Kallis century delights South Africa

CENTURION, South Africa,  (Reuters) – Jacques Kallis  hit his 32nd test century to lead South Africa to 262 for four  on the opening day of the first test against England yesterday.

His 112 not out gave the hosts the advantage after they had  been sent in to bat and lost two wickets in each of the first  two sessions.
South Africa’s leading run-scorer batted for 278 minutes and  faced 203 balls, stroking 14 fours and an imperious six off  spinner Graeme Swann.

Kallis and JP Duminy (38 not out) shared an unbeaten  fifth-wicket stand of 103.
Swann bowled unchanged for 24 overs either side of tea,  taking two for 61 while seamers Graham Onions and Stuart Broad  claimed a wicket apiece.

Broad struck in the second over of the day when wicketkeeper  Matt Prior took a diving catch down the leg side to remove  captain Graeme Smith for a duck.

ALL AT SEA

Ashwell Prince and Hashim Amla (19) took South Africa to 51  for one before Amla, who had been all at sea against Onions,  edged the seamer to Paul Collingwood at second slip.

Swann made his first breakthrough, turning the ball sharply  to have opener Prince caught by Collingwood at slip for 45.
Kallis and AB de Villiers then put on 66 for the fourth  wicket before the latter went for 32, giving a bat-pad catch to  short-leg Alastair Cook off Swann.

England had used up their umpire referrals by the 53rd over,  Kallis surviving an lbw appeal and De Villiers getting lucky  with a caught-behind shout.

“We messed up our reviews again. We all thought the lbw was  out and the caught behind we all knew was out, the bowler, the  wicketkeeper and slip,” Swann told a news conference.

No edge could be heard on the television replays of the De  Villiers review.
Kallis and Duminy took control later in the day and the  all-rounder reached his century six overs before the close when  he top-edged a hook off Broad and Onions was unable to get under  the ball at fine leg.

South Africa opener Prince said they were hoping Kallis and  Duminy could add substantially to their partnership on the  second day.
“Everyone knows how calm Jacques is and it rubs off on  everyone else.

We’ll have to negotiate the first hour again  tomorrow because the ball is quite new, but hopefully they can  build the partnership as big as possible,” he said.

I think being only four down has tilted things our way.”
Earlier, South Africa suffered a big blow when leading fast  bowler Dale Steyn pulled out with a hamstring injury and was  replaced by the uncapped Friedel de Wet.

England decided to go into the match with only four  front-line bowlers.