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Ton-up Kallis
leads South African charge
Bureau Report
KARACHI—All-rounder Jacques Kallis made Pakistan pay for dropping him
twice by scoring a brilliant unbeaten century to help South Africa make
a solid start to the first Test here on Monday.
The 31-year-old scored an unbeaten 118 for his 25th Test hundred as
South Africa reached 294-3 at close on the first day after winning the
toss on a dry and well-prepared pitch at the National Stadium. Kallis,
in the news for the wrong reasons after quitting the vice-captaincy over
his omission from the Twenty20 world championships squad last month,
shared a third-wicket stand of 170 with a resolute Hashim Amla, who made
71.
Kallis hit 15 boundaries during his 224-minute stay at the crease. He
should have been out on 36 when he edged leg-spinner Danish Kaneria only
for wicket-keeper Kamran Akmal to drop a regulation catch. Salman Butt
then grassed a pull off Mohammad Hafeez when Kallis was on 61.
Kallis, who took 91 deliveries to score fifty, reached his second
half-century off just 56 balls, hitting 11 boundaries to reach his ton,
his second against Pakistan.
Amla hit six boundaries and a six during his 225-minute knock. He was
also let off on one when Misbah-ul Haq spilled a catch off skipper
Shoaib Malik. The lapses allowed Kallis and Amla to continue untroubled
before paceman Mohammad Asif bowled Amla in the second over with the new
ball. Earlier, South Africa were given a solid opening start of 87 by
Herschelle Gibbs (54) and Graeme Smith (42). Gibbs, without a hundred
for 37 innings, looked set for a big score as he drove and cut with
confidence to reach his half-century in two-and-a-quarter hours, hitting
seven boundaries. But he fell to a low catch in the slips by Hafeez off
Umar Gul. Gibbs fell three short of reaching 6,000 Test runs.
Pakistan had been forced to rely on the only two available seamers in
Asif and Gul but they failed to achieve an early breakthrough, forcing
Malik to introduce Kaneria in the tenth over. Kaneria did turn the ball
but it was batting all-rounder Hafeez who claimed Pakistan’s first
wicket when he trapped Smith leg-before in his second over.
Smith hit five boundaries in his 105-minute stay at the crease. The home
team received a jolt before the start of the match when prolific batsman
Mohammad Yousuf pulled out, citing a lack of match practice and form.
The 33-year-old last week made himself available to play for Pakistan
after cancelling a contract with a rebel Indian league. But he had
barely picked up a bat for two months after being dropped for the
Twenty20 tournament, at which Pakistan were finalists.
“Yousuf told us that he needed time to gain match fitness and opted out
on his own,” chief selector Salahuddin Ahmed said. Pakistan included
Faisal Iqbal in Yousuf’s place and gave a debut to left-arm spinner
Abdul Rehman.
South Africa preferred paceman Andre Nel over veteran all-rounder Shaun
Pollock after rookie paceman Morne Morkel failed to regain fitness
following a leg injury. The second Test starts in Lahore from October 8. |