Frustrated England on brink of defeat

JOHANNESBURG, (Reuters) – England were on the verge  of a heavy defeat in the fourth and final test against South  Africa yesterday as the row over the umpire referral system  rumbled on.

The tourists, still angered by the third umpire’s decision  on Friday not to give South Africa captain Graeme Smith out  early in his innings before he went on to make 105, collapsed to  48 for three in their second innings when bad light forced an  early close.

That left them still 195 runs behind South Africa, who  bowled England out for 180 on day one and finally declared their  first innings on 423 for seven, with Mark Boucher cutting loose  to notch up a stylish 95.

England are 1-0 up in the series and barely clinging on in a  test that has been blighted by thunderstorms and a series of  controversial calls.

Alastair Cook (1) edged a fizzing delivery to first slip,  Jonathan Trott (8) misjudged an away-swinger and lifted the ball  to AB de Villiers at third slip and captain Andrew Strauss (22)  soon departed after being trapped lbw by debutant Wayne Parnell.

“We’re quietly confident (of winning the test), we believe  we have the attack, on this sort of pitch, to take seven  wickets, but we can’t rest on our laurels because England have  saved two tests already,” Boucher told reporters.

LOST REFERRAL

While the South Africans were frustrated by the bad weather,  which curtailed play by around two hours, England were still  ruing their bad luck and called for the reinstatement of the  referral they lost in the appeal against Smith.

On Friday, Smith appeared to edge a ball to the wicketkeeper  but was not given out by the umpire — a decision upheld after a  referral.

England claimed that third umpire Daryl Harper had not had  the volume turned up on his replay monitor, so missing what they  claimed was an audible nick. The ICC rejected the suggestion.

The South Africans kept their eyes on the ball despite a  number of delays after they began the third day with Hashim Amla  on 73 and Jacques Kallis on seven.

Kallis was out without adding to his overnight score and  Amla added just two more runs as both were dismissed in the  first two full overs of the day.

Boucher and De Villiers put South Africa in command with a  concerted push for runs.

De Villiers twice referred successful appeals by Graeme  Swann to the third umpire. Harper overturned both decisions, and  Boucher survived a referral by the same bowler.

Boucher celebrated becoming only the second specialist  wicketkeeper to score 5,000 test runs — Australian Adam  Gilchrist was the first — when he reached 66.

Stuart Broad ended De Villiers’s innings on 58 and Boucher’s  knock was ended when he top-edged a sweep at off-spinner Swann  and was caught at deep backward square-leg.