Headingly - 3rd Test England vs South Africa
With the series squared up at 1 apiece, the two teams arrived after a short furlough at Headingly, the next test, and the first of a double-header of tests that would be played within days of each other. Both teams sported unchanged teams, with no changes flagged as necessary by selectors.
The captains were greeted in the middle by a pitch with a slight hint of green, and overcast conditions that suggested that the ball would swing early on. Nonetheless, the pitch looked like it would settle and become a good batting strip should the batsman be able to survive the early period with the ball moving around. In the event, Hutton won the toss and after elected to bat, although he didn’t sound as comfortable about this decision as he has previous calls.
The ball did indeed move around quite a bit early, but Hutton’s faith in himself and Jack Hobbs to withstand the onslaught appeared well justified as the two openers, both acknowledged as masters of difficult conditions, applied their superb techniques with great concentration. Hutton’s duel with Donald and then Peter Pollock in particular was fascinating viewing, with Donald having a couple of close LBW shouts, but otherwise failing to draw a false stroke from the English captain, who displayed an exceptional awareness of where his off-stump was and soft hands that offered no catching chances.
An exploratory over from Tayfield just before lunch provided the first breakthrough – Hobbs caught at silly mid-off after edging a ball onto his pads. Nonetheless, having withstood the early onslaught, Hutton would have been well satisfied as he sat down to his Yorkshire pudding at lunch, with the score at 1-95, and his decision to bat apparently vindicated.
This feeling of cheerfulness would have evaporated when Sutcliffe was run-out from by a brilliant piece of work from Barry Richards – first bringing down a Hutton cut shot that looked like being a boundary, then recovering and scoring a direct hit to have Sutcliffe run out for only 4. All-time SA fielding coach Jonty Rhodes looked well satisfied with the results of his fielding drills with the team.
The wickets then kept falling as a rejuvenated Shaun Pollock had first Hammond then Compton out cheaply, and when Tayfield drew the edge from Ames with his arm-ball, the English had slumped to 5-149 in the second session. Fortunately Botham showed some resolve to stick with his captain, and the two saw England through to tea without further incident.
They continued on after tea, taking the score to 242 before England again collapsed, this time at the hands of Aubrey Faulkner’s wrist spin. England lost the wickets of Botham, Hutton, and Trueman without any additional score. While Laker and Tyson managed to eke out another 27 runs, the English were soon dismissed for only 270, Faulkner cleaning out the tail and finishing with four wickets.
South Africa came to the wicket on the second day, confident that they had produced a real chance to go ahead in the series, especially as the conditions were much less overcast and conditions seemed good for batting. After losing Mitchell early, Richards and Nourse took the South African total past 100 and looked set before break throughs to Barnes and Laker had them both back in the pavilion and England back in the hunt.
However, the only thing England ended up hunting over the next 8 hours of play was plenty of leather all over the park as Graeme Pollock and Jacques Kallis added a mammoth 295 runs for the fourth wicket. Kallis played a great supporting role, and his many fine shots and immaculate defence were only overshadowed due to his captain producing one of the great knocks. Pollock took the pace of Tyson, the fire of Trueman, the guile and accuracy of Barnes and Laker, and the heart of Botham, all with the same unflappable poise and power, as he fashioned a magnus opus in Headingly. With the conditions offering little assistance, all of the English bowlers were made to look pedestrian as Pollock regally progressed past 50, 100 and 150. He lost Kallis for 134 when the allrounder was finally snagged by an almost surprised Hammond off the bowling of Barnes, but with Faulkner quickly looking assured at the crease, he pressed on towards his 200, but when it seemed within his grasp, he played all around a delivery that cut in from Tyson and was bowled for a magnificent 196.
If Hutton and England thought their pain was nearing an end, they were sadly mistaken, as Faulkner took up the baton his captain had passed to him, batting with great acumen to keep the score board ticking over while protecting first Cameron and then Shaun Pollock sufficiently to allow these players, no mugs with the bats themselves, to acclimatize to conditions and assist him in reaching a century of his own. Faulkner eventually reached his hundred over 200 deliveries and was out trying to hit some boundaries soon after. Pollock closed the innings almost immediately, SA having compiled a massive 639-7 (dec), with 5 overs left to be bowled before stumps on day three.
Hobbs and Hutton again got England off to a solid start, with a half-century opening stand. In pursuit of a score of 369 merely to make SA bat again, Hutton was not able to repeat his first innings heroics and was bowled by Shaun Pollock for 25. Sutcliffe also got a start, and helped Hobbs take the score past 100 before succumbing to Faulkner, who was by now looming as a nightmare figure for England. When Hammond had his second failure for the match, and Hobbs gave Tayfield his second wicket for the innings, the match seemed unlikely to make it to the fifth day, with England struggling at 157-4. Compton and Ames however were able to establish a good partnership, adding 130-odd runs to the total before Shaun Pollock had Compton caught in the gully. As he had in the first test, Ames kept his head and wicket and shepherded England away from the spectre of an innings defeat. With the help of some determined batting from the tail on the morning of day 5, Ames took England past the 369 they required to make the South Africans bat again, although he was only able to provide another 52 runs beyond that point, England all out for 421 at lunch on day 5.
South Africa quickly knocked off the 53 runs they required, Pollock ending undefeated on 13*. The South African captain was awarded man of the match honours, although Faulkner also certainly contributed with a century in the massive South African first innings and five wickets, including four in England’s first innings.
SA won by 8 wickets and went 2-1 up in series, with England only having 3 days to collect themselves before the 4th test.