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Pacers wreak havoc as South Africa book Pakistan on 211

South Africa win toss and choose to bowl first in Boxing Day Test

GNN Web Desk
Published 13 hours ago on Dec 26th 2024, 2:37 pm
By Web Desk
Pacers wreak havoc as South Africa book Pakistan on 211

PRETORIA (Reuters): South African pacers rattled Pakistan's batting line-up as the entire side got out at the score of 211 runs in the first Test match of a two-match series against Pakistan at SuperSport Park, Centurion, on Thursday.

In reply, as the Proteas batters kicked off their innings, they received an early blow as Pakistan's Khurram Shahzad dismissed opener Tony de Zorzi in the third over. 

After Zori's return to the pavilion, Ryan Rickelton joined opener Aiden Markram.  Shahzad struck again and dismissed Rickelton after the batter added just eight runs to the scoreboard. 

Earlier, South Africa's Dane Paterson had grabbed a five-wicket haul with Corbin Bosch dismissing four Pakistani batters. Marco Jansen took the final wicket of the inning. 

Pakistan's opener Saim Ayub fell at 14 and Babar Azam at 4. Whereas, Shan Masood was routed for 17 and Saud Shakeel for 14.

Earlier, Pakistan faced four early dismissals in the first test against South Africa today.  

South Africa won the toss and put Pakistan into bat on the opening day of the first Test at Centurion on Thursday, hoping to make early inroads with an all-out pace attack.

South Africa are chasing a place in next year’s World Test Championship final but, in order to do so, must win at least one Test in the two-Test series against Pakistan.

“It was a tricky decision to make but we’d like to have a go with the new ball,” said South Africa captain Temba Bavuma after winning the toss. The pitch at Centurion traditionally offers plenty of seam movement for the bowlers.

The home side named their team on Tuesday with 30-year-old fast bowler Corbin Bosch to debut in an all-seamer bowling line-up, joining Marco Jansen, Kagiso Rabada and Dane Paterson in the home attack as he gets an opportunity because of a long injury list among the country’s fast bowlers.

Pakistan also selected a side without a specialist spinner, with Mohammad Abbas, Aamer Jamal, Naseem Shah and Khurram Shahzad in their bowling attack.

Abbas plays a first Test in three years while Naseem is back after being dropped for the last two Tests against England in October.

Shahzad was injured for that three-Test series.

“The last couple of times we’ve played at Centurion, we’ve gone with the seam attack and we’ve seen some success. The pitch does not favour the spinners at all,” said Bavuma.

“Conditions favour the seamers,” added Pakistan captain Shan Masood, “but you get a lot of value for your shots so it’s about picking the right balls and getting a decent first innings score on the board.”

Babar Azam, also dropped for the last two Tests against England at home in October, returns which means Masood will open the batting alongside Saim Ayub.

The 22-year-old Ayub scored two centuries as Pakistan thrashed South Africa 3-0 in their One Day International series last week. Teams:

South Africa: Tony de Zorzi, Aiden Markram, Ryan Rickelton, Tristan Stubbs, Temba Bavuma (captain), David Bedingham, Kyle Verreynne (wicketkeeper), Marco Jansen, Corbin Bosch, Kagiso Rabada, Dane Paterson.

Pakistan: Shan Masood (captain), Saim Ayub, Babar Azam, Kamran Ghulam, Mohammad Rizwan (wicketkeeper), Saud Shakeel, Salman Ali Agha, Aamer Jamal, Naseem Shah, Khurram Shahzad, Mohammad Abbas. (Writing by Mark Gleeson in Cape Town; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)