Graeme Swann batted England back into contention with a career-best innings of 85 on the third day of the first Test against South Africa at SuperSport Park on Friday. Swann and James Anderson (29) shared a record ninth wicket stand of 106 as England, who had been floundering at 242 for eight, stretched their first innings total to 356.
It gave South Africa a first innings lead of 62 but the hosts suffered a setback in the first over of their second innings when Anderson bowled Ashwell Prince for nought. South Africa finished the day on nine for one, an overall lead of 71. Swann, batting at number nine, followed a bowling haul of five for 110 with his off-spin by playing a crucial innings after his side had been in dire trouble.
It was his fourth Test half-century and he made his runs off 81 balls, with ten fours and two sixes. No fewer than 76 of his runs were scored against the second new ball, which was taken just four runs into his partnership with Anderson. South Africa tried to blast out the tailenders with short-pitched bowling but by the time they returned to the lengths which had put the recognised batsmen under pressure it was too late.
Harris finished with five for 123, completing his five-wicket haul when Swann was last man out, caught on the deep midwicket boundary, but not before Swann had spoiled his figures with two sixes and some audacious reverse sweeps.
Apart from being his side's main wicket-taker, Harris tied up one end during an unbroken spell of 24 overs, enabling South African captain Graeme Smith to use his fast bowlers in short spells on a hot day.
Shortly before play, one-time rural herd boy Ntini received a letter from former South African President Nelson Mandela congratulating him on playing in his 100th Test match. Mandela wrote: "What you have achieved goes beyond the number of matches you played; you have demonstrated, especially to the youth of our country, that everyone can rise above their circumstances and achieve success if they are dedicated to and passionate about what they do."
There was controversy when Stuart Broad was eighth out following a successful review of a leg before wicket decision after he had been given not out by umpire Aleem Dar. There was a lengthy delay and Broad appeared to protest that the South Africans had only called for the review after a signal from the dressing room after a television replay had been seen.
SCOREBOARD
South Africa, first innings, 418
England, first innings (overnight 88-1)
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A. Strauss b Ntini 46
A. Cook c Boucher b De Wet 15
J. Trott b Harris 28
K. Pietersen b Morkel 40
P. Collingwood c Kallis b Harris 50
I. Bell b Harris 5
M. Prior c De Wet b Harris 4
S. Broad lbw b Duminy 17
G. Swann c Smith b Harris 85
J. Anderson c Morkel b Ntini 29
G. Onions not out 4
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Extras: (b8, lb8, nb12, w5) 33
Total: (104 overs, 471 min) 356
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Fall of wickets: 1-25 (Cook), 2-98 (Strauss), 3-119 (Trott), 4-168 (Pietersen), 5-189 (Bell), 6-211 (Prior), 7-221 (Collingwood), 8-242 (Broad), 9-348 (Anderson), 10-356 (Swann)
Bowling: Ntini 23-4-78-2, De Wet 20-3-72-1 (nb6, w1), Morkel 21-0-60-1 (nb6), Harris 37-10-123-5, Duminy 3-0-7-1
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South Africa, second innings
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A. Prince b Anderson 0
G. Smith not out 6
P. Harris not out 2
Extras: (lb1) 1
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Total (1 wkt, 4 overs) 9
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Fall of wicket: 1-2 (Prince)
Bowling: Anderson 2-0-5-1, Onions 2-1-3-0.
Match position: South Africa lead by 71 runs with nine wickets remaining in the second innings
Umpires: Aleem Dar (PAK), Steve Davis (AUS)
TV umpire: Amish Saheba (IND)
Match referee: Roshan Mahanama (SRI).
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