Guernsey Press

What happened on day two of the third Test between South Africa and England?

The Proteas closed on 60 for two in response to England’s 499 for nine declared.

Published

Ollie Pope’s maiden Test century and another from the bat of the irrepressible Ben Stokes put England firmly in charge of South Africa on a dominant second day in Port Elizabeth.

The tourists declared on 499 for nine and closed having reduced the Proteas to 60 for two, a commanding position built around two brilliant knocks from men at different stages of their journey.

Pope announced himself as a worthy recipient of the ‘next big thing’ tag he has been handed with a wonderful, unbeaten 135 in just his ninth Test innings, while Stokes’ 120 continued a remarkable sequence of performances that saw him crowned this week as world player of the year.

The pair shared a stand of 203 for the fifth wicket, coming together on the previous evening at 148 for four and shaping the game together. Weighed down by the exertions of 152 overs in the field, South Africa lost Pieter Malan and Zubayr Hamza to Dom Bess’ off-spin in just over an hour’s play before stumps.

Stokes does the double

Before reaching his century Stokes ticked his 4,000th Test run to become just the seventh man to achieve that mark having also taken at least 100 wickets. Sir Ian Botham, predictably, is the solitary Englishman among the other six, joined by Jacques Kallis, Sir Garfield Sobers, Carl Hooper, Kapil Dev and Daniel Vettori.

Tweet of the day

The 200 club

Ben Stokes and Ollie Pope
Ben Stokes and Ollie Pope put on 203 for the fifth wicket (Michael Sheehan/AP)

To declare or not to declare, that is the question

Joe Root
Joe Root finally declared with England on 499 for nine (Mike Egerton/PA).

Wood’s unexpected charge

The England number 10 smashed 42 in just 23 balls and was eventually out caught just a few yards in from the boundary. Had the ball gone just a little further the Durham man would have been a shoo-in for the country’s fastest Test 50, currently held by Botham in 28 balls. Not bad for a man with an average of 16.50 when he walked to the crease.

What’s next?

Day three of five: Some bad weather is forecast over the weekend and South Africa will be more than happy if it arrives soon. Only two results are now realistic – an England win and a draw, with interruptions helping increase odds of the latter.

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