BSP-26 Elgar and Amla guide South Africa to victory in opening Test

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BSP-26

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Elgar and Amla guide South Africa to victory in opening Test

CENTURION, South Africa, Dec 28, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Dean Elgar and Hashim
Amla hit half-centuries as South Africa beat Pakistan by six wickets inside
three days in the first Test at SuperSport Park on Friday.

The pair survived some early scares and put on 119 for the second wicket
before Elgar was caught behind off part-time medium-pacer Shan Masood for 50,
one ball after reaching his half-century.

Amla finished a year in which he seldom found top form by making 63 not
out.

The value of the partnership between Elgar and Amla was shown as Theunis
de Bruyn and captain Faf du Plessis both fell cheaply before Temba Bavuma
swept Yasir Shah for four to take South Africa past their target of 149
shortly before tea on the third day.

Both captains, Du Plessis and Pakistan’s Sarfraz Ahmed, made ‘pairs’ by
being dismissed without scoring in both innings.

Pakistan made an ideal start when Hasan Ali trapped Aiden Markram leg
before wicket before a run had been scored.

Hasan and Mohammad Amir did not concede a run off the bat until Amla
clipped Hasan for four in the sixth over.

– Controversy –

There were two crucial incidents with the total on 16, either of which
could have swung the game in Pakistan’s favour.

Amla, on eight, was dropped by Fakhar Zaman at third slip off Hasan when
he slashed hard at the ball, which flew at chest height to the fielder. In
the next over, Elgar, on four, edged new bowler Shaheen Shah Afridi low to
first slip where Azhar Ali appeared to take a diving catch.

On-field umpires Bruce Oxenford and Sundaram Ravi conferred before
referring to television umpire Joel Wilson with a ‘soft’ signal of out,
indicating they thought it was a clean catch.

After looking at several replays, including super-slow close-ups, Wilson
ruled the ball had bounced and Elgar was reprieved.

The decision clearly astonished the Pakistan players and coach Mickey
Arthur was seen leaving his place on the players’ balcony and going to the
adjacent office of match referee David Boon.

Television commentator Michael Holding criticised his fellow West Indian
Wilson.

“I’m convinced he was out,” said Holding. “I think the third umpire made a
mistake. The protocol says you have got to be 100 percent sure the decision
was wrong to change it.”

In a similar situation, Indian captain Virat Kohli was given out in the
recent second Test against Australia in Perth when television umpire Nigel
Llong found no conclusive evidence to overturn a ‘soft’ signal from the on-
field umpires.

Elgar and Amla survived some testing bowling from the Pakistan seamers and
gradually began to lift the scoring rate on a pitch which favoured bowlers
throughout.

South African fast bowler Duanne Olivier was named man of the match for
his match return of 11-96.

The second Test begins in Cape Town on January 3.

BSS/AFP/BZC/1726HRS