By Tristan Holme
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — The genius of Saeed Ajmal came to the fore for the first time in the series, as the Pakistan spinner single-handedly put South Africa on the back foot on day two of the second test at Newlands on Friday.
South Africa went to stumps on 139-5 in response to Pakistan’s 338 all out, with Ajmal claiming all five Proteas wickets.
After South Africa was reduced to 109-5, AB de Villiers and Dean Elgar steadied the innings and closed the day on 24 and 11 respectively.
Ajmal’s threat was nullified by a seam-friendly pitch in the first test at the Wanderers, but a healthy breeze and a dry surface at Newlands assisted both drift and turn as he claimed figures of 5-41 from 25 bewitching overs.
From the moment that Ajmal was introduced in just the 12th over of the innings, South Africa’s batsmen never looked comfortable against the offspinner as they struggled to pick him.
Ajmal dismissed openers Graeme Smith and Alviro Petersen in the second session, before inducing a collapse midway through the third that claimed Hashim Amla, Jacques Kallis and Faf du Plessis.
Smith, Amla and Kallis were all trapped lbw, while Petersen and du Plessis were caught at short leg and slip respectively.
Ajmal’s haul was not without controversy, however, with umpire Steve Davis at the centre of a contentious decision to give Kallis out.
Davis, who had already had two other calls overturned by the Decision Review System, appeared to give Kallis out caught before the batsmen referred the decision upstairs.
HotSpot failed to find an edge, but ball-tracking technology suggested the ball would have struck the outside of leg stump.
Kallis was therefore given out lbw on ’umpire’s call,’ despite the ICC’s DRS rules stating that decisions over a different mode of dismissal should be “conducted as if the batsman has been given not out.”
Kallis sought clarity from Davis before he was eventually forced to leave the field, but while the incident left a sour taste in South African mouths, it took little away from Ajmal’s superb effort, which saw him bowl 25 overs on the trot.
It more than matched that of Philander, who had claimed the ninth five-wicket haul of his 15-test career in the morning session as the Proteas clinched the five wickets required to close out the Pakistan innings before lunch.
Philander claimed three wickets in three overs at the start of the day, including centurion Asad Shafiq for his overnight score of 111, and finished with figures of 5-59.
A 64-run stand for the ninth wicket between Tanvir Ahmed and Ajmal held up the Proteas for more than 18 overs, before left-arm spinner Robin Peterson claimed the final two wickets to wrap up the innings.
11:58ET 15-02-13

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