Australia faces record chase

December 02, 2012 01:21 pm | Updated December 03, 2012 12:24 am IST - PERTH, Australia

AB de Villiers smashed his 14th Test ton to help South Africa set Australia an unlikely victory target of 632 in Perth on Sunday.

AB de Villiers smashed his 14th Test ton to help South Africa set Australia an unlikely victory target of 632 in Perth on Sunday.

Hashim Amla and AB de Villiers posted big centuries in quick time before South Africa was dismissed for 569 late Sunday, setting Australia an unlikely victory target of 632 in the third Test.

David Warner (29) and Ed Cowan (9) survived an hour before stumps to steer the Australians to 40 without loss on day three, cutting the target to 592 with two full days remaining in a Test that will decide the No. 1 ranking for 2012.

Amla batted for almost six hours and stroked 20 boundaries in his 196, sharing stands of 178 with Graeme Smith (84), 81 with Jacques Kallis (37) and 149 with de Villiers until he gave a return catch to Mitchell Johnson in the middle session.

De Villiers continued, reaching his 14th Test hundred with three consecutive reverse sweeps for boundaries from off-spinner Nathan Lyon and belting 21 fours and three sixes before he was eventually caught behind off Mitch Starc for 169.

After pounding the Australian bowlers for three sessions, the South Africans lost their last five wickets for 31 runs with left-arm pacemen Starc (6-154) and Johnson (4-110) taking all the wickets.

Australia had to navigate an hour before stumps on day three and had a further two days to bat.

The record successful fourth innings chase is the West Indies’ 418-7 to beat Australia at St. John’s in 2003. The South Africans went close to that here four years ago when they scored 414-4 to beat Australia and clinch the 2008 series.

The highest fourth—innings total was England’s 654—5, from 218 eight—ball overs, chasing 696 to beat South Africa in a famous timeless match at Durban in March, 1939, when both captains finally agreed to a draw after 10 days of play so the tourists could get a ship back to Britain.

Amla resumed on 99 with South Africa at 230-2 on day three and reached his 18th Test hundred in the first over. He treated the inexperienced bowling attack almost with disdain at times by walking across his off stump and flicking the ball onto the leg-side, scoring with ease for most of his 221-ball knock.

The Australian attack had only picked up one wicket in 3 1/2 hours before Johnson’s double breakthrough in one over to remove Amla and Dean Elgar as the South African slipped from 3-436 to 5-436.

Johnson took his second caught-and-bowled dismissal of the innings, this time with a reflex, right-handed grab to dismiss Amla on the first ball of the 89th over of the innings. Then, after hitting Elgar on the elbow and shoulder with some short-pitch balls, he trapped the rookie South African lbw to give him a pair of ducks on debut.

The South Africans added 69 runs in the six overs after the tea interval, with de Villiers and Faf du Plessis (27) flaying the bowling attack to all parts of the ground.

Du Plessis contributed to a 102-run, seventh-wicket stand before his defiance of the Australian bowlers ended, edging Johnson to Michael Clarke at slip. He scored 215 between dismissals in the series. Starc dismissed the last three tailenders as South Africa deciding not to declare.

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