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South Africa close in on Test win against Bangladesh
DHAKA—Jacques Kallis picked up a five-wicket haul to put South Africa on
the brink of victory on the third day of the opening Test against
Bangladesh here on Sunday.
The prolific all-rounder took all his wickets in a single spell of
fascinating fast bowling to help South Africa bowl out the hosts for 182
and restrict their second innings lead to 204.
South African batsmen, who made 170 in their first essay, made amends by
reaching 178-4 at close and now need just 27 runs to go 1-0 up in the
two-Test series.
Ashwell Prince was batting on 24 with three fours alongside A.B. de
Villiers on eight when play was called off due to bad light with eight
overs remaining in the day.
Skipper Graeme Smith, who scored his 20th Test fifty off 80 balls, laid
the platform for the chase, putting on crucial partnerships with opener
Neil McKenzie and Hashim Amla.
Smith (62) put on 52 runs with McKenzie and a 73-run stand for the
second wicket with Amla before he was deceived by a Mohammad Rafique
ball that kept low.
He tried to work the ball through the on side but it hit him in line
with the middle stump and umpire Steve Bucknor had no hesitation in
raising his finger.
South Africa set off their chase cautiously with openers Neil McKenzie
and Smith negotiating the home team bowlers with considerable restraint.
But Bangladesh’s first innings bowling hero Shahadat Hossain fetched the
first breakthrough for his side when he had McKenzie caught by Habibul
Bashar at square leg.
Kallis lost his wicket when he pulled one to Mashrafe Mortaza at
backward square leg off Hossain for seven.
Prince and de Villiers, top scorer in the first innings with 46, then
batted with dogged determination to deny Bangladesh any more success
with the ball.
The South Africans owed their happy progress in the match to Kallis
(5-30), who picked five of the six wickets to fall this morning,
including that of top-scorer Junaid Siddique (64).
Speedster Dale Steyn finished with 4-48 as Bangladesh innings folded up
at the stroke of lunch. Bangladesh, who lost all their previous four
encounters against South Africa by innings margins, have won just one of
their 51 Tests — against minnows Zimbabwe. The second Test begins in
Chittagong on February 29.—Agencies |