BSP-13 Steyn claims outright South Africa wicket-taking record

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ZCZC

BSP-13

CRICKET-RSA-PAK-STEYN

Steyn claims outright South Africa wicket-taking record

CENTURION, South Africa, Dec 26, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Dale Steyn became South
Africa’s all-time leading Test wicket-taker when Pakistan’s Fakhar Zaman
became his 422nd victim on the first day of the first Test at SuperSport Park
at Wednesday.

Zaman’s dismissal brought to an end more than three years of frustration
during which the fast bowler missed no fewer than 27 Test matches because of
injury.

Steyn was mobbed by his teammates after Zaman (12) edged the ball to Dean
Elgar at third slip, reducing Pakistan to 17 for two after winning the toss
and batting first.

Slightly built, with a lithe, athletic action, Steyn at his best was
capable of bowling at 150kmh, with late away swing accounting for many of the
world’s leading batsmen. When conditions did not suit express pace he
developed an impressive array of cutters and became a master of reverse swing
with the old ball.

Ironically, before a groin strain ruled him out of action midway through a
Test in India, Steyn had been remarkably durable for a fast bowler, playing
in 48 consecutive Tests from December 2009 to November 2015, during which he
took 232 wickets at an average of 21.72 and dominated the International
Cricket Council Test rankings for bowlers. He spent a record 263 weeks in the
top spot.

Steyn took his 400th Test wicket in his 80th Test in July 2015 — the
second-fastest in the world to reach the milestone — and it seemed Pollock’s
record was about to fall.

But four serious injuries delayed what had seemed imminently inevitable.

The groin injury in India was followed by a shoulder injury during the
first Test against England in December 2015 and, after a brief comeback, a
more serious shoulder injury against Australia in November 2016 caused him to
miss 15 Tests.

Just when it seemed he had made a full recovery, he suffered a freak heel
injury in the first Test against India in January this year, which caused him
to miss the remaining Tests against India and a series against Australia.

After a slow recovery, Steyn, 35, spent time with English county Hampshire
and returned to Test cricket in an unproductive series in Sri Lanka during
which he took only two wickets in two Tests to be stuck level with Pollock.

Steyn is now 11th on his own on the all-time world list, needing to match
New Zealand’s Richard Hadlee on 431 to claim a place in the top ten.

Steyn has had success in all Test-playing countries in taking five wickets
in an innings on 26 occasions, with five ten-wicket match hauls.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 1525 hrs