Australia play to their strengths, exploit South Africa’s recent batting decline

By Trelawney McGregor / Roar Guru

Australia was overwhelmingly under pressure heading into the first Test against South Africa and that pressure was somewhat eased when Faf du Plessis won the toss and elected to bat.

The quality of Australia’s bowling attack was never in question leading into the match, as opposed to the durability. Faced with a South African batting line-up minus one of the world’s best batsman, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood immediately exposed that gaping hole in the Proteas’ top order.

Australia’s fielding standards had recently been called into question by a former great Steve Waugh and they responded to the criticism positively.

A succession of sharp chances generated from a near impeccable line and length by the bowlers were taken and reduced South Africa to three for not many inside the first hour.

South African opening batsman Stephen Cook lasted four deliveries and it was the most unconvincing four deliveries a selector could see. Batsmen who plod and look as indecisive as Cook seldom last long at this level.

After Peter Siddle, Australia’s first change specialist sorely missed in recent times, had grabbed a wicket, South Africa were well on the way to losing the match inside the first session.

Several of the South African batsmen showed little cleverness. The batting lacked power, conviction and the ability to stand and fight and see off the new ball.

For the remainder of the session du Plessis and Temba Bavuma put the South Africans into a position to reach a potential competitive score on a pitch that was not lacking in pace and bounce.

The rot continued after lunch, du Plessis would have regretted the break in concentration as he flayed at a Starc delivery that was much too close to his body and another sharp catch was taken.

It would not surprise to see Starc bowl the first over in a session for the remainder of the summer after he collected wickets in his opening over in the first two sessions.

Quinton de Kock’s arrival to the crease was a breath of fresh air as he showed what South Africa’s top order could have done after lunch in Perth when the pitch flattens out and the ball loses its hardness.

De Kock sees little value in taking time to settle, and he immediately launched into some clever booming shots that had the Australian captain pushing the point fieldsman back to the fence almost immediately.

De Kock’s boldness inspired Bavuma towards a half century and they lifted the scoring rate and pushed South Africa towards redemption.

The introduction of Nathan Lyon in the middle session paid an immediate dividend as Shaun Marsh in close and in midair somehow got his hand under the ball off an inside edge rebounding off Bavuma’s thigh guard.

While the Marsh brothers’ trials and tribulations continue with the bat, there is no such question mark on their fielding as they set what should be the standard for Australia’s summer with two exceptional catches.

Although wickets were falling regularly, de Kock looked more than comfortable amongst the mayhem. He played some breathtaking strokes, none better than an audacious hook over fine legs head off Hazlewood when Smith had set three fielders back to deter the shot and control the scoring.

It was a powerful stand and the counter-attacking nature revived memories of a former Western Australian wicketkeeper who played similar knocks in most familiar circumstances. The South Africans will benefit from moving de Kock up the order if similar collapses become the norm.

At this stage it seemed South Africa would post a total upwards of 300. However, the wickets continued to tumble, and de Kock, realising the tail was not going to hang around, threw his wicket away attempting to lift the scoring.

Australia would be more than satisfied with their day’s effort and could not have drafted a better script to start the summer.

Marsh and Warner negotiated a difficult period as the shadows loomed, sealing a dominant day for the home side.

South Africa will lament the fact they failed to bat the entire day as it could have been advantageous to see how Australia’s underdone bowing attack pulled up in the morning.

The Crowd Says:

2016-11-04T16:00:55+00:00

DavSA

Guest


What we are seeing with the SA side is a major changing of the guard. Rabada was always going to be the heir apparent to Steyn. Just came sooner than he expected. No AB so De Kock stands up . In my own opinion and you touched on it in this article Trelawney , the next Gilchrist in world cricket . On the side lines the very talented Riley Rossouw with Cook looking seriously like a buck caught in the headlights . Expect Rossouw to open the batting at some stage this series. New spinners (finally SA producing them) and yes my favourite bowler Morkel looking like he is going the same way as Steyn on the injury front. Never mind Abbott will not let down any team he plays for. So the future looks good for SA. Interestingly enough one senses much the same with the Aussies. Your domestic league is really strong so time for a few new faces to step up....P.S long live test cricket

2016-11-04T12:31:10+00:00

Tanmoy kar

Guest


If the First Day belongs to Australia then the Second Day belongs to South Africa. Australia lost 10 wickets for only 86 runs and later-on South Africa piled-up 104 runs for the loss of 2 wickets, for a lead of 102 runs.

2016-11-03T23:40:36+00:00

BrainsTrust

Guest


The South African captain electing to bat when they have this supposed great spearhead of fast bowlers on a Perth pitch basically was capitulation for my money. If you believe you have a great fast bowling attack you would be rearing to get at the opposition bastman in Perth on this wicket in the first session. If the wicket was drier and and it was in the summer heat batting first and waiting for cracks might have been the go, thought the cracks haven't been the big feature at the Waca they used to be. The bowling was then ridiculous, Steyn tried to roll back the clock and made a fool of himself, Rabada with the wind could have been effective in that role, Steyn should have tried using the wind to pitch up and get some swing, Philander not a strong looking figure to battle into the wind should have been used as the first change down wind

2016-11-03T15:59:23+00:00

doogs

Guest


Great day for the Aussies. Everything perfect

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