Amla stars as Proteas push England to the brink

July 23, 2012 12:09 am | Updated 12:29 am IST - LONDON

England's Ravi Bopara (left) congratulates South Africa's Hashim Amla after he reaches his triple century during the fourth day of the first cricket test in London on July 22, 2012.

England's Ravi Bopara (left) congratulates South Africa's Hashim Amla after he reaches his triple century during the fourth day of the first cricket test in London on July 22, 2012.

Hashim Amla’s epic triple century that took more than 13 hours has South Africa poised to win the first test against England, with the hosts trailing by 150 runs on Sunday with six second-innings wickets in hand.

Amla’s 311 from 529 balls lasted 790 minutes and contained 35 boundaries, and it broke AB de Villiers’ 278 not out as the highest test score by a South African batsman. It also has South Africa on the verge of leading 1-0 in the three-test series with one day’s play left at The Oval.

England had slumped to 102-4 by stumps with Ravi Bopara 15 not out and Ian Bell unbeaten on 14. Vernon Philander had the best figures of 1-13.

Amla and Jacques Kallis (182 not out) put on a stand of 377 after captain Graeme Smith was dismissed for 131. Kallis hit a six and 23 fours in 326 balls on a torturous and wicketless day for England’s bowlers.

Amla’s innings was remarkable for its style and quality.

The South African played few false shots against an England attack whose discipline never wavered even after 13 hours in the field the run rate was only 3.37.

The only real chance Amla offered was on Friday evening, slashing at a delivery from Ravi Bopara only for England captain Andrew Strauss to miss a difficult catching opportunity at first slip when on 40.

The 150 partnership came off 309 balls and Amla reached his 200 off 392 deliveries when he pushed a delivery from Stuart Broad for three through cover.

Kallis then steered Bresnan to third man to reach his century his 43rd in tests from 227 balls.

Amla beat his previous best test score of 253 not out against India in Nagpur in 2010 when he drove Anderson for four early in the afternoon session. And he broke de Villiers’ record with a four off Tim Bresnan before Kallis strolled to 150 with a single from Graeme Swann.

Chances only came after South Africa started to accelerate toward a declaration.

Amla reached his triple century, off 515 balls, with a four off Bopara that just eluded the fielder at cover. Bopara then got a hand to a drive from Amla but couldn’t hold the catch.

South Africa declared during the tea interval and claimed a wicket in the second over of the evening session, when Alastair Cook was caught behind for 0 off Philander.

The Oval crowd broke into a spontaneous ovation when news broke that cyclist Bradley Wiggins had become the first British winner of the Tour de France, but otherwise they had nothing to cheer about.

Jonathan Trott fell in the 11th over, caught behind off Dale Steyn, but England was handed a lifeline when Kevin Pietersen wafted a ball from Morne Morkel and was dropped by Kallis at second slip.

It was a short-lived reprieve for Pietersen, who batted like a man playing a one-day innings. After 17 balls, Morkel bowled him middle stump and he was out for 16.

Strauss played an equally senseless shot when he tried to sweep Imran Tahir and was caught off a top edge by Philander at square leg for 27. But Bopara and Bell survived to take the game into a fifth day.

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