Leeds 2nd Test: South Africa in command against England
AB de Villiers' sixth Test century put South
Africa on the verge of winning the second Test at Headingley after England ended
the third day 269 runs behind the visitors on Sunday.
England were 50 for two at the close after
Makhaya Ntini dismissed Andrew Strauss, caught behind without scoring from a
short delivery after going round the wicket, and Michael Vaughan for 21.
Alastair Cook was unbeaten on 23 and was joined by night-watchman James
Anderson.
De Villiers, on 70 overnight, plundered 174 in
predominantly sunny conditions for what was the slowest of his test centuries,
helping South Africa to an imposing first innings total of 522 all out in reply
to England's 203. They kept England in the field for more than 12 hours.
De Villiers, booed to the crease on Saturday
after claiming a catch that was grounded earlier in the Test, played an
unusually patient innings spanning 381 deliveries.
He took his overnight partnership with Ashwell
Prince to 212. Prince was caught behind off debutant Darren Pattinson before
lunch, one short of his 150 but was still his highest Test score.
After Prince's dismissal, de Villiers took up the
challenge to eliminate England's chances of an unlikely victory. The century
would have been especially satisfying for de Villiers after South Africa coach
Mickey Arthur said the batsman had been abused by the England players for his
role in the claimed catch on Friday.
De Villiers slowly grew in confidence and a
square cut for four after lunch even beat the fielder sweeping the cover
boundary to the rope. For the most part de Villiers, so often an aggressor, had
played a supporting role to Prince and then Boucher (34). He spent an agonising
45 minutes in the 90s and was stuck on 99 for 14 balls.
De Villiers registered the team's 500 with an
intelligent cut shot off Stuart Broad to the third man boundary, shortly before
number nine batsman Paul Harris hit a six over long-on off Monty Panesar to rub
further salt into England's wounds.
Another downside of England's struggle in the
field would be the amount of overs that Andrew Flintoff (40) and Anderson (44)
had to bowl.
Flintoff was playing his first Test in 18 months
after recovering from ankle and other injuries, while Anderson reported a stiff
back on the eve of the match.
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