CENTURION: Pakistan opener Imam-ul-Haq is bowled by South African pacer Duanne Olivier during the first Test at the SuperSport Park on Thursday.—Reuters
CENTURION: Pakistan opener Imam-ul-Haq is bowled by South African pacer Duanne Olivier during the first Test at the SuperSport Park on Thursday.—Reuters

CENTURION: A magnificent spell of fast bowling from Duanne Olivier inspired a Pakistan collapse after tea on the second day of the first Test against South Africa here at SuperSport Park on Thursday, leaving South Africa needing 149 to win.

Pakistan slipped from 100 for one at tea to 190 all out, at one point losing five wickets for 25 in 11 overs.

The last wicket fell shortly before the close of play which did not leave enough time for South Africa to start their chase.

Olivier took two wickets in four balls immediately after the tea interval and went on take five for 59 for match figures of 11 for 96 following his six for 37 in the first innings.

Imam-ul-Haq (57) and Shan Masood (65) gave Pakistan hope of setting a difficult target for the hosts on a pitch which has helped the fast bowlers throughout.

But Imam was bowled off an inside edge in the first over after tea and Shan quickly found himself effectively fighting a lone battle before he was ninth out after a fighting 120-ball innings which included seven fours.

Kagiso Rabada and Dale Steyn supported Olivier with three and two wickets, respectively.

It was the second successive day on which 15 wickets fell. Although the pitch appeared to be playing slightly easier than on the first day, Pakistan will seek to make early inroads on Friday after restricting South Africa to 223 all out in the first innings.

Mohammad Amir took four for 62 and teenager Shaheen Shah Afridi claimed four for 64 and together with Hasan Ali (2-70) are likely to make South Africa work hard to take a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.

Temba Bavuma (53) and Quinton de Kock (45) were mainly responsible for South Africa squeezing out a 42-run first-innings lead.

Imam and Fakhar Zaman wiped out the deficit with a first-wicket stand of 44 and Shan joined Imam in a 57-run second-wicket partnership.

After a shaky start, the left-handed Imam hurried to 15 off 11 balls but all three of his boundaries to that point were off the edge of his bat.

He was still on 15 when he was dropped low down by Hashim Amla at first slip off Steyn. But he then batted solidly in reaching fifty off 71 balls with seven fours and a hooked six off Olivier.

After bowling Imam, Olivier claimed the wicket of the experienced Azhar Ali, with the help of a diving Rabada at mid-wicket after a mistimed pull shot.

The rest of the batting crumbled, with Steyn having Asad Shafiq caught behind and Rabada ripping out the next three batsmen cheaply.

Scoreboard

PAKISTAN (1st Innings) 181 (Babar Azam 71; D. Olivier 6-37, K. Rabada 3-59).

SOUTH AFRICA (1st Innings, overnight 127-5):

A.K. Markram lbw b Hasan 12
D. Elgar c Azhar b Shaheen 22
H.M. Amla c Babar b Amir 8
T.B.M. de Bruyn c Sarfraz b Amir 29
F. du Plessis c Babar b Shaheen 0
T. Bavuma c Sarfraz b Shaheen 53
D.W. Steyn c Sarfraz b Amir 23
Q. de Kock c Fakhar b Amir 45
K.A. Maharaj lbw b Hasan 4
K. Rabada c Asad b Shaheen 19
D. Olivier not out 0

EXTRAS (LB-3, W-2, NB-3) 8

TOTAL (all out, 60 overs) 223

FALL OF WKTS: 1-19, 2-43, 3-43, 4-43, 5-112, 6-146, 7-170, 8-189, 9-220.

BOWLING: Mohammad Amir 20-6-62-4 (3nb); Hasan Ali 18-4-70-2 (1w); Shaheen Afridi 18-1-64-4; Yasir Shah 4-0-24-0.

PAKISTAN (2nd Innings):

Imam-ul-Haq b Olivier 57
Fakhar Zaman c Rabada b Olivier 12
Shan Masood c Maharaj b Steyn 65
Azhar Alli c Rabada b Olivier 0
Asad Shafiq c de Kock b Steyn 6
Babar Azam b Rabada 6
Sarfraz Ahmed c du Plessis b Rabada 0
Mohammad Amir b Rabada 12
Yasir Shah c de Kock b Olivier 0
Hasan Ali not out 11
Shaheen Shah Afridi c Markram b Olivier 4

EXTRAS (B-6, LB-10, W-1) 17

TOTAL (all out, 56 overs) 190

FALL OF WKTS: 1-44, 2-101, 3-103, 4-134, 5-142, 6-142, 7-158, 8-159, 9-185.

BOWLING: Steyn 15-4-34-2; Rabada 15-4-47-3; Olivier 15-3-59-5 (1w); Maharaj 11-2-34-0.

Published in Dawn, December 28th, 2018

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