6-179, 7-204, 8-208, 9-242. BOWLING: Steyn 20-2-80-2; Philander 14-4-41-1; Olivier 15-2-74-3 (1nb); Rabada 16-2-75-3; Elgar 0.4-0-1-0.
RESULT: South Africa won by 107 runs to win three-match series 3-0. UMPIRES: S. Ravi (India) and J.S. Wilson (West Indies). TV UMPIRE: B.N.J. Oxenford (Australia). MATCH REFEREE: D.C. Boon (Australia). MAN-OF-THE-MATCH: Quinton de Kock. MAN-OF-THE-SERIES: Duanne Olivier. FIRST TEST: Centurion, South Africa won by six wickets. SECOND TEST: Cape Town, South Africa won by nine wickets.

Published in Dawn, January 15th, 2019

Opinion

Editorial

Digital growth
Updated 25 Apr, 2024

Digital growth

Democratising digital development will catalyse a rapid, if not immediate, improvement in human development indicators for the underserved segments of the Pakistani citizenry.
Nikah rights
25 Apr, 2024

Nikah rights

THE Supreme Court recently delivered a judgement championing the rights of women within a marriage. The ruling...
Campus crackdowns
25 Apr, 2024

Campus crackdowns

WHILE most Western governments have either been gladly facilitating Israel’s genocidal war in Gaza, or meekly...
Ties with Tehran
Updated 24 Apr, 2024

Ties with Tehran

Tomorrow, if ties between Washington and Beijing nosedive, and the US asks Pakistan to reconsider CPEC, will we comply?
Working together
24 Apr, 2024

Working together

PAKISTAN’S democracy seems adrift, and no one understands this better than our politicians. The system has gone...
Farmers’ anxiety
24 Apr, 2024

Farmers’ anxiety

WHEAT prices in Punjab have plummeted far below the minimum support price owing to a bumper harvest, reckless...