Key Points

Kagiso Rabada's fiery five-wicket haul dismantled Australia for 212 on day one of the WTC Final. Beau Webster and Steve Smith fought hard with half-centuries but fell to South Africa's relentless attack. Marco Jansen's three wickets provided crucial support as Rabada moved past Allan Donald in South Africa's all-time wicket-takers list. The Proteas dominated with disciplined bowling, setting up an intriguing contest at Lord's.

Key Points: Kagiso Rabada fifer bowls Australia out for 212 in WTC Final

  • Rabada surpasses Allan Donald in SA's all-time wicket-takers list
  • Webster survives close calls before top-scoring with 72
  • Jansen's 3-49 supports Rabada's fiery spell
  • Smith's 66 provides brief resistance before Markram's breakthrough
3 min read

WTC Final: Kagiso Rabada picks a fifer as South Africa bowl out Australia for 212

Rabada's 5-51 dismantles Australia as South Africa dominate day one of the WTC Final at Lord's, with Webster and Smith top-scoring.

"Rabada rattled Australia in the seventh over by dismissing Khawaja and Green in four balls - Match Report"

London, June 11

Kagiso Rabada claimed 5-51 and moved past Allan Donald to be at fourth spot on South Africa's all-time wicket-takers list as the side bowled out Australia for 212 on day one of the World Test Championship Final at the Lord’s Cricket Ground on Wednesday.

Australia had entered the third session at 190/5 in 50 overs, but Rabada wrapped up the innings in post-tea session in just 36 minutes. For Australia, Beau Webster top-scored with 72 while Steve Smith hit 66. Supporting Rabada in his pursuit were Marco Jansen’s 3-49, while Keshav Maharaj and Aiden Markram took a wicket each.

In the post-tea session, Alex Carey fell straightaway as his attempt to reverse-sweep off Keshav Maharaj resulted in his stumps being castled for 23. Rabada then came in to knock off Pat Cummins, before having Webster edging to first slip. After Jansen castled Nathan Lyon through the gate, Rabada bursts through Mitchell Starc’s defences to end Australia’s innings.

Previously, from the word go, Rabada and Jansen nailed their lengths from the word go to keep Australia on a tight leash. Rabada rattled Australia in the seventh over by Usman Khawaja and Cameron Green in the span of four balls. He first came in from round the wicket to extract Khawaja’s edge and have him caught at first slip, as the batter fell for a 20-ball duck.

Rabada then got one to shape away from Green and the edge was caught by low-diving third slip, as the batter fell for four on his return to Tests after nearly a year. Lungi Ngidi, back in Test match action after 10 months, and Wiaan Mulder continued to be tight in their lines and lengths to keep Smith and Labuschagne on a tight leash.

With Smith found some boundaries, South Africa continued to strike as Labuschagne poked at one from Jansen and nicked behind to keeper. At the stroke of lunch, Jansen produced another huge moment by having Travis Head strangled down leg to make it a really good first session of Test cricket for South Africa.

In the second session, Smith, batting with an outside the leg-stump stance and a trademark exaggerated back-and-across movement, stole three quick boundaries off Rabada and Jansen. But Webster was all at sea, struggling to survive in tough conditions. With luck on his side, Webster survived twice in as many overs.

On four, was first beaten on the outside edge and trapped lbw by Marco Jansen, but ball tracking showed umpire's call on impact. Then against Rabada on eight, Webster was clearly lbw, but with South Africa fearing it was inside edge, they didn’t take the review. To their dismay, replays showed the ball hitting stumps and that it would have been out if South Africa took the review.

Smith eventually got his fifty in 76 balls by slashing Rabada through backward point for four, before he and a now-settled Webster took boundaries off Lungi Ngidi and Keshav Maharaj. But in a bid to smack Aiden Markram through covers, Smith could only get a healthy outside edge and was caught by first slip on his third attempt.

Though Webster was living dangerously, he got his second Test fifty off 69 deliveries and ensured Australia had a bright second session after a gloomy first session. But after that, Carey’s reverse sweep opened the floodgates for South Africa to bring Australia’s innings to a swift end.

Brief Scores: Australia 212 in 56.4 overs (Beau Webster 72, Steve Smith 66; Kagiso Rabada 5/51, Marco Jansen 3/49) against South Africa

- IANS

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Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the cricket article:
R
Rahul K.
Rabada was absolutely lethal today! 🔥 That spell reminded me of our own Bumrah at his best. South Africa's bowling attack looks scary good - makes me nervous for when we face them next. But credit where it's due, what a performance!
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Priya M.
Steve Smith's batting was class as usual, but Webster's innings was the real surprise package. Survived so many close calls and then made it count. Shows why Test cricket is the ultimate challenge - one moment you're struggling, next you're scoring 70+!
A
Arjun S.
That missed review against Webster could've changed everything! South Africa need to be sharper with their DRS calls, especially in big matches like this. Reminds me of that time Kohli wasted our reviews too quickly 😅
S
Sneha R.
Watching Rabada bowl is pure poetry in motion! That seam position, the late movement... just wow. Makes me wish we had more fast bowling pitches in India to develop our own pace battery. But hey, at least we have Shami and Siraj now!
V
Vikram J.
Australia collapsing in English conditions - some things never change! 😂 But seriously, this shows why Test cricket is the real deal. One bad session and your whole innings can unravel. Hope our boys are taking notes before our next overseas tour.
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Neha P.
While the bowling was excellent, I feel Australia's batting was too reckless at times. That reverse sweep from Carey when they were already struggling? Unnecessary! Test cricket rewards patience - something our Pujara has mastered. Sometimes old-school is the best school!

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