Key Points

South Africa's young cricketers staged a remarkable comeback in the first Test against Zimbabwe after early struggles. Teenage sensation Lhuan-dre Pretorius broke Graeme Pollock's record by becoming the youngest South African to score a Test century. Corbin Bosch complemented the effort by scoring his maiden Test hundred in the day's final over. The Proteas recovered from 55/4 to reach an impressive 418/9 by stumps.

Key Points: Pretorius Bosch Shine as Proteas Dominate Zimbabwe Test Opener

  • Pretorius becomes youngest SA Test centurion at 19
  • Bosch scores maiden Test hundred in final over
  • Zimbabwe pacers strike early with Chivanga's 4 wickets
  • Brevis contributes crucial 51 in recovery partnership
3 min read

1st Test: Pretorious, Bosch score maiden tons as Proteas reach 418/9 on Day 1

South Africa's young talents Lhuan-dre Pretorius and Corbin Bosch lead impressive fightback in first Test against Zimbabwe

"A complete turnaround from 55/4 to 418/9 - Match Commentator"

Bulawayo, June 28

Reigning champions South Africa began their campaign in the 2025-27 World Test Championship (WTC) cycle in commanding fashion, despite stumbling early on, as they reached 418/9 at stumps on Day 1 of the first Test against Zimbabwe at the Queens Sports Club here on Saturday.

After being reduced to 55/4 at one stage, teenaged left-handed batter Lhuan-dre Pretorius turned it around for the Proteas with a fantastic 153, as he became the youngest South African to score a Test century, alongside fellow debutant Dewald Brevis, who made 51, as the duo shared a 95-run partnership made off just 88 balls. Corbin Bosch provided the box-office entertainment in the latter part of the day as he reached his maiden Test hundred in the final over of the day.

Zimbabwe pacers had the upper hand early on with Tanaka Chivanga romping through the South African top order. Openers Tony de Zorzi and Matthew Breetzke fell similarly. With the former being dismissed for a 16-ball duck, Brian Bennett caught both batters at third slip off Chivanga.

The 31-year-old quick also found David Bedingham's outside edge to send him back to the pavilion for a duck just two overs later. A complete miscommunication between the batters saw Blessing Muzrabani run out Wiaan Mulder for 17.

In what is also his Test debut, Pretorius, aged 19 years and 93 days, reached his century with a single off the 113th ball he faced in his knock during the second session of day one's play on Saturday. In the process, he broke the record previously held by Graeme Pollock to become the youngest Test centurion for South Africa.

Brevis and Pretorius steadied the South African innings with the former smashing three sixes off Vincent Masekesa to raise his half-century in splendid fashion. However, the 95-run stand came to an end when Brevis top-edged a pull shot and was caught at mid-off.

Masekesa had his first scalp owing to a superb catch by skipper Craig Ervine, which saw Kyle Verreynne's innings come to an end at just 12.

Pretorius took charge of the Zimbabwe bowlers and struck 11 boundaries and four maximums. He alongside Bosch put on a 108-run stand for the seventh wicket, with the left-handed batter reaching the 150-run mark before Chivanga claimed his fourth with a short ball, which Pretorius holed to mid-on.

Keshav Maharaj, who is captaining the side, and Codi Yusuf contributed 21 and 28 runs each before departing. Bosch reached the 100-run milestone, off 124 deliveries, with just three balls remaining in the day. Kwena Maphaka provided some entertainment and sealed the day with a six on the final delivery.

Brief scores:

South Africa 418/9 in90 overs (Lhuan-dre Pretorius 153, Corbin Bosch 100*, Dewald Brevis 51; Tanaka Chivanga 4-83, Blessing Muzarabani 2-59) vs Zimbabwe

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya M
As an Indian cricket fan, I'm more concerned about how this affects SA's WTC points. They're always strong contenders and this start puts them ahead in the championship race. But kudos to Zimbabwe for those early wickets - their bowling attack seems improved from last season.
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Amit K
Chivanga's 4-wicket haul deserves more attention! Zimbabwe may have let it slip later but their pacers showed real promise in the first session. Reminds me of how our Indian fast bowlers used to be before Bumrah & Co. changed everything. More matches like this will help Zimbabwe cricket grow.
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Sarah B
That partnership between Pretorius and Brevis changed everything! 95 runs in just 88 balls - that's the kind of counterattack we rarely see in Test cricket nowadays. Makes me wonder if India should try more aggressive approaches when we lose early wickets instead of being overly defensive.
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Nikhil R
While the batting was impressive, Zimbabwe's fielding deserves credit too. That catch by Ervine to dismiss Verreynne was world class! Fielding standards have improved so much across all teams - hope our Indian fielders are taking notes for the upcoming season.
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Kavya N
So happy to see young talents like Pretorius shining in Test cricket! At 19, scoring 153 against a decent bowling attack is phenomenal. Hope BCCI is watching - we need to give our young players more opportunities in longer formats too, not just T20s. #FutureOfTestCricket

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