World test championship
London, June 13: Hobbling captain Temba Bavuma and hundred-hitter Aiden Markram pushed South Africa to the brink of a sensational victory over Australia in a gripping World Test Championship final at Lord’s on Friday.
Bavuma, elevating the drama with a strained left hamstring, and opener Markram partnered for an unbroken 143 runs against one of Australia’s greatest bowling attacks to have South Africa 69 runs from an historic triumph.
Chasing 282 to win, the Proteas were 213-2 at stumps on day three in a stirring bid to win a first ICC trophy in 27 years.Bavuma was 65 not out, his running restricted but not his batting technique, and Markram was 102 not out, easily the highest individual score of the final.
Defending champion Australia bombarded them with four of its top-10 all-time test wicket-takers – more than 1,500 wickets in total – but they couldn’t part the Proteas pair, and hardly troubled them.
In South Africa’s huge favor, the day three pitch flattened, offered the bowlers little and was far easier paced for the batters than the first two days, when 14 wickets fell on each.
The odds were in Australia’s favor when South Africa’s chase began straight after lunch.
To win, South Africa was required to equal England’s most successful ever run chase at Lord’s from 2004. The only bigger run chase at the home of cricket was 344-1 in 1984 by the West Indies.If Day 3 was about survival, Day 4 now promises a potential rewrite of South African cricketing folklore. What Temba Bavuma and Aiden Markram have constructed at the hallowed turf of Lord’s is not just a batting partnership—it is a defiant statement of belief, resilience, and national pride. Markram, with his elegant cover drives and steely temperament, has stood tall against the might of Australia’s celebrated attack, etching his name in gold as the only centurion in this high-stakes final. But it is Bavuma, courageously fighting on one good leg, who has added a layer of theatre to this epic battle. Limping but unyielding, his stroke play remained untouched by pain, and his resolve unbroken by adversity. Together, they weathered the storm, not just of hostile fast bowling, but also of history and pressure. South Africa, a team often haunted by their past collapses in knockout matches, suddenly finds itself within touching distance of its first ICC crown in nearly three decades. The pitch, once treacherous, has mellowed; the crowd, once expectant of another Australian triumph, now watches in awe at what could be one of Test cricket’s greatest comeback tales. Should South Africa complete the chase on Saturday, it would not merely be a win—it would be redemption for generations of near-misses, heartbreaks, and unfulfilled promise. (PTI)