South African captain Hashim Amla will be under pressure in the second Test against England, starting at Newlands on Saturday.
Amla
and South Africa have not produced a single convincing Test performance
since defeating a weak West Indies team at the same venue in the 2015
New Year fixture.
Their 241-run defeat in the first
Test against England at Kingsmead in Durban on Wednesday was their
fourth loss in seven matches, with the other three fixtures severely
affected by rain and ending in draws. Three of the defeats were in
India.
South Africa's batting has been dismal during
this period, with only three totals over 200 in 10 completed innings and
just one individual century — Dean Elgar's undefeated 118 at Kingsmead —
and three half-centuries.
Amla himself has hit the
longest batting slump of his international career, scoring 150 runs in
10 Test innings at an average of 15.00 with a highest score of 43. His
form in one-day and Twenty20 internationals has been similarly poor with
his most recent 19 innings in these formats yielding a single century —
against New Zealand in August — and no fifties.
Amla took over the Test captaincy in 2014 and made a
good start with series wins against Sri Lanka, Zimbabwe and West Indies,
contributing heavily with the bat as well.
But his
recent form and an early history of reluctance to lead - he gave up an
early provincial captaincy in order to concentrate on his batting, as
well as the vice-captaincy of the national side at one stage — have
caused questions to be asked about his future as Test captain.
Following
the Durban defeat he insisted he had "enjoyed every minute" of the job
but expressed his disappointment at not being able to lead from the
front in a struggling batting line-up.
"We know we can turn it around," he said.
Quinton
de Kock seems likely to come into the team to strengthen the batting
and take over as wicketkeeper from the over-worked AB de Villiers. At
least one other change is likely, with fast bowler Dale Steyn an
extremely doubtful starter because of a shoulder injury.
England,
meanwhile, go into the match on a wave of confidence after most of
their players made significant contributions in Durban. Their only
problem is whether to bring veteran fast bowler James Anderson back into
the side, probably at the expense of Chris Woakes.
Anderson missed the first Test because of a calf strain. His fitness will be assessed on Friday.
Squads:
South Africa:
Hashim Amla (captain), Dean Elgar, Stiaan van Zyl, Faf du Plessis, AB
de Villiers (wk), Temba Bavuma, JP Duminy, Quinton de Kock (wk), Rilee
Rossouw, Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel, Kagiso Rabada, Kyle Abbott, Dane
Piedt, Chris Morris.
England: Alastair Cook
(captain), Alex Hales, Nick Compton, Joe Root, James Taylor, Ben Stokes,
Jonny Bairstow (wk), Moeen Ali, Chris Woakes, James Anderson, Stuart
Broad, Steven Finn
Umpires: Aleem Dar (PAK), Bruce Oxenford (AUS)
TV umpire: Rod Tucker (AUS)
Match referee: Ranjan Madugalle (SRI)
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