Brave Kallis defies pain to rescue South Africa

CAPE TOWN, (Reuters) – Jacques Kallis defied medical  advice to score a magnificent century which put South Africa in  position to win the deciding third test against India yesterday.

India dominated the morning session and were on course for  their first series victory in South Africa when the hosts  stumbled to 121 for five at lunch.
But Kallis, suffering from a side strain caused by a ball  from Shanthakumaran Sreesanth during his first-innings century,  dug in and supported by Mark Boucher and Dale Steyn he lifted  his side to 341 all out at the close.

The experienced all-rounder was expected to be sidelined for  two weeks by the injury but he ignored the obvious pain to reach  his 40th test hundred, the second time he has scored a century  in each innings of a test.

Off-spinner Harbhajan Singh claimed two early wickets and  Zaheer Khan bowled AB de Villiers (13) off the bottom edge of  the bat before lunch.

BATTED STOUTLY

DOWN BUT NOT OUT! South Africa’s Jacques Kallis ignored medical advice and a side strain to carve his 40th test ton and give his side a chance of winning the third test.

Ashwell Prince (22) batted stoutly but was well-held low  down at point by Sreesanth after a firmly-struck cut shot off  Ishant Sharma.
But Kallis found a partner he could rely on in Boucher and  their 103-run stand for the seventh-wicket was the key factor in  South Africa ending the day as favourites after they had been  heading for defeat.

Boucher scored a typically bullish 55, shrugging off the  pressure of playing for his place and the parlous situation when  he came to the crease.

Boucher fell to a ball that kept low from part-time spinner  Sachin Tendulkar before Steyn continued the fightback with a  bright 32.
The highlight of the day came 45 minutes before stumps when  Kallis turned Harbhajan to leg for a single to complete his  century after five-and-a-half hours at the crase.

Kallis made 161 in the first innings after coming to the  crease at 34 for two.
With the field spread, tailender Morne Morkel enjoyed  himself by scoring 28 and Lonwabo Tsotsobe struck successive  boundaries before being caught on the fence.

Kallis’s unbeaten 109 was a top-class effort spanning 380  minutes and 240 balls and he almost single-handedly gave South  Africa a lead which India’s batsmen will be hard-pressed to  overcome on a typical final-day pitch.

The holder of the national run-scoring record has now scored  40 test centuries, moving past Ricky Ponting into second place  on the all-time list behind Tendulkar’s 51 hundreds. Kallis’s  tally of 11,947 runs is just six runs behind West Indian Brian  Lara on the all-time run-scorer’s list.

“I have not seen many batsmen who could handle conditions  like that,” Harbhajan, who completed figures of seven for 120,  told a news conference.

The world’s number one side will have 90 overs in which to  score 340 runs for victory.