A fluent century from Sean Williams stood tall amid a faltering Zimbabwe batting effort, but South Africa maintained firm control at the end of Day 2 of the first Test at Queens Sports Club. Williams played a lone hand with an aggressive 137 off 163 deliveries—his seventh Test hundred—contributing more than half of Zimbabwe’s total of 251. However, South Africa held a commanding first-innings lead of 167 runs, which they stretched to 216 by stumps, closing at 49/1 in their second innings. Zimbabwe’s troubles began early in the day as South Africa declared overnight at 418/9. Debutant Codi Yusuf struck twice in his opening spell to jolt the top order. Their woes deepened when in-form opener Brian Bennett, fresh from a century against England, was struck on the helmet by a short ball from Kwena Maphaka. He was forced to retire hurt on 19 and later ruled out with mild concussion. Captain Craig Ervine and Williams added 81 for the fourth wicket, the only substantial stand of the innings. Ervine’s dismissal—stumped off Keshav Maharaj for 36—handed the left-arm spinner his 200th Test wicket. Maharaj, captaining in place of the injured Temba Bavuma, ended with figures of 3/70.
All-rounder Wiaan Mulder impressed with the ball, taking 4/50, while Yusuf returned 3/42 on debut. South Africa lost Matthew Breetzke early in their second innings to Tanaka Chivanga, who struck in his first over for the second time in the match. But Tony de Zorzi (22)* and Mulder (25)* guided the visitors to safety before bad light stopped play.
Poll
Will South Africa maintain their lead in the second innings?
This one-off Test does not count towards the World Test Championship. Notably, only four players from South Africa’s WTC final win over Australia are featuring in this match.