WELLINGTON: South Africa’s Temba Bavuma jumps to attempt a shot during the second Test against New Zealand at the Basin Reserve on Friday.—AP
WELLINGTON: South Africa’s Temba Bavuma jumps to attempt a shot during the second Test against New Zealand at the Basin Reserve on Friday.—AP

WELLINGTON: Quinton de Kock’s game-changing partnership with Temba Bavuma left South Africa feeling comfortable with an 81-run lead after day two of the second Test against New Zealand here at the Basin Reserve on Friday.

At 349 for nine at stumps in reply to New Zealand’s 268 any further runs tailenders Vernon Philander and Morne Morkel could add on Saturday would be a bonus, de Kock said.

The wicketkeeper-batsman joined Bavuma to turn the game around with a 160-run stand for the seventh wicket.

When de Kock went to the middle South Africa were in trouble at 94 for six and despite the pressure he said he knew it was no time for caution.

“The mindset I had going in was to somehow shift the pressure back on to them,” he said. “I didn’t want to get bogged down and the only way I knew forward was to play my natural game, but obviously a little more aggressive than usual.”

De Kock made 91 and Bavuma 89 and following their departure Philander and Morkel continued the stubborn resistance with an unbeaten 47 for the last wicket.

Philander was not out 36 at the close, three runs short of being the sixth South African to complete the 100 wickets and 1,000 runs double, while Morkel was on 31.

Three overs before lunch, it was New Zealand with their tails in the air having taken their fourth wicket of the morning, but it was to be another 39 overs before they would strike again when Jimmy Neesham removed de Kock after tea.

It ended a quality counter-attack which saw the South African pair grow in boldness as the New Zealand seamers slipped in line and length.

The first session belonged to the New Zealand seamers as Colin de Grandhomme removed Hashim Amla for 21 then Faf du Plessis for 22.

Tim Southee also bowled nightwatchman Kagiso Rabada for nine and Wagner saw off J.P. Duminy for 16 before de Kock and Bavuma batted South Africa back into the match.

De Kock survived an early anxious moment against his nemesis Jeetan Patel, who has taken his wicket cheaply the four times they have met in the past month.

As his timing and confidence grew, de Kock took a four and six off successive Southee deliveries and handed out the same punishment to Wagner as he raced to his eighth Test half-century in 55 balls.

Bavuma had a let-off on five when he skied a Wagner bouncer and de Grandhomme slipped when moving to take what should have been a regulation catch.

However, there was little risk-taking after that in his 160-ball innings, until he eventually fell when he hooked a Wagner bouncer to Neesham at square leg.

De Grandhomme and Wagner each have three wickets while Southee has two and Neesham one.

Scoreboard

NEW ZEALAND (1st Innings) 268

(H. Nicholls 118, J. Raval 36; JP Duminy 4-47)

SOUTH AFRICA (1st Innings, overnight 2-24):

S. Cook c Neesham b Southee 3

D. Elgar c Neesham b de G’homme 9

K. Rabada b Southee 9

H. Amla c Nicholls b de G’homme 21

J. Duminy c Nicholls b Wagner 16

F. du Plessis c Watling b de G’homme 22

T. Bavuma c Neesham b Wagner 89

Q. de Kock c Watling b Neesham 91

V. Philander not out 36

K. Maharaj c Williamson b Wagner 1

M. Morkel not out 31

EXTRAS (B-4, LB-5, W-12) 21

TOTAL (for nine wkts, 95 overs) 349

FALL OF WKTS: 1-12, 2-12, 3-26, 4-59, 5-79, 6-94, 7-254, 8-290, 9-302.

BOWLING (to-date): Southee

27-7-98-2 (1w); de Grandhomme

23-7-52-3; Wagner 21-1-96-3 (1w); Patel 12-0-53-0; Neesham 12-2-41-1 (2w).

Published in Dawn, March 18th, 2017

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