Prince leads SA after Asif's magical return Saturday, January 13, 2007 04:14 [IST]
Centurion: Ashwell Prince, South Africa's leading batsman in the past year,
has anchored his team to a strong position on the second day of the first Test
against Pakistan at Centurion Park.
South Africa
were 254 for four at the close Friday in reply to Pakistan's first innings total of
313.
But Prince shared the limelight with Pakistan seamer Mohammad Asif who
took all four wickets for 58 runs.
The 24-year-old Asif was playing his first Test since having
a doping ban overturned.
The left-handed Prince, who topped the averages in the
recent series against India,
was unbeaten on 77.
He came in with South Africa in trouble at 53 for
three and shared stands of 90 with Hashim Amla (71) and an unbeaten 111 with
Herschelle Gibbs (58 not out).
Makhaya Ntini was mainly responsible for Pakistan
failing to get the total in excess of 350.
Ntini took five for 83, his 16th five-wicket haul in Tests,
as Pakistan
paid a heavy penalty for their obsession with hook and pull shots which claimed
seven batsmen.
Pakistan
self-destructed in a frenetic morning's play, scoring 71 runs in 67 minutes and
12.5 overs but losing five wickets.
Three wickets fell to hook shots on the first day and the
trend continued Friday, with captain Inzamam-ul-Haq the first offender.
Inzamam was out for 42 in the fourth over of the day when he
hooked Ntini straight to Amla on the square leg boundary.
He stood at the crease looking disgusted with himself before
trudging slowly to the dressing room.
Kamran Akmal, who made an aggressive 29, top-edged a pull to
mid-on off Andre Nel and Shahid Nazir, who could have been out several times in
a hit-or-miss innings of 15, top-edged an attempted hook off Ntini to gully.
Immediately after Nazir's dismissal Rana Naved-ul-Hasan
hooked Ntini high to square leg and Amla took a spectacular diving catch but
landed over the boundary for the batsman to score six runs.
Danish Kaneria fell to a routine catch at second slip as
Ntini took his fifth wicket before Naved-ul-Hasan was the seventh man to be out
hooking or pulling, top-edging a pull for Nel to hold a catch off his own
bowling.
The tall Asif swung the ball both ways when South Africa
started their innings.
South African captain Graeme Smith, who finished the recent
series against India
with three successive half-centuries, was out without scoring when he edged a
ball that swung away from the left-hander to wicketkeeper Akmal.
De Villiers followed in Asif's next over when he edged an
out-swinger to Younis Khan at second slip.
South
Africa could have been in worse trouble if
Amla had been caught on four when Yasir Hameed could not hold a sharp chance at
gully off Asif.
Jacques Kallis made 18 before he was Asif's third victim,
caught at second slip, but Amla and Prince steadied the innings.
Amla was looking in authoritative form as he made his 71 off
152 balls with 11 fours before edging a catch to Akmal when he pushed forward
outside his off stump.
While Prince played a chanceless innings, Gibbs showed his
best touch of the summer as Pakistan's
bowlers looked ineffectual.
By the close Prince had faced 144 balls and hit 10 fours
while Gibbs had faced 109 and hit 11 boundaries.
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